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WSJ: Apple Weighing Price Hikes for iPhone 17 Lineup Without Blaming Tariffs

Apple is considering raising prices for its upcoming iPhone 17 models set to release this fall, according to people familiar with the matter cited by The Wall Street Journal.

iPhone 17 Pro Blue Feature Tighter Crop
The company reportedly aims to pair the potential price hikes with new features and design changes to justify the increased cost to consumers, rather than attributing them to U.S. tariffs on goods from China.

The U.S. and China recently agreed to suspend most tariffs imposed during their trade dispute, but a 20% tariff implemented by President Trump on Chinese goods remains in place and covers smartphones.

The WSJ report notes that Apple is particularly concerned about avoiding any appearance that price increases are directly related to tariffs. From the report:

The people familiar with the supply chain said Apple would have trouble making up for China tariff costs solely by seeking further savings from its suppliers, meaning a hit to its profit margin was likely unless it could raise prices.

At the same time, company executives are wary of blaming increases on tariffs. When a news report in April said Amazon might show the impact of tariffs to its shoppers, the White House called it a hostile act and Amazon quickly said the idea "was never approved and is not going to happen."

These circumstances have led Apple to look at what supply-chain insiders described as the least-bad choice: raising prices on the new iPhones to preserve profit and finding reasons other than tariffs to explain the move. It couldn't be determined what new features Apple may offer to help justify price increases.

Amid growing pressure over U.S.-China trade tensions, Apple has built up inventory and shifted manufacturing for the U.S. market to India. Apple CEO Tim Cook stated earlier this month that a majority of iPhones shipped to the U.S. in the April-June quarter would come from India.

However, Chinese factories will continue to handle most production for Apple's high-end Pro and Pro Max models, as India's infrastructure and technical capabilities aren't yet sufficient to support mass production at China's scale.

The upcoming iPhone lineup, expected to be called iPhone 17, is expected to include an all-new ultra-thin iPhone 17 Air, which replaces the Plus model in Apple's lineup. Current iPhone models range from the base iPhone 16 starting at $799 to the iPhone 16 Pro Max at $1,199.

Related Roundups: iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone Air
Related Forum: iPhone

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Top Rated Comments

Mrkevinfinnerty Avatar
15 months ago

The company reportedly aims to pair the potential price hikes with new features and design changes to justify the increased cost to consumers, rather than attributing them to U.S. tariffs on goods from China.
Look we've changed the camera layout. +$150.
Score: 27 Votes (Like | Disagree)
crisneat Avatar
15 months ago
Honestly, raising prices for the iPhone 17 sounds risk. People are already stretched thin with inflation, and iPhones aren’t cheap. If the upgrades aren’t groundbreaking, customers might just stick with their current phones longer or buy older models.
Meanwhile, other brands are offering serious competition at lower prices. If Apple keeps pushing up costs they might lose some ground especially in markets where budget matters more.
Score: 22 Votes (Like | Disagree)
15 months ago
Read the room Apple. I'm in Europe, their phones are really overpriced here. I'm ready to jump ship if they get more expensive.
Macs on the other hand are great value, they are unmatched considering what they offer.
Phones? It's really the software now... Android cameras in many cases surpassed Apple, Snapdragon chips are neck and neck, software support detto. And the Ai tools are vastly superior. The iPhone has competition.
Score: 21 Votes (Like | Disagree)
iZac Avatar
15 months ago
And I'm sure this will be a global increase, not a domestic one. Which funnily enough means iPhones sold outside the US will be even more profitable for Apple!
Score: 21 Votes (Like | Disagree)
15 months ago
First it was Covid that companies blamed for price increases and now tarriffs. I just don’t buy it. After Covid was over prices never really came back down. US/China already agreed to significantly reduce tariff's last night. So, enough of the excuses to raise prices.

Consumers need to push back on this stuff. Stop buying and prices go down. Accept higher prices and they stay and then go up again. Consumers own the market, not businesses.
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
15 months ago
If they increase prices globally instead of only in the US, I might be done with Apple.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)