Apple’s first foldable iPhone is increasingly looking like it won’t be called “iPhone Fold” at all, but will instead join Apple’s growing family of ultra-premium devices under the name “iPhone Ultra.” The branding shift says a lot about how Apple wants you to think about this product: less experimental side project, more top-of-the-line status symbol that sits above even the regular flagship iPhone lineup.
The latest clue comes from Chinese leaker Digital Chat Station, who posted on Weibo that Apple’s book-style foldable is expected to launch as the “iPhone Ultra,” not “iPhone Fold.” This isn’t some random codename pulled from a supply-chain part number – it lines up almost perfectly with what Apple has been doing for the past couple of years, using the Ultra label to mark out its most premium gear like Apple Watch Ultra, CarPlay Ultra, and its M1/M3 Ultra chips, with reports that an OLED touchscreen MacBook and high-end AirPods could also go “Ultra” soon. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman has already said Apple is preparing a wave of Ultra-branded devices for 2026, and multiple reports now place a foldable iPhone right in the middle of that push.
On the hardware side, the foldable iPhone Ultra is rumored to follow the now-familiar book-style design: a compact outer screen and a tablet-like inner display when opened. Current leaks point to an outer panel around 5.3–5.5 inches and a roughly 7.8‑inch main display on the inside, putting it in the same size class as Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold series but said to be slightly wider for a more usable tablet feel. Apple is reportedly planning front-facing cameras for both closed and open modes, plus a dual-lens rear camera system, so think more “ultra-premium hybrid iPhone–iPad” than “spec showcase camera monster.” Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo and other supply-chain reports also point to a very thin chassis when unfolded, on the order of under 5mm, along with a crease-minimizing panel, which would help Apple differentiate on refinement rather than being first.
There are also some interesting rumors about how this thing will actually work day to day. Several reports suggest Apple might skip traditional Face ID and instead revive Touch ID in the power button, freeing up more room on both displays and allowing for smaller punch-hole cameras instead of a Dynamic Island cutout. That would be a big design break from recent iPhones, but it fits the idea that this Ultra is its own category, not just a foldable version of the “normal” phone. Under the hood, leaks mention a next‑gen A‑series chip built on a 2nm process – often referred to as A20 Pro in early reports – putting it at or above whatever lands in the iPhone 18 Pro, and making it clear this isn’t meant to feel like a compromise device. Materials are also expected to scream “expensive,” with talk of a titanium frame, a new, more durable LiquidMetal hinge, and glass or ceramic shield on the back to keep it visually aligned with other high-end iPhones.
Of course, none of this comes cheap. Multiple reputable outlets and analysts have converged on a price band between $2,000 and $2,500, which would easily make the iPhone Ultra the most expensive iPhone Apple has ever sold. That price tag also explains why other Chinese brands are rumored to be eyeing “Ultra” branding for their own upcoming foldables, hoping to ride the same wave but undercut Apple on cost.
Timing is the one part of the story that still feels a little shaky. Some reports say Apple is targeting mass production in the second half of 2026, with a possible unveiling alongside the iPhone 18 lineup in the September window if testing stays on track. Others, including recent supply-chain chatter, hint that development setbacks could push broader availability or even the announcement itself, which wouldn’t be shocking for a first‑generation foldable from a company that openly prefers to watch a category mature before jumping in. Either way, iOS 27 is already rumored to include optimizations specifically for a foldable iPhone, another sign that Apple is treating this as a serious new form factor rather than a tech demo.
The branding piece is where it all comes together. Calling this device “iPhone Ultra” does a few things at once: it slots neatly into Apple’s existing Ultra story, signals that it sits above a “Pro Max” in both price and ambition, and avoids locking the name to a single form factor like “Fold” in case Apple experiments with other folding styles later. It also gives marketing plenty of room to position it as the pinnacle iPhone – the one for people who want the most futuristic hardware Apple makes, not just the best camera or the longest battery life. Even longtime Apple watchers are joking that the only “Ultra” left to fix is Siri, but the overall direction is clear: 2026 is shaping up to be the year Apple leans hard into a new, super‑premium tier across iPhone, Mac, and accessories, and the foldable iPhone Ultra looks like the centerpiece of that strategy.
Discover more from GadgetBond
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
