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AppleiPhoneMobileTech

iPhone 18 Pro tipped to get 35% smaller Dynamic Island cutout

Apple’s iPhone 18 Pro is back in the spotlight as fresh leaks suggest a dramatically smaller Dynamic Island driven by under‑display Face ID upgrades.

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Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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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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Mar 30, 2026, 1:33 PM EDT
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rumored smaller iPhone 18 Pro Dynamic Island design.
Image: @UniverseIce on X/Twitter
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Apple looks set to give the Dynamic Island its first big visual makeover, and it’s happening with the iPhone 18 Pro. Based on a wave of new leaks, the cutout at the top of the display — which has defined the “face” of recent iPhones — is about to get noticeably smaller, thanks to Apple quietly moving more of its Face ID hardware under the screen.

If you’ve seen the latest image doing the rounds on X from the account @earlyappleleaks, you’ll know why this story suddenly blew up. The photo allegedly shows an iPhone 18 Pro prototype with another iPhone’s flashlight shining through the display, revealing a tiny circular punch‑hole under the glass. That small circle is believed to be a relocated Face ID sensor, which would let Apple shrink the physical Dynamic Island cutout significantly compared to today’s models. The leaker behind this image is still new and unproven, so on its own, it wouldn’t be enough to trust. But it didn’t stay “on its own” for long.

Shortly after that prototype photo appeared, Ice Universe — a much more established leaker with a solid track record on Apple and Samsung hardware — posted pictures of what are claimed to be iPhone 18 Pro screen protectors. The cutouts on those protectors are dramatically smaller than what you’d see on an iPhone 16 or even the upcoming iPhone 17 series, and they line up with the idea that the bulk of the Face ID array is now hidden under the panel. That’s important because accessory makers don’t usually commit to cutting tempered glass in a new shape unless they’re pretty confident in Apple’s final design.

Then there’s Majin Bu, another familiar name in the Apple leak space, who chimed in with a more concrete number: according to them, the Dynamic Island on iPhone 18 Pro could shrink by as much as 35 percent compared to the iPhone 17 Pro. That isn’t just a slight trim around the edges — on a display you stare at all day, a one‑third reduction is visually obvious. If you’ve been holding onto an older device because you didn’t like how large the Dynamic Island cutout looked, this might be the first version that actually tempts you to upgrade.

As always with pre‑launch Apple hardware, not everyone has been on the same page. Some earlier reports suggested the Dynamic Island might not change at all this generation, casting doubt on the under‑display Face ID timeline. But as more images and accessory leaks pile up, the balance of evidence now leans toward Apple going ahead with the smaller cutout on the 18 Pro. It’s the classic Apple rumor arc: early skepticism, then a slow drip of matching parts and photos until the new design starts to feel inevitable.

One interesting detail from Ice Universe is that this might not be just a “Pro‑only” flex. They’ve claimed that the smaller Dynamic Island will roll out across the entire iPhone 18 lineup, not just the Pro models, while the bezels themselves stay basically the same as on the iPhone 17 family. If that holds, Apple would be using iPhone 18 as a sort of clean‑up generation for the front of the phone: same overall frame and bezel look, but a much tidier cutout that gives you a bit more uninterrupted screen real estate.

Now, does a smaller Dynamic Island actually change how you use the phone? Day to day, probably not in a dramatic way. The software “island” that expands for timers, music, calls, and so on will keep behaving as it does now — that’s all UI and animation. What changes is the underlying hardware footprint. Less dead space at the top means a slightly more immersive feel when you’re watching full‑screen video, gaming, or just enjoying wallpapers that don’t have a big chunk missing from the middle. For a lot of users, it’s not about new features; it’s about the phone looking cleaner and more modern.

It’s also a clear stepping stone on Apple’s longer‑term roadmap. Moving parts of the TrueDepth system under the display is a necessary intermediate step on the way to either a single tiny camera hole or a completely all‑screen front with everything hidden. Other manufacturers have already experimented with under‑display cameras, but often with big trade‑offs in photo quality; Apple tends to wait until it can keep Face ID performance at a level that doesn’t feel like a regression. The 18 Pro leaks suggest Cupertino is finally confident enough in under‑panel tech to start that transition.

Timing‑wise, none of this is expected to come out of nowhere. Apple is rumored to be lining up the iPhone 18 Pro for a fall launch, announced alongside its first foldable iPhone, while the standard iPhone 18 models are said to follow early next year as part of a new split‑cycle release strategy. That means this smaller Dynamic Island will likely debut as one of several design talking points, right next to whatever wild folding hardware Apple brings on stage. You can almost hear the keynote line now about “pushing the boundaries of an all‑screen future” as the camera pans slowly across that tighter, more minimal cutout.

Of course, this is still leak season, not launch day. Until Apple walks onto a stage and shows the iPhone 18 Pro for real, there’s always a chance details change — especially with under‑display components, which are notoriously tricky to perfect at scale. But when you have prototype photos, third‑party screen protectors, and multiple well‑known leakers all pointing in the same direction, it usually means we’re looking at the rough shape of the real thing. If you’ve been waiting for the Dynamic Island to shrink before jumping back into the Pro lineup, 2026 might finally be your year.


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