Apple announces a new iPhone every fall. Most cycles follow a familiar rhythm: incremental camera improvements, modest chip gains, a new color or two. The iPhone 18 cycle, which is reportedly set to arrive in fall 2026 with select models following in early 2027, is shaping up differently. The leaks are more specific, the sources are more consistent, and the hardware changes being described are more fundamental than anything Apple has introduced in several years.
Five areas in particular have drawn the most credible and consistent reporting.
The A20 chip and what 2nm actually means for the iPhone 18 Pro
The processor is the headline. The A20 Pro chip expected to power the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max will reportedly be the first iPhone chip built on TSMC’s 2-nanometer fabrication process, a step forward from the 3-nanometer standard used in current devices. The shift to a smaller process node typically delivers meaningful gains in both performance and power efficiency without increasing the physical size of the chip.
The A20 Pro is also expected to use a packaging approach called Wafer-Level Multi-Chip Module, which places the processor and memory on the same wafer rather than connecting them through separate components. That architecture reduces the distance data has to travel between parts, with particular advantages expected for AI processing and high-end gaming. Analysts have also suggested the iPhone 18 could carry 12GB of RAM, up from current configurations.
Variable aperture cameras and a 24-megapixel front camera
Multiple leaks point to the iPhone 18 Pro Max introducing a rear camera with variable aperture, a capability drawn from professional DSLR and mirrorless systems. Variable aperture gives photographers meaningful control over depth of field and low-light performance in ways that software processing cannot fully replicate. The telephoto lenses on both Pro models are also rumored to gain a faster overall aperture, improving night shooting across the board.
Front cameras across most iPhone 18 models are expected to jump from 18 megapixels to 24 megapixels, with the exception of the entry-level 18E. That upgrade would bring the selfie camera closer to parity with the rear system in terms of raw resolution.
Battery life crosses 5,000 mAh
Leaks from the Chinese platform Weibo, corroborated by a separate source, suggest the iPhone 18 Pro will include a battery of at least 5,000 mAh. The specific figure reported is around 5,000 mAh for models with a physical SIM card slot and 5,200 mAh for eSIM-only configurations. The iPhone 17 Pro already ranked at the top of a recent comparison of battery life across 35 smartphones, and an increase of this size would extend that lead further.
Under-display Face ID and a smaller Dynamic Island
Reporting from The Information and Bloomberg both indicate that the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max will move Face ID sensors beneath the display, shrinking the Dynamic Island cutout considerably. One prominent leaker described the cutout as approximately 35% narrower than on current devices. Leaked prototype photos and screen protector images have appeared to support that description, making this one of the more visually documented rumors in the current cycle.
A split launch and new colors
Bloomberg reports that Apple is planning a staggered release. The Pro, Pro Max and a new foldable model are expected in fall 2026, while the base iPhone 18, the 18E and a possible second-generation Air follow in February or March 2027. Leaked color options include coffee brown, burgundy, purple and a possible deep red, though some of those may represent variations within a single color direction rather than entirely separate options.
Where the rumors leave room for caution
Not every signal points upward. Some reports suggest the base iPhone 18 may see specifications scaled back to reduce production costs, bringing it closer to the 18E in terms of performance. Potential OLED supply constraints could affect screen availability. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman has noted that the standard 18 Pro may receive incremental rather than dramatic updates, a shift from the more premium positioning the Pro line has historically held.
No pricing has surfaced. Apple’s fall event will deliver the first official confirmation of what the company has built.

