New iPhones are always safe contenders for our list of the best smartphones, though the latest rumours suggest that you might be in for a longer iPhone 18 release date wait than expected – with some cost-cutting thrown in.

According to posts from Weibo leaker Fixed Focus Digital, the iPhone 18 release date won’t see it launch alongside Apple’s usual autumn lineup (including the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max), and it could instead be pushed into early 2027.

The general consensus is that Apple will split its iPhone launches, with higher-end models like the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max arriving first in late 2026, followed by the standard iPhone 18 and 18e together in early 2027.

The same source also states that Apple is planning “manufacturing downgrades” across the iPhone 18. These are said to affect areas like production processes, chips, and memory, though the exact changes haven’t been detailed.

The goal appears to be cost control – and potentially closer alignment with the lower-cost future iPhone 18e. In fact, the two models are now expected to launch at the same time, rather than months apart, which could allow Apple to streamline how they’re built.

That would mark a notable shift, given that recent iPhone lineups have kept a clearer separation between the standard model and its cheaper counterpart. With the iPhone 17 and iPhone 17e, for example, differences reportedly include display features, camera hardware, battery life, and design elements like the Dynamic Island versus a notch.

If the latest reports are accurate, though, some of those distinctions could start to narrow – though it’s still unclear exactly which features might change on the iPhone 18. Apple will definitely need to keep some major differences between the two models, or risk cannibalising sales.

As for how reliable this all is, there is some credibility behind the source. The same leaker previously shared accurate details about the iPhone 17e retaining a notch design, when other rumours suggested it would adopt the Dynamic Island.

Still, even leakers with proven track records can’t replace official announcements, so take everything with a healthy dose of salt for the time being.

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