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AppleiPhoneMobileTech

Apple’s iPhone 18 plan is changing

Apple’s new iPhone calendar starts to split.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jun 16, 2026, 11:00 AM EDT
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Close-up of the rear upper corner of a Mist Blue iPhone 17, showcasing its dual-camera system with two large vertically aligned lenses, LED flash, and sleek flat-edge aluminum design. The soft blue finish and smooth matte back are highlighted against a light gray background, emphasizing the phone’s minimalist aesthetic and camera hardware.
Image: Apple
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You were probably expecting to spend this fall obsessing over iPhone 18 rumors, comparing colors you’ll never actually buy, and convincing yourself that this is the year you “finally” upgrade. Then, quietly, almost in passing, Apple’s supply chain said the thing nobody was prepared for: the regular iPhone 18 isn’t coming this year at all. Instead, it’s been pushed to early 2027, while only the Pro models and Apple’s first foldable are still on the calendar for 2026.

So if you were waiting for “just the normal iPhone 18,” you might be waiting longer than you planned.

And that’s not a typo, a mistranslation, or a rumor from a random forum post. Comments from Largan Precision – the company that supplies Apple with iPhone camera lenses – indicate that a “major U.S. customer” has postponed a new model to the first quarter of 2027, shifting component orders into late 2026. Largan didn’t say “Apple” or “iPhone 18” out loud, but given that reports have already claimed the base iPhone 18 is being moved to spring 2027 while the Pro models arrive on the usual September schedule, the dots are very close together.

In other words, if you were expecting the whole iPhone 18 lineup to drop together this fall like every year since the iPhone 4s era, it looks like Apple is finally breaking that pattern.

For more than a decade, Apple has trained us to think in September. New iPhones, new iOS, a barrage of YouTube videos, and preorders that somehow “sell out” even when delivery still says launch day. The rhythm has been comfortingly predictable: all the new models announced together, all of them shipping within a few weeks.

This year, that rhythm changes. Multiple reports over the past year have pointed to a new, split strategy: premium iPhones in September, more affordable models in the spring. If the current reporting holds, fall 2026 will be about iPhone 18 Pro, iPhone 18 Pro Max, and Apple’s first foldable “iPhone Ultra,” while the regular iPhone 18, the iPhone 18e, and the next-gen iPhone Air 2 are now penciled in for early 2027.

It’s not just a one-off delay because “suppliers had issues.” It looks much more like a deliberate restructuring of the iPhone calendar.

From Apple’s perspective, splitting the lineup into two waves solves a few problems at once. The first is pure logistics. As the family grows – Pro, Pro Max, base, “e,” Air, and now a foldable – trying to ramp and launch everything in the same narrow window is massively complex and expensive. Largan’s comments about component orders shifting later into the year fit that story: push some models out a few months, and you smooth factory utilization instead of spiking it around one quarter.

The second reason is business momentum. Right now, iPhone sales are heavily front-loaded around launch. By the time spring rolls around, the “new iPhone” buzz is gone, and Apple relies more on promos and carrier deals to keep the line moving. A spring launch for the lower-priced models creates a second wave of marketing oxygen. New iPhones in September, new iPhones in March or April – two “upgrade moments” in one fiscal year instead of one.

And there’s a strategic layering here too. Put the flagship, margin-rich devices – Pro, Pro Max, foldable – in the spotlight first. Let the hardcore upgrade crowd and early adopters pay top dollar. Then, as the hype settles, bring in the more accessible iPhone 18, 18e, and Air 2 for the mainstream and price-sensitive buyers.

From a spreadsheet angle, it’s elegant. From a user angle, especially if you were waiting on the “normal” iPhone 18 this year, it’s kind of annoying.

One important nuance: “no iPhone 18 this year” doesn’t mean Apple is skipping the iPhone 18 entirely or that the base model is somehow less important. In fact, leaks and analyst notes point to some meaningful upgrades lined up for that phone – they’re just not arriving on the same timeline as the Pro models.

Recent reports from KB Securities, via DigiTimes, say next year’s standard iPhone 18 is expected to ship with 12GB of RAM, specifically to support Apple’s new on-device AI model and a smarter, more capable Siri. That might not sound dramatic on paper, but for context, RAM has been one of the bottlenecks for advanced on-device AI features. Apple’s WWDC 2026 announcements leaned heavily into a more expressive, more accurate Siri and systemwide voice dictation improvements powered by this model. Giving the “regular” iPhone 18 12GB puts it much closer to Pro-class hardware in terms of AI capability, without an expected price bump, according to those same reports.

On the UI side, iOS 27 is already hinting at where Apple wants to go. Siri now appears as a glowing pill that emerges from the Dynamic Island, masking the actual cutout, and some reports suggest that on next-gen iPhones (likely including the 18 series), this could shift to a more minimal circular presentation. It’s a small design tweak, but it reinforces the idea that the next wave of iPhones is being built with “Siri as a presence” in mind, not just a voice that lives at the bottom of the display.

