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State of the Thunder 14: The 2026 Mobile Roadmap

Welcome back to the latest State of the Thunder. In the last Community Office Hours, Heather and Monica sat down with members of the mobile team in a retrospective to celebrate the first year of the Thunderbird for Android app. In this recording, however, Alessandro is leading viewers through the upcoming mobile roadmap, both for Android and iOS.

Looking ahead for Android

Key Priorities

Next year’s top priority is rearchitecture and core maintenance. The underlying code behind the Thunderbird for Android app, which was built on top of K-9 Mail, is 15 years old. That’s ancient in software terms. This work will make the app more stable and reduce the odds of developers breaking the app through their changes. This is a broad initiative with lots of elements. This includes bringing consistency across apps, including UI. For several reasons, we won’t be continuing with Material UI. Instead, we’ll be using our own homegrown Bolt UI.

Another feature the mobile team would like to prioritize is continuity with Thunderbird Pro. Since the exact delivery dates for these services have not yet been defined, setting priorities is difficult, but the team has confirmed the Thundermail integration will come first. Integrating Send, our end-to-end encryption file share, will be trickier when it comes to mobile. However, this may ultimately enable encrypted sync for user account settings as a future feature. 

The team also plans to modernize the Message List and Message View, in addition to ensuring they work well. As users probably spend most of their time on these screens, this is key to get right. We want to have an experience that compares to other mobile mail apps in a good way.

Additional Goals

Several features and feature explorations fill out the rest of the Android roadmap: This includes HTML Signatures that can be synced from the desktop app. The team will also explore providing JMAP support, Exchange support, and calendar support. It’s been a while since the Android app has added a new protocol, but Thundermail includes support for JMAP, and the desktop app monthly release now includes Exchange support. It’s important for users to have a similar experience across the apps. For calendar explorations, we’ll determine whether it’s better to integrate with the native Android calendar or build a calendar section for the app.

Prioritization

Our urgent priorities for next year are the Rearchitecture and Core Maintenance, and the Message View improvements. If we complete both of these goals with our growing yet still small team, we’ll consider that a realistic success!

Our plans for iOS

The mobile team also includes our iOS developers, and we have some broad goals for iOS development next year. iOS is, Alessandro notes, a locked-in, opinionated platform and we want to make future iOS app users comfortable using Thunderbird on their chosen platform. Any iOS roadmap also needs to balance developer and community satisfaction. Prioritizing IMAP as the first supported protocol reflects this as most users still rely on it. Once that’s completed, we can begin work on JMAP to help lead the way for other clients to adopt it. This is the same principle behind adding Exchange support to our apps. While it may be a proprietary protocol, adding it opens up Thunderbird for many people who want to use it but currently can’t.

Watch the Video (also on PeerTube)

Listen to the Podcast

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