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The MacRumors Show: iPhone 18 Pro Has a Pricing Problem

On this week's episode of The MacRumors Show, we discuss potential price rises for the iPhone 18 lineup following Apple's wave of hikes yesterday, as well as plans for the Apple Watch Ultra 4 and camera-equipped AirPods.

Apple yesterday raised prices across most of its lineup, including HomePod mini, HomePod, Apple TV, the entire iPad line, the entire Mac line, and Vision Pro, following CEO Tim Cook's warning to The Wall Street Journal that hikes were "unavoidable" due to soaring memory and storage chip costs. Apple's online store was briefly taken offline before returning with the new pricing, with increases ranging from $30 on the ‌HomePod mini‌ to $1,300 on the high end Mac Studio, averaging $246.67 across the affected products.

The iPhone, AirPods, Studio Display, Apple Watch, and accessories such as the Apple Pencil appear to be the only product lines left unaffected. Separately, the 256GB Mac mini has returned to the lineup after disappearing earlier this year, now priced at $799, which is a $200 increase over its earlier price.

The same pressure is likely to hit the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max, which were already speculated to cost more than their predecessors before yesterday's increases. Speaking with the Wall Street Journal, Cook acknowledged Apple isn't immune to these cost pressures, and said clarity on iPhone pricing would come with the lineup's September launch.

Citing research firm TechInsights, the ‌Wall Street Journal‌ reported that DRAM and flash storage costs are projected to roughly quadruple by fall, pushing the iPhone 17 Pro's bill of materials from about $582 up 25% to around $726 for its successor. TechInsights has said Apple would need to raise the iPhone 18 Pro's price by about $270 to preserve current margins, though Apple's preference for standardized pricing makes a $1,299 starting price more likely on its own.

Factoring in the new camera system, which analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says could cost about 50% more than the previous generation, the ‌Wall Street Journal‌ estimates Apple could ultimately set the ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌'s starting price at $1,399 or higher, a $200 to $300 jump over the current model, with the iPhone 18 Pro Max likely starting $100 above that.

The ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ is rumored to keep the ‌iPhone 17 Pro‌'s aluminum build, with four new colors including Dark Cherry, a muted wine-red expected to be the signature shade. As with last year, there's likely no true black option. Weibo leaker Fixed Focus Digital recently warned the new colors could be prone to the same chipping and surface issues seen on last year's Cosmic Orange and Dark Blue, which Apple reportedly treats as a material characteristic rather than a defect.

The ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ and ‌iPhone 18 Pro‌ Max are expected to launch in September alongside Apple's first foldable iPhone, the "iPhone Ultra." Shipping could slip slightly later for the foldable. A Chinese leaker recently said any gap would be at most a month, and Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has reported the device remains on track for September, after Barclays analyst Tim Long earlier suggested shipments could slip to December. The foldable is expected to feature a 7.8-inch inner display, 5.5-inch cover display, the A20 chip and C2 modem, Touch ID instead of Face ID, two rear cameras, and a starting price of at least $2,000.

Gurman recently reported that the Apple Watch Ultra 4 and Apple Watch Series 12 will launch alongside the new iPhones. Little is known about the devices, though a faster chip seems highly likely given that both the Series 11 and Ultra 3 stuck with the S10 from the previous year. watchOS 27 will likely add new watch faces, including a variant of the Modular Ultra face.

For 2027, Apple is developing camera-equipped AirPods. The cameras, embedded in the AirPods' stems, are not designed for taking photos or video, and will instead feed information about the wearer's surroundings to Siri, which will be able to answer questions about objects and whatever the wearer is looking at, alongside contextual reminders and improved turn-by-turn directions. An included light will indicate to people nearby when the cameras are active. The AirPods were originally targeted for a 2026 launch, but Apple's broader AI struggles and the need to develop reliable object-identification models apparently pushed the timeline back.

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If you haven't already listened to the previous episode of The MacRumors Show, catch up to hear our further discussion about WWDC 2026 and iOS 27, macOS Golden Gate, and Apple's other new software updates coming this fall.

Subscribe to ‌The MacRumors Show‌ for new episodes every week, where we discuss some of the topical news breaking here on MacRumors, often joined by interesting guests such as Kayci Lacob, Kevin Nether, John Gruber, Mark Gurman, Jon Prosser, Luke Miani, Matthew Cassinelli, Brian Tong, Quinn Nelson, Jared Nelson, Eli Hodapp, Mike Bell, Sara Dietschy, iJustine, Jon Rettinger, Andru Edwards, Arnold Kim, Ben Sullins, Marcus Kane, Christopher Lawley, Frank McShan, David Lewis, Tyler Stalman, Sam Kohl, Federico Viticci, Thomas Frank, Jonathan Morrison, Ross Young, Ian Zelbo, and Rene Ritchie.

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Related Roundup: iPhone 18 Pro

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Top Rated Comments

Marrakas Avatar
1 day ago at 09:32 am
I wonder if we will ever reach a point where people just decide the price is too high, and Apple start losing customers.

It hasn't happened yet, so it makes me wonder if it ever will.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
23 hours ago at 10:45 am
Roughy two-thirds (67.5%) of 2025 Apple’s iPhone sales were to consumers with an annual income of $75,000 or less. These income groups are absolutely getting hammered these days by the price of food, housing, automobiles, auto insurance, healthcare insurance, diminishing employment benefits, lack of employment mobility, etc.

Significantly increasing iPhone prices, at a time when most of its customers are being squeezed in a financial vice, seems incredibly short-sighted and, frankly, stupid. Maybe Apple hopes to make up the lost sales in increasing Applecare contracts that people will buy as a hedge when keeping their current devices.

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Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
23 hours ago at 10:22 am
Apple can to hell. I won't be buying anything at these prices.

Normal people can't afford these things anymore. The whole world is squeezing us from every direction AND WE"VE HAD ENOUGH.

I WON'T BE BUYING A GOD DAMNED THING.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
22 hours ago at 11:20 am

IMO the upper crust lol that buys Apple products do not care about a $50-100-200 price increase. They are buying the latest and greatest and that’s that.
Although I'm part of that target group and have been an Apple fanboy since 1984, Timmy Apple has cured me of my FOMO. My $800 AW Ultra has suddenly become obsolete after 3 yrs, and the obscene AI chase has no real practical/urgent use case scenario for me personally. AI on the personal level seems to me to be a solution looking for a problem to solve.

I’m done with being on the cutting edge. It’s not the $$$ for me, it’s the lack of need. I’ve just updated all my devices to the latest so I’ll be on the sidelines for the foreseeable future (unless the iPhone foldable is irresistible).
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 day ago at 09:39 am
I wonder if phone carriers will still have the “on us” type promotion. If that’s the case, the price of the phone doesn’t matter much. But I could also see carriers coming out with a new plan to make up the difference and only that plan will get the on us promo.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
JPack Avatar
1 day ago at 09:38 am
The problem is more about mainstream devices like base iPhone 18/19 and 18e/19e as those consumers will really feel the pain.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)