·  ·  · 

iPhone 18 on Nov. 12, 2025: Apple tipped to drop two‑tone back, test punch‑hole + under‑display Face ID, and reshuffle the 2026 lineup

November 12, 2025
iPhone 18 on Nov. 12, 2025: Apple tipped to drop two‑tone back, test punch‑hole + under‑display Face ID, and reshuffle the 2026 lineup
  • More uniform back: Multiple reports say Apple is moving away from the iPhone 17 Pro’s two‑tone rear to a single, uniform finish on at least the iPhone 18 Pro models. The change reportedly comes from a new rear‑glass process that minimizes the color difference between the glass cutout and the aluminum panel. [1]
  • Front design in flux: For 2026’s iPhone 18 Pro, some leakers still expect under‑display Face ID with only a small punch‑hole for the selfie camera; others now forecast a smaller hole‑punch without under‑display Face ID in 2026. [2]
  • All‑screen milestone in 2027: The 20th‑anniversary iPhone (2027) is again rumored to hide the selfie camera under the display for a truly bezel‑free look. [3]
  • Lineup shake‑up (today’s news context): Following The Information’s reporting, major outlets note iPhone Air 2 is delayed, with Apple now eyeing spring 2027—leaving fall 2026 focused on iPhone 18 Pro, 18 Pro Max, and a foldable iPhone if plans hold. [4]
  • Foldable optics rumor: JP Morgan–sourced notes indicate Apple’s first foldable could use a 24MP under‑display camera, far above today’s typical 4–8MP UDCs. [5]

What’s new today (Nov. 12, 2025)

The Verge updated its coverage to reflect The Information’s follow‑up: iPhone Air 2 has been pushed past fall 2026 and is now “likely” spring 2027, in part to add a second rear camera. That sequencing—Pro and Fold in fall 2026, base iPhone 18/18e (and possibly the revised Air) in spring 2027—would make next fall’s lineup Apple’s most unusual in years. [6]

Reuters also summarized the delay off The Information’s reporting, underlining weak demand for the first‑gen Air and Apple’s silence on the matter. [7]

9to5Mac’s analysis lays out the implication: unless Apple pulls the base iPhone 18 back into fall, only three models might arrive next September—iPhone 18 Pro, 18 Pro Max, and iPhone Fold—which would push the entry price higher than usual. [8]


The rear design: goodbye two‑tone, hello uniform back

The iPhone 17 Pro family introduced an aluminum chassis with a glass cutout around MagSafe hardware, creating a subtle two‑tone effect. For iPhone 18 Pro, leaker Instant Digital (Weibo) says Apple is adopting a new rear‑glass process that makes the finish appear more seamless across materials. AppleInsider rates this “Possible,” while MacRumors echoes the claim of a more unified look. [9]

A separate rumor roundup (Wccftech) adds color testing (brown/purple/burgundy) and reiterates that Apple is iterating on the Pro hardware rather than overhauling it externally—though some whispers go further (e.g., translucent elements) and should be treated as speculative. [10]


The front: smaller cutout in 2026, invisible camera in 2027?

Two tracks have emerged:

  1. 2026 iPhone 18 Pro (front)
    • Under‑display Face ID with a small punch‑hole for the selfie camera remains a leading scenario in long‑running supply‑chain chatter. Earlier reports this year suggested Face ID hardware moves under the screen while the selfie camera remains visible. [11]
    • However, newer briefings point to Apple using HIAA (hole‑in‑active‑area) OLED tech to shrink the camera opening in 2026—without fully hiding Face ID yet. That would still reduce the visual footprint versus today’s Dynamic Island. [12]
  2. 2027 iPhone (20th anniversary)
    • Multiple outlets now align on Apple burying the selfie camera under the display in 2027, delivering an all‑screen iPhone with no visible cutouts when idle. Today’s note flow re‑ups that timeline. [13]

Why the caution? Under‑display cameras traditionally suffer from light loss and image distortion; Apple suppliers like LG Innotek are said to be developing freeform optics to compensate—one reason analysts believe Apple is staggering Face ID vs. camera timelines across 2026–2027. [14]


Lineup and timing: how the Air 2 delay reshapes 2026–2027

  • Air 2 delay: Apple has reportedly pulled iPhone Air 2 from fall 2026, now targeting spring 2027; production of the current Air is sharply scaled back. The change appears aimed at adding a second rear camera after critiques of the single‑lens Air. [15]
  • Fall 2026: Expect iPhone 18 Pro, iPhone 18 Pro Max, and a foldable iPhone if plans hold. That could temporarily raise the “entry” price tier each fall. [16]
  • Spring 2027: Base iPhone 18, iPhone 18e, and iPhone Air 2 are the models most often mentioned for this window. Apple has not confirmed any of these plans. [17]

Foldable iPhone camera rumor: a 24MP under‑display leap

While not an iPhone 18, Apple’s first foldable, tipped for fall 2026, continues to pick up camera chatter. A JP Morgan equity note (reported by MacRumors) points to an industry‑first 24MP under‑display camera inside the foldable’s main screen—far higher resolution than typical UDCs used elsewhere—though editorial skepticism remains about image quality. [18]


Other iPhone 18 Pro rumors to watch

  • Sizes: Pro models are expected to retain ~6.3‑inch and ~6.9‑inch displays, similar to iPhone 17 Pro/Pro Max. [19]
  • Silicon & modem: An A20‑class chip fabricated on TSMC 2nm and Apple’s next‑gen C2 modem are making the rounds in rumor roundups; as always, treat pre‑announcements cautiously. [20]

What this means for buyers

If you prefer the cleanest back design, waiting for iPhone 18 Pro could deliver exactly that. If you care most about a front that “disappears,” the 2026 Pro phones may reduce the cutout size—but the fullly invisible selfie camera isn’t expected until 2027, according to today’s round of corroborating reports. And if you were eyeing a second‑gen iPhone Air, planning cycles now point to spring 2027, not next fall. [21]


FAQ

Will iPhone 18 Pro have under‑display Face ID?
Most recent briefings say yes for 2026, but with a visible (smaller) punch‑hole for the selfie camera. Some sources still expect under‑display Face ID and a small punch‑hole in 2026; others now suggest only the punch‑hole in 2026, with the selfie camera moving under‑display in 2027. [22]

Is Apple really ditching the two‑tone back?
That’s the current consensus from AppleInsider/MacRumors reporting out of Weibo: a more uniform back is planned for iPhone 18 Pro. [23]

What’s HIAA and why does it matter?
HIAA (hole‑in‑active‑area) is a technique to laser‑drill a tiny aperture in the OLED’s active pixel area so the camera sees through fewer layers, helping shrink the visible cutout and improve clarity. It’s a likely stepping stone before a fully hidden selfie camera. [24]

When are the next iPhones coming?
Rumor timelines today: Pro + Fold in fall 2026, then base iPhone 18/18e and the delayed Air 2 in spring 2027. Apple has not announced any dates. [25]


Sources & further reading

  • Apple to unify iPhone 18 back design — AppleInsider; MacRumors; Wccftech. [26]
  • Under‑display camera & all‑screen 2027 iPhone — Nasdaq/RTTNews; MacRumors. [27]
  • iPhone Air 2 delay and lineup implications — The Verge (updated Nov. 11); Reuters; 9to5Mac analysis. [28]
  • Foldable iPhone 24MP UDC — MacRumors; Tom’s Guide. [29]
BREAKING: Apple's 2026 Products LEAKED - 20 NEW Devices!

References

1. appleinsider.com, 2. www.macrumors.com, 3. www.nasