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A refreshed Apple Store app adopts Apple’s Liquid Glass design with a new icon, updated UI, and performance boosts across iOS 26.
Apple has rolled out a major update to the Apple Store app following the release of iOS 26.2 beta 2. The app now adopts Apple’s new Liquid Glass design language, moving away from the long-standing flat aesthetic. This update was first reported by AppleInsider.
The most noticeable change is the redesigned app icon. Apple has inverted the earlier color palette. The shopping bag icon is now white and sits on a blue background. The look is consistent with the Liquid Glass visual style Apple showcased during WWDC and reflects the broader redesign taking place across iOS 26.
The icon isn’t the only update. Inside the app, traditional buttons have been replaced by a Liquid Glass tab bar featuring translucent textures and subtle lighting transitions. The four navigation sections For You, Products, Go Further and Bag remain the same, so the update focuses purely on appearance rather than new functionality.
This redesign is part of an ongoing visual refresh across Apple apps. The Apple TV app and its streaming platform received a similar Liquid Glass treatment earlier, including a real-glass redesign for the Apple TV logo. GarageBand has also adopted the new design style. In contrast, the iWork suite, including Pages, Numbers and Keynote, has not yet been updated.
Apple notes that version 6.6 also introduces various improvements and performance enhancements. There are no new user-facing features included in this release. The focus is entirely on bringing the Apple Store app in line with the new design language of iOS 26.
Liquid Glass represents Apple’s biggest visual change since the introduction of the flat UI style in iOS 7, which continued through iOS 18. It may take months for all optional Apple apps to receive this update and even longer for third-party developers to transition to the new interface style.
Apple’s steady rollout signals a clear goal to create a unified visual identity ahead of larger ecosystem changes expected with future software updates.