When Apple announced Monday that John Ternus would succeed Tim Cook as chief executive officer on Sept. 1, the move confirmed what many industry observers had increasingly expected. For months, Mr. Ternus had taken on more of Mr. Cook’s public duties: fronting product launches, sitting for media interviews, greeting customers at store openings. By early 2026, many in the industry viewed him as the leading internal candidate. Monday’s announcement made it official.
Mr. Ternus, 50, has spent roughly half his life at Apple. He joined the company’s product design team in July 2001, arriving just as Steve Jobs was rebuilding Apple from its near-collapse of the late 1990s. His first assignment was working on the Apple Cinema Display, an external computer monitor. Two decades later, his work touches nearly every major product the company sells.
Apple’s official leadership page describes Mr. Ternus as having overseen all hardware engineering at the company, including the teams behind the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, AirPods, and Apple Vision Pro. He was named senior vice president of Hardware Engineering in January 2021, when his predecessor Dan Riccio transitioned to lead a then-undisclosed special project, which Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reported would become the Apple Vision Pro headset.
Mr. Ternus had previously been named vice president of Hardware Engineering in 2013.
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The Bloomberg report described Mr. Ternus as the “youngest member of Apple’s executive team” and characterized him as “charismatic and well-liked” internally. Former Apple procurement chief Tony Blevins, who worked closely with Mr. Ternus, called him “a very meticulous engineer and a judicious executive” and an “outstanding and obvious choice” to succeed Mr. Cook.
In a separate announcement Monday, Apple said Johny Srouji, previously senior vice president of Hardware Technologies, will become chief hardware officer, effective immediately. Mr. Srouji will assume an expanded role leading Hardware Engineering, the division Mr. Ternus is vacating upon becoming CEO, as well as the hardware technologies organization.
Mr. Ternus grew up in California and competed as a swimmer at the University of Pennsylvania, earning all-time letterwinners distinction on the men’s team. SwimSwam, citing a 1994 report in the Daily Pennsylvanian, reported that as a freshman he won the 50 freestyle and 200 individual medley in a dual meet against Swarthmore College. Penn Athletics records, as cited by Philly Voice, list him as an all-time letter winner. He graduated in 1997 with a bachelor of science in mechanical engineering.
His senior project foreshadowed an interest in accessible design. The Daily Pennsylvanian reported, as cited by Philly Voice, that Mr. Ternus designed a robotic feeding arm that individuals with quadriplegia could control using head movements.
After graduation, Mr. Ternus spent four years at Virtual Research Systems, working as a mechanical engineer on virtual reality headsets, before joining Apple in 2001, according to Apple’s own biography of him.
Mr. Ternus joined Apple at a moment when the company was rebuilding its product lineup under Mr. Jobs. He started on the product design team, working on external monitors, and advanced to vice president of Hardware Engineering in 2013 under then-hardware chief Mr. Riccio, per Apple’s official records. He took on oversight of iPhone hardware in 2020, and assumed the senior vice president title and a seat on the executive team in January 2021 when Mr. Riccio stepped back.
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Bloomberg’s Gurman reported that Mr. Cook subsequently broadened Mr. Ternus’s authority, giving him oversight of Apple’s design teams and a larger role in product marketing. Bloomberg also reported that Mr. Ternus took control of a secretive robotics unit and became more central to the company’s environmental sustainability work. Those details are drawn from Bloomberg’s reporting based on current and former Apple employees.
The clearest public indicator came in early 2026, when Apple held an event in New York to announce the MacBook Neo, a $599 laptop. Bloomberg reported it was Mr. Ternus — not Mr. Cook — who headlined the event, and that the following morning Mr. Ternus appeared on Good Morning America to promote the product, the type of media appearance Mr. Cook had typically handled himself. Many industry observers interpreted the back-to-back appearances as a signal of succession intent, though Apple did not characterize them as such at the time.
When the iPhone 17 lineup went on sale in September 2025, it was Mr. Ternus, then serving as senior vice president of Hardware Engineering, who greeted customers at Apple’s Regent Street store in London. It’s a role Mr. Cook had typically performed at the Fifth Avenue flagship in New York, according to Bloomberg.
Mr. Ternus has rarely discussed his own ambitions publicly. When asked about succession speculation in a recent interview, he deflected: “I love the job I have,” according to published reports.
On Monday, in his first public statement as CEO-designate, he was more expansive. “Having spent almost my entire career at Apple, I have been lucky to have worked under Steve Jobs and to have had Tim Cook as my mentor,” Mr. Ternus said in Apple’s announcement. “It has been a privilege to help shape the products and experiences that have changed so much of how we interact with the world and with one another. I am filled with optimism about what we can achieve in the years to come … I am humbled to step into this role, and I promise to lead with the values and vision that have come to define this special place for half a century.”
Mr. Cook left no ambiguity about his confidence in the selection. “John Ternus has the mind of an engineer, the soul of an innovator, and the heart to lead with integrity and with honor,” he said. “He is without question the right person to lead Apple into the future.”
Arthur Levinson, who has served as Apple’s non-executive chairman since November 2011, will move to the role of lead independent director on Sept. 1, a separate position from the executive chairmanship Mr. Cook is assuming. Mr. Ternus will join Apple’s board of directors on the same date.
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