Apple decided that the iPhone X – pronounced ‘iPhone 10’ was a new beginning for Apple’s mid-range smartphone, so jumped over iPhone 9. Yep, that’s right – there was no iPhone 9.
In 2017 Apple released the iPhone 8, then followed it up with the very high-end iPhone X (shown), skipping over the number 9 in the process.
Quite why it did this is an open question, but it was exactly the same for Microsoft when it wanted to reinvent Windows. We said goodbye to Windows 8 and hello to the shiny Windows 10, now superseded by Windows 11.
So was there anything like an iPhone 9? The answer to that was ‘yes, there was’ because the iPhone XR was, essentially a lesser version of the iPhone X and its follow up, the iPhone XS. So in a way, the iPhone XR was the iPhone 9.
The rumours back in 2018 were correct: “the iPhone XS will have a larger Max version… but there will also be a cheaper iPhone X-like iPhone 9, using some lower-end components. Here’s the rub: it might also be larger than the iPhone X.” And yes, that became iPhone XR, with a larger 6.1-inch LCD display versus a 5.8-inch OLED in the iPhone X.
However, the iPhone XR has long been consigned to the bin marked ‘no longer manufactured’. It could also be said that the 2020 iPhone SE also fitted into that iPhone 9 slot. But certainly not the 2022 iPhone SE given that it has some pretty advanced internals similar to the iPhone 13. That would be a bit of a stretch.
If you want a cheaper iPhone, the iPhone 16e is it now that the 2022 iPhone SE has been discontinued.
iPhone chronology (2017-present)
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
Also don’t forget to check out our guide to each and every currently available iPhone.
Read the full article here