Long ago, in our very galaxy, Apple offered iLife – a suite of creative apps – and iWork – a trio of productivity tools. Like much nostalgia-fueled tech (and today’s surge in bundling), what’s old is new again.
Apple Creator Studio groups core creative apps like Logic Pro, Motion, Compressor, MainStage, Pixelmator Pro (a first!), and Final Cut Pro, alongside Pages, Keynote, and Numbers, into a single subscription that spans platforms. For $12.99 / £12.99 / AU$19.99 a month or $129 / £129 / AU$199 per year, you get access across Mac, iPad, and iPhone.
It’s clearly a value play. Many of these apps were previously purchased outright or via separate, platform-specific subscriptions. But beyond savings, Apple is betting the bundle will encourage more people to integrate these tools into their workflows — or try them for the first time.
In a shared release, Apple SVP of Internet Software and Services Eddy Cue said, “Apple Creator Studio is a great value that enables creators of all types to pursue their craft and grow their skills.”
Cue also points to “advanced intelligent tools” designed to speed up workflows, building on AI features already present in apps like Logic Pro for iPad. Notably, Creator Studio officially brings Pixelmator Pro into Apple’s first-party creative lineup. Apple acquired the popular photo-editing app in 2024, and it has a loyal fanbase – myself included – and this bundle finally brings it to the iPad.
When Creator Studio launches on January 28, 2026, subscribers will get access to the following apps:
- Mac: Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Pages, Keynote, Numbers, Freeform, Motion, Compressor, and MainStage
- iPad: Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Pixelmator Pro, Pages, Keynote, Numbers, and Freeform
- iPhone: Pages, Keynote, Numbers, and Freeform
Eligible students and educators can subscribe at a steep discount: $2.99 / £2.99 / AU$4.99 per month or $29.99 / £29.99 / AU$49.99 per year. Apple is also offering a one-month free trial to eligible customers on both plans, but if you buy a select Mac or iPad, you can get a three-month free trial.
iMovie and GarageBand will remain free entry-level creative apps on Mac, iPad, and iPhone. And for those who prefer to pay once, Pixelmator Pro, Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Motion, Compressor, and MainStage will continue to be sold individually on the Mac. Beyond the bundling, there are some meaningful platform expansions and new features – so let’s break those down.
Pixelmator Pro is finally coming to iPad
Pixelmator Pro has long been a Mac favorite, but we’ve been waiting for a major update – or a new platform – since Apple acquired it in November 2024. That wait ends on January 28, 2026, when Pixelmator Pro launches on iPad.
Built from scratch for iPadOS, the app is optimized for touch and Apple Pencil, and the Apple Pencil Pro. Apple says workflows will carry seamlessly between Mac and iPad, with many of the same editing tools available across both. Features such as Super Resolution remain, and Apple Pencil gestures, including hover, squeeze, and double-tap, let you preview and adjust effects more fluidly.
A new Warp tool is also coming to Pixelmator Pro on both Mac and iPad, allowing users to twist and reshape layers – another push toward a more premium creative toolkit. You’ll also find that on the iPad, many of the time-saving features like ML Enhance or Super Resolution are sticking around as well.
Logic Pro adds more AI-powered features
Logic Pro was one of Apple’s earliest showcases of AI, thanks to features such as Stem Splitter, which separates a recording into individual sound layers. Now, as part of Creator Studio (or as a standalone Mac purchase), Logic Pro is getting new tools.
The AI Session Player is expanding with a new Synth Player designed for EDM-style performances, adding synth bass elements and dynamic flair. You can tweak complexity in real time, effectively treating it like an always-available session musician. Apple is also adding more royalty-free sounds via a new sound pack, along with natural-language search in the Sound Browser – a welcome quality-of-life upgrade.
Final Cut Pro on iPad gets Montage Maker, while Mac gets new AI features
Final Cut Pro on iPad gains a new feature called Montage Maker. Think of it as a more powerful take on auto-editing – not for vertical social clips, but for traditional video projects.
Select a group of clips, and Final Cut Pro will automatically stitch together a sequence based on what it identifies as key moments. It can recrop footage to your chosen aspect ratio and deliver the result in a full timeline, where you can reorder clips, adjust speed, swap music, and add more media.
If you’re dealing with a larger selection of clips, you’ll now be able to search either the ‘transcript’ of the video or visually, allowing you to easily track down a specific moment within clips on both Final Cut Pro for iPad and the Mac.
Pages, Keynote, and Numbers get new templates and AI functionality, but core versions will stay free
Apple has made this clear: Pages, Keynote, and Numbers will continue to be free on iOS, iPadOS, and macOS, with regular updates. Creator Studio subscribers, however, unlock more advanced features. These include early access to intelligent tools – like generating a first-draft Keynote deck from a simple outline – plus a new Content Hub with higher-quality illustrations and photos.
Subscribers also get premium templates across all three apps. Image Playground remains available, but Apple is adding on-device AI tools to upscale images – it’s using the same engine as Super Resolution in Pixelmator Pro – and automatically crop them for documents or presentations directly within Pages, Keynote, and Numbers.

As a whole, Creator Studio Pro serves as a unified home for Apple’s creative and productivity apps, while also shining a light on how Apple is using AI – not as a replacement for the long-promised new Siri or the broader Apple Intelligence umbrella, but for practical, quality-of-life improvements inside apps people already use. Between the updates to Logic Pro, Final Cut Pro, and Pixelmator Pro, Apple isn’t trying to replace human creativity so much as offer tools that speed up workflows and encourage experimentation with new effects.
With the first steps toward premium content in Pages, Numbers, and Keynote, Apple is also offering higher-end templates and graphics designed to elevate documents and presentations. Image Playground, alongside other AI models, can be used to customize visuals and put your own spin on clip art.
Apple Creator Studio launches on January 28, 2026, as a bundled subscription that includes new features across apps like Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro. We’ll go hands-on as soon as possible and share our first impressions closer to launch – but in the meantime, let us know what you think in the comments below. Is this the return of iLife and iWork, reimagined with fresh branding and a more premium edge?
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jacob.krol@futurenet.com (Jacob Krol)




