iPhone Air hands-on: ultra-thin precursor to Apple’s upcoming foldable

iPhone Air hands-on: ultra-thin precursor to Apple’s upcoming foldable

Apple’s new iPhone Air is a bold rethink of the company’s middle-sized model: an ultra-thin 5.6mm titanium-bodied handset that looks, in many ways, like half of a future foldable. It pairs a 6.5-inch ProMotion OLED display with the A19 Pro chip, a 48MP single rear camera, and a weight of roughly 165g. The base model starts at $999.

Key specs

  • Thickness: 5.6mm
  • Display: 6.5″ OLED with ProMotion (120Hz)
  • Chip: A19 Pro
  • Rear camera: 48MP single lens (up to 4x zoom)
  • Front camera: 18MP with Center Stage
  • Frame: Titanium, ~165g
  • Battery: Apple claims up to 27 hours continuous video playback (real-world tests pending)
  • Price & Availability: Starts at $999 (256 GB). Pre-orders begin Sep 12; on sale Sep 19.

Why it matters

The Air’s extreme thinness and design choices — fewer cameras, lighter battery, polished titanium frame — make sense if Apple is iterating toward a foldable: pair two slim halves, add a hinge and flexible display, and you have a foldable that still carries Apple’s design language. Observers note similarities to Samsung’s recent S25 Edge and the Galaxy Z Fold 7.

First impressions

In-hand, the Air feels exceptionally light and premium. The camera “plateau” is subtle, the display is vivid with ProMotion, and the new Center Stage front camera makes framing for photo/video easy. The titanium frame looks shiny and durable, though it can attract fingerprints. Battery life and real-world camera performance still need extended testing.

Where to learn more / shop

Official Apple event and product details (watch the September event): Apple Events

Shop / compare on Amazon (search pages with affiliate tag):

Join the conversation

Do you prefer slimmer phones with fewer cameras or thicker phones with more features? Leave a comment below — and follow for updates and full reviews once long-term testing is complete.

Note: This summary avoids links to the original Engadget RSS review; it references primary event coverage and shopping links instead.

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