Put simply, when the base iPhone 18 finally arrives, it’s not expected to be a lazy spec bump. Apple seems to be positioning it as the “entry ticket” into its more ambitious, on-device AI world.

The flip side is that, visually, you probably shouldn’t expect a radical redesign. Current reporting indicates that Apple plans to stick with a 6.3-inch display for the regular iPhone 18 and 6.1 inches for the iPhone 18e, with overall design changes expected to be minimal. That tracks with Apple’s usual cadence: big aesthetic shifts every few years, with the in-between generations focusing on internals, cameras, and software-hardware integration.

So if you were daydreaming about a completely new silhouette for the base model, the more likely story for 2027 is “familiar exterior, much more capable interior.”

If you’re in the U.S., this staggered launch also changes the buying calculus a bit. The default advice for years has been: if you care about having the latest hardware for more than a few months, buy near launch. Carriers and retailers line up their biggest promotions around September and October, and you get the longest runway before that phone is “the old one.”

With the new schedule, that becomes more complicated. Imagine this:

  • You’re on an older device – say an iPhone 14 – and were planning to go for a non-Pro iPhone 18 this fall.
  • Now, your options are either:
    • Jump to an iPhone 18 Pro/Pro Max and spend more than you planned, or
    • Sit tight through another cycle and wait until early 2027 for the regular iPhone 18.

For some buyers, especially in the U.S., where carrier installments and trade-in deals are normalized, this might nudge them upward into Pro territory. You don’t want to wait, the base model you wanted doesn’t exist yet, the Pro is right there with all the AI bells and whistles… and amortized over 24 or 36 months, the monthly difference doesn’t feel huge.

For others, particularly people who consciously avoid Pro models because of size, price, or “I just don’t need that much phone,” this could feel like being sidelined for a season. If you bought, say, an iPhone 13 or 14 with the expectation of upgrading on a predictable three-year cycle, this shift basically asks you to stretch that plan.

There’s another group this affects too: people who time upgrades around big life or budget events – a contract ending, a job change, the U.S. holiday shopping season. Pushing the regular iPhone 18 to early 2027 bumps it out of the usual Black Friday and holiday deal window. You’ll still see deals on the Pro models, but the “new standard iPhone for everyone” will be coming after the holidays, not before.

Underneath all of this is a bigger story about how Apple sees the future of the iPhone lineup. The split calendar isn’t happening in a vacuum; it’s arriving in the same breath as:

  • Apple’s first foldable iPhone “Ultra” finally debuting alongside the Pro models.
  • A growing spread of models – Pro, Pro Max, Air, “e,” base – that need to fit into clear tiers.
  • Apple’s big bet on on-device AI and a new Siri that it wants to feel like a core reason to upgrade, not just an extra feature of iOS.

If you zoom out, it looks like Apple is trying to carve the lineup into three overlapping layers:

  • The halo devices: Pro, Pro Max, foldable Ultra. These get the earliest, flashiest launch window and headline new tech.
  • The mainstream devices: base iPhone 18 and 18e. These arrive later, carrying a lot of the same AI capabilities but in more accessible hardware and price brackets.
  • The value ladder: iPhone Air 2 and older models that stay in the lineup at reduced prices.

From that angle, delaying the base iPhone 18 isn’t Apple “forgetting” about regular buyers. It’s Apple repositioning them in the calendar – and, by extension, in its overall business story.

For you, as someone waiting for a normal, non-Pro iPhone 18 this year, it boils down to a very human question: how much does timing matter?

If your current phone is holding up, the early-2027 timeline might actually be a blessing in disguise. You’ll be stepping into a device that, if the leaks are right, carries Pro-grade RAM, full support for Apple’s most advanced on-device AI model, and a mature version of the new Siri experience, without paying Pro prices. You’re effectively getting the AI-first iPhone Apple has been talking up, in its most mainstream form.

If your current phone is on its last legs, the math changes. You may not want – or be able – to wait another six to nine months. In that case, your practical choices are:

  • Go Pro this year and lean into the early AI wave, plus whatever camera and display perks Apple adds to justify the higher tier.
  • Drop down to an older non-Pro model (17 series or earlier) with discounts, accepting that you’ll miss the first true “AI-baseline” generation on the regular models.
  • Or, of course, sit out the cycle entirely and live with a cracked screen and fading battery a little longer than you hoped.

What’s clear is that Apple is no longer designing the iPhone year for people who only think in September. It’s designing for a world where “new iPhone season” comes twice – once loud and flashy for the flagships, once a little later for everyone else.

So if you were waiting for iPhone 18 this year, you’re not wrong – you were just living in the old Apple calendar. On the new one, your box arrives with a spring 2027 delivery window.


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