iPhone 16 and 16 Pro review: A worthy upgrade after three years

Enlarge / From left to right: iPhone 16, iPhone 16 Plus, iPhone 16 Pro, and iPhone 16 Pro Max.

Samuel Axon

With the iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Pro, it has never been clearer that the cycle of radical invention has given way to iterative updates—not just on an annual basis, but a monthly one, due to delayed features coming in later software updates during the iOS 18 cycle.

The final form of the smartphone as we know it has been reached and nearly perfected. Nothing fundamental is changing anymore. But if you take the long view of just a few years, you can still see some impressive progress.

Year after year, the iPhone 16 is Apple’s most lightly iterative flagship phone release ever. But if you’re upgrading from an iPhone 13 or earlier, you’ll still feel like you’re graduating to a whole new experience.

A note on Apple Intelligence

Specs at a glance: iPhone 16, 16 Plus, 16 Pro, 16 Pro Max
Screen 2556×1179 6.1-inch (16), 2796×1290 6.7-inch (16 Plus), 2622×1206 6.3-inch (16 Pro), 2868×1320 6.9-inch (16 Pro Max) OLED
OS iOS 18
CPU Apple A18 Bionic (16 & 16 Plus), Apple A18 Pro (16 Pro & 16 Pro Max)
RAM 8GB
GPU Apple A18 Bionic (16 & 16 Plus), Apple A18 Pro (16 Pro & 16 Pro Max)
Storage 128, 256, or 512GB for 16 & 16 Plus; 128, 256, 512GB, or 1TB for 16 Pro; 256, 512GB, or 1TB for 16 Pro Max
Networking Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.3, 5G
Ports USB-C
Camera 48 MP main camera and 12 MP ultra-wide (16 & 16 Plus); 48 MP main camera, 48 MP ultra-wide, 12 MP 5x telephoto (16 Pro & Pro Max); 12 MP front camera; 4K HDR video
Size 147.6×71.6×7.8 mm (16), 160.9×77.8×7.8 mm (16 Plus), 149.6×71.5×8.25 mm (16 Pro), 163×77.6×8.25 mm (16 Pro Max)
Weight 170 g (16), 199 g (16 Plus), 199 g (16 Pro), 227 g (16 Pro Max)
Starting price $799 (16), $899 (16 Plus), $999 (16 Pro), $1,199 (16 Pro Max)
Other perks MagSafe, Face ID, Dynamic Island, Camera Control, always-on display (Pro models)

Much of Apple’s marketing messaging going into this launch has focused on Apple Intelligence, a suite of generative AI features that will work only on the new iPhone 16 line and last year’s iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max. However, none of those features is available yet.

We’re not in the habit of reviewing phones for what they could do rather than what they currently do, so I won’t be talking about Apple Intelligence in this review. When it’s ready for a public release, you can expect to see us covering it closely—the same goes for other delayed features in these phones.

For now, it’s just about what you get out of the box when you buy an iPhone 16 today.

Specifications

Let’s review the specs of the iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Pro as they differ from last year’s phones.

Display

Nothing at all has changed about the iPhone 16’s display. It still comes in two sizes: 6.1 inches at 2,446×1,179 pixels and 6.7 inches at 2,796×1,290. Both clock in at 460 ppi, both are OLED with inky blacks and the maximum brightness to properly handle Dolby Vision HDR. (Apple claims 1,000 nits typical max brightness, 1,600 nits peak, and 2,000 nits peak outdoors.)

The Pro phones are almost the same as last year. Apple has just barely increased the footprints of these two phones while further slimming the already slim bezels, so the screens are just a little bit bigger than before: 6.3 inches at 2,622×1,206 and 6.9 inches at 2,878×1,320.

The expansive screens are subtly nice, but you probably wouldn’t notice they were bigger without doing a side-by-side comparison.

No one was looking for changes in the screens; these are still without question the best displays in consumer electronics outside of the priciest of high-end OLED TVs—and even with those, it’s close. If it ain’t broke, definitely don’t fix it.

The display is where two of the key distinctions between the 16 and 16 Pro lie, though. The 16 Pro has a variable refresh rate screen that can go up to 120 Hz, whereas the iPhone 16 caps out at 60 Hz. This is hardly an essential feature—it’s the sort of thing you don’t even notice or know you want until you’ve upgraded—but the iPhone 16’s 60 Hz screen stands out as a bit behind competitors on the Android side, where 120 Hz is becoming standard even at middle price points.

On the left is the previous-generation Pro screen, and on the right is the new one. Can you tell the screen is bigger? It's barely perceptible, but the bezels are a bit smaller.
Enlarge / On the left is the previous-generation Pro screen, and on the right is the new one. Can you tell the screen is bigger? It’s barely perceptible, but the bezels are a bit smaller.

Samuel Axon

Additionally, the Pro phones are still the only ones to include always-on displays. Again, this is not a critical feature. Sometimes I even turn it off. But it is nonetheless another thing that is standard with the iPhone’s competitors.

Silicon

The iPhone 16 chip jumps two whole generations, from the A16 to the new A18, which has a 6-core CPU (4 efficiency, 2 performance) and a 5-core GPU. In addition to increased performance, the A18 promises up to around 30 percent less power usage for the same performance as the chip that was in the iPhone 15.

There’s also the 16-core Neural Engine, which is primed for the much-hyped Apple Intelligence, when it materializes next month. Notably, Apple determined that the chip in last year’s iPhone 15 was inadequate for Apple Intelligence, so this is the first non-Pro iPhone that promises to support those features.

That’s thanks also in part to a bump in RAM from 6GB to 8GB—now the regular iPhone and the Pro have the same amount.

Speaking of the Pro, it has a variant of the A18 called the A18 Pro. For a bit, Apple was shipping its Pro phones with the latest chips and letting the standard iPhone run a year behind, but the company has moved to the same approach that it uses in the Mac lineup: there are standard and high-end versions of the new generation of iPhone chips.

The CPU on the A18 Pro has the same number of performance and efficiency cores as the regular A18, but there’s one additional GPU core. Apple is touting the high-end 3D gaming features of this chip, promising double the speed for hardware-accelerated ray-tracing compared to the previous chip, for example. If only there were games to take advantage of that!

The A18 Pro also has an updated image signal processor and video encoder that supports several of the new camera features.

Other notable specs

Most of the other spec changes are in the cameras, which I’ll talk about in the cameras section of this review.

That said, it’s worth noting that all the new iPhones have Wi-Fi 7 support and a faster 5G modem. And thanks to larger batteries and the efficiency of the A18 and A18 Pro, the phones all promise just a little bit longer battery life than before.

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