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Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Alan Martin

iPhone 16 screen change could be a Pro-only upgrade

iPhone 14 Pro vs. iPhone 14 Pro Max

Earlier this week, the reliable display analyst Ross Young revealed that the iPhone 16 family of handsets would see their first significant screen size increase since 2020

Back then, the iPhone 12 introduced 6.1 and 6.7-inch screens, up from 5.8 and 6.5-inches on the iPhone 11. This time, the analyst claimed, we’ll be looking at handsets with 6.3 and 6.9-inch panels.

What wasn’t clear at the time was whether this was an upgrade for all iPhones, and history doesn’t give any precedents there. The regular iPhone 11 didn’t have a mini or Plus handset for comparison and the handset already had a 6.1-inch frame, the same as the iPhone XR before it. 

But now Young has returned to MacRumors to clarify that the size increase will be exclusive to the iPhone 16 Pro headsets. The regular iPhone 16 devices will reportedly maintain the same 6.1 and 6.7-inch screens as available on the iPhone 14 and 14 Plus today. 

Bigger screen, similar footprint? 

While Young says that the 6.3 and 6.9-inch figures are rounded up (more accurate numbers will emerge at the Display Week Conference on May 23, he says), the discrepancy presents two hints about the direction of the iPhone 16.

The first is that Apple believes a big screen should be a premium feature in the same league as a faster chipset, better camera array and ProMotion 120Hz panels. However, the weak sales figures on the iPhone 14 Plus suggests there are limits to that strategy,

The second is that Apple could be making such progress in reducing the size of the bezels on its high-end phones to the degree that it can make displays 0.2-inches larger without having a massive impact on the footprint or weight of the device. 

We know that the upcoming iPhone 15 Ultra is set to have ridiculously thin bezels — perhaps Apple has decided that this reduction means the iPhone 16 can justify a bit more width without consumers finding it to be ‘too much’.

Even if it’s true that consumers won’t notice much difference from what’s available today, it’ll still leave those who prefer smaller handsets without a natural home. The 5.4-inch iPhone 13 mini will be three years old by the time the iPhone 16 arrives, and while the iPhone SE is a pocket-friendly 4.7-inches, the next generation isn’t expected until 2025. That’s a long wait, even if the inevitable compromises in making a cheaper iPhone prove to be acceptable. 

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