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The Information: ‘Apple Plans a Thinner iPhone in 2025’

Wayne Ma and Qianer Liu, reporting for The Information (paywalled — MacRumors has a summary):

Apple is developing a significantly thinner version of the iPhone
that could be released as early as 2025, according to three people
with direct knowledge of the project. The slimmer iPhone could be
released concurrently with the iPhone 17, expected in September
2025, according to the three people with direct knowledge and two
others familiar with the project. It could be priced higher than
the iPhone Pro Max, currently Apple’s most expensive model
starting at $1,200, they said.

The people familiar with the project described the new iPhone,
internally code-named D23, as a major redesign — similar to
the iPhone X, which Apple marketed as a technological leap from
previous generations and which started at $1,000 when it was
released in 2017. Several of its novel features, such as
FaceID, the OLED screen and glass back, became standard in
subsequent models.

The iPhone X was a true ground-up redesign of the iPhone. No more Home button (replaced by a gestural interface), Face ID, all-screen design with round corners, and more. It effectively created a fork in the platform.

Left unsaid by The Information is how Apple plans to market this new iPhone. I suspect they’re either describing what Apple plans to call the iPhone 17 Pro, or that it’ll have a new name but replace the iPhone Pro in the lineup. That is to say, I do not think Apple plans to make regular iPhone 17’s, 17 Pros, and this new redesigned and more expensive thinner iPhone.

The screen will measure somewhere between the 6.12-inch diagonal
display of the standard iPhone and the 6.69-inch display of the
iPhone Pro Max, the person added. The rear cameras could be
relocated from the upper-left corner of the phone’s back to the
top center as part of the redesign, another person with direct
knowledge said. […] Ross Young, CEO at Display Supply Chain
Consultants, later said on X that this model would have a
6.55-inch display, which would make it slightly smaller than the
iPhone Pro Max.

The Information isn’t coming out and saying there will only be one size, but it sure sounds like that’s the rumor — and that one size is the current Max size. It’s also worth remembering that there was only one size of the iPhone X (5.8 inches) but its 2018 follow-up, the iPhone XS, added the Max size (6.5 inches). Perhaps Apple plans to ship a 5.8-inch-ish smaller iPhone 18 Pro? Or, perhaps, 6.5 inches is the new regular size and an even larger-display iPhone Pro will come in the iPhone 18 generation?

Speaking of larger-sized iPhones, though, The Information says the Plus models are going away:

In recent years, Apple has released four iPhone models. It plans
to drop the iPhone Plus, one of its less-expensive models, which
has a large screen but lacks the latest-generation processors and
cameras, in 2025, three people said. The Plus, which debuted with
the iPhone 14 and will still be part of the iPhone 16 lineup this
year, has sold below expectations, they said.

 ★ 

Wayne Ma and Qianer Liu, reporting for The Information (paywalled — MacRumors has a summary):

Apple is developing a significantly thinner version of the iPhone
that could be released as early as 2025, according to three people
with direct knowledge of the project. The slimmer iPhone could be
released concurrently with the iPhone 17, expected in September
2025, according to the three people with direct knowledge and two
others familiar with the project. It could be priced higher than
the iPhone Pro Max, currently Apple’s most expensive model
starting at $1,200, they said.

The people familiar with the project described the new iPhone,
internally code-named D23, as a major redesign — similar to
the iPhone X, which Apple marketed as a technological leap from
previous generations and which started at $1,000 when it was
released in 2017. Several of its novel features, such as
FaceID, the OLED screen and glass back, became standard in
subsequent models.

The iPhone X was a true ground-up redesign of the iPhone. No more Home button (replaced by a gestural interface), Face ID, all-screen design with round corners, and more. It effectively created a fork in the platform.

Left unsaid by The Information is how Apple plans to market this new iPhone. I suspect they’re either describing what Apple plans to call the iPhone 17 Pro, or that it’ll have a new name but replace the iPhone Pro in the lineup. That is to say, I do not think Apple plans to make regular iPhone 17’s, 17 Pros, and this new redesigned and more expensive thinner iPhone.

The screen will measure somewhere between the 6.12-inch diagonal
display of the standard iPhone and the 6.69-inch display of the
iPhone Pro Max, the person added. The rear cameras could be
relocated from the upper-left corner of the phone’s back to the
top center as part of the redesign, another person with direct
knowledge said. […] Ross Young, CEO at Display Supply Chain
Consultants, later said on X that this model would have a
6.55-inch display, which would make it slightly smaller than the
iPhone Pro Max.

The Information isn’t coming out and saying there will only be one size, but it sure sounds like that’s the rumor — and that one size is the current Max size. It’s also worth remembering that there was only one size of the iPhone X (5.8 inches) but its 2018 follow-up, the iPhone XS, added the Max size (6.5 inches). Perhaps Apple plans to ship a 5.8-inch-ish smaller iPhone 18 Pro? Or, perhaps, 6.5 inches is the new regular size and an even larger-display iPhone Pro will come in the iPhone 18 generation?

Speaking of larger-sized iPhones, though, The Information says the Plus models are going away:

In recent years, Apple has released four iPhone models. It plans
to drop the iPhone Plus, one of its less-expensive models, which
has a large screen but lacks the latest-generation processors and
cameras, in 2025, three people said. The Plus, which debuted with
the iPhone 14 and will still be part of the iPhone 16 lineup this
year, has sold below expectations, they said.

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