The iPhone 18 Pro's biggest design upgrade is proof Apple won't try harder

The 35% Dynamic Island trim says everything about how Apple does upgrades.

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iPhone 18 leaked renders
iPhone 18 leaked renders. | Image by MacRumors
Apple has spent years proving that it doesn't need to reinvent the iPhone to keep selling millions of them. And with the latest iPhone 18 Pro leak, the company's playbook is becoming clearer than ever.

A smaller Dynamic Island, confirmed by screen protectors


A new report shared fresh images of alleged iPhone 18 Pro screen protectors, and they tell us what we've been hearing about for weeks now: the Dynamic Island is getting noticeably smaller. The cutout reportedly comes in at just 13.49 mm wide, down from 20.76 mm on the iPhone 17 Pro. That's roughly a 35% reduction.

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How? Apple is apparently moving the Face ID flood illuminator under the display, which frees up space on the left side of the pill-shaped cutout. And that's about all that's changing up front. The bezels stay the same, the overall front design stays the same, and the back apparently isn't getting a makeover either.

The rumor rollercoaster that got us here


If you've been following the iPhone 18 Pro leak cycle, you already know how messy it's been. Early rumors promised a punch-hole design with under-display Face ID. That didn't pan out. Then a reliable leaker claimed Apple would reuse iPhone 17 Pro molds entirely, with zero Dynamic Island changes.

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Now we've landed somewhere in between. Prominent leaker Ice Universe kicked things off by sharing comparison images of the shrunken cutout, and these screen protector photos only add more weight to that. The fact that accessory makers are already tooling for this design tells you they're pretty confident it's happening.

There's still some debate about which models actually get the smaller Dynamic Island, though. Earlier leaks pointed to this being Pro-exclusive, but Ice Universe suggested it could come to the entire iPhone 18 lineup. If that pans out, it would break Apple's usual playbook of saving design changes for the priciest phones first.

Apple's "just enough" formula keeps on working


Here's what should frustrate anyone hoping for bold smartphone design: this strategy works. A recent poll of ours found that over 70% of our readers don't feel the iPhone 18 Pro needs a major redesign. Apple absolutely knows that, which is exactly why it can treat a slightly smaller pill cutout as the headline design change for its $1,000+ phone.

Meanwhile, nearly every Android flagship has been rocking simple punch-hole cameras for years now. The Dynamic Island was clever when it launched in 2022, but the fact that Apple is still working on shrinking it in 2026 while competitors moved past this problem ages ago says a lot.

The way I see it, Apple isn't behind because it can't figure this out, but because it doesn't have to rush.

And honestly, that's what makes this whole saga so interesting. Apple turned a technical limitation (not being able to hide Face ID sensors under the display) into a feature that people actually enjoy using. The Dynamic Island shows you notifications, timers, music controls, and more, all in a way that makes the cutout feel intentional rather than like a compromise. So when Apple finally shrinks it, the company gets to position that as a generous upgrade instead of playing catch-up.

The real upgrades are hiding under the hood


To be fair, the iPhone 18 Pro isn't just about a trimmed Dynamic Island. The phone is expected to pack the A20 Pro chip built on TSMC's 2nm process, a larger battery, a variable aperture on the main camera, and Apple's second-gen in-house modem. Those upgrades will matter way more in daily use than a few millimeters shaved off a display cutout.

Apple is also reportedly keeping pricing steady despite rising RAM costs and competitors like Samsung hiking prices across the Galaxy S26 lineup, as per the rumors. If that holds, the iPhone 18 Pro becomes an even easier sell, because most buyers care a lot more about what their phone can do than what the front of it looks like.

What are your thoughts on Apple shrinking the Dynamic Island on the iPhone 18 Pro?
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Apple has us trained, and we keep showing up


That's the broader point here. Apple bundles genuinely solid internal improvements with one minor visual tweak and sells the whole package as the next big thing. It keeps upgrade cycles predictable, manufacturing costs manageable, and customers coming back on schedule. I honestly can't blame them.

Most people picking up the iPhone 18 Pro will be coming from an iPhone 15 Pro or older, and for them, the jump will feel huge regardless of whether the Dynamic Island lost a few millimeters. But the frustrating part is that Apple has trained us to celebrate what should have been standard years ago.

A smaller cutout isn't innovation. It's housekeeping. But when you're Apple, even housekeeping gets a standing ovation...I guess.
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