In Java, object life is managed automatically. The Java garbage collector will perform mark and sweep algorithm (O(N) algorithm) to walk the object graph and clean up objects that are not being referenced. Users do not have a reliable way to trigger the garbage collection (user can call System.gc(), but it's not guaranteed to run immediately). When garbage collection will happen pretty much relies on the JVM implementation.
So, back to your question, when people say garbage collection is slowing their application down, it means the mark and sweep algorithm is taking away some of their machine's silicon time.
In iOS world, what you said is right, object gets garbage collected when they're relieved. Relieved here means the reference count of the object becomes 0, and the programmer is responsible for increasing or decreasing the reference count. In this case, the run time of garbage collection is O(1).