Apple fans will reportedly have four options to choose from – the standard iPhone 17, an ultra–thin iPhone 17 ‘Air’, and the more expensive iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max, which could cost £1,250.
iPhone 17 Air, also referred to as ‘iPhone 17 Slim’, is expected to be a lighter, thinner option – rivalling the Galaxy Edge recently released by Samsung.
iPhone 17 Air is rumoured to be 0.2–inch (5.5mm), which would make it the thinnest iPhone ever.
It is expected to be a lighter, thinner option with less powerful hardware to tie in with ‘Air’ MacBook computers, which are touted for their slimline design.
The standard iPhone 17 will have two camera lenses in a vertical alignment, one on top of the other, but the other three options will have a rectangular camera bar across the back – similar to Google’s Pixel phones.
It suggests Apple is needing more space on the back of the phone to pack in camera components for its high–end handsets.
iPhone 17 will also have aluminum frame with a glass back, enhanced cameras, and a powerful A19 chip for advanced AI tasks.
In recent years, new iPhones have gone on sale on a Friday about 10 days after they were announced, so if this is anything to go by, iPhone 17 will arrive on shelves September 19.
Apple is also expected to announce the Apple Watch Series 11 on September 9, potentially with an improved health monitoring features and battery life.
The tech giant will also pull back the curtain on a new version of the Apple Watch Ultra, its high–end smartwatch line first announced in 2022.
The Apple Watch Ultra 3 will reportedly come with emergency satellite messaging, letting people get help in an emergency when there’s no Wi–Fi.
It may also announce the third–generation AirPods Pro, which may come with in‑ear heart‑rate tracking and temperature detection.
Apple is also said to be preparing its first ever foldable device, although this won’t be released until 2026 at the earliest, industry experts believe.
iPhone Fold, as its rumoured to be called, will have four cameras, a barely–noticeable crease and Touch ID, according to Apple expert Mark Gurman.
But Apple’s first foldable ‘won’t break any technological barriers or redefine the category’, he said in a recent issue of his Power On newsletter.
Some of the other biggest smartphone makers in the world – Motorola, Huawei, Oppo, Xiaomi and Vivo – have released foldables, but Apple has not.
Samsung has ‘pioneered and dominated’ the foldable category and one of the first to embrace the hinge, releasing the original Galaxy Fold back in 2019.
But the first ever foldable smartphone was actually the FlexPai from a Chinese company called Royole, first released in 2018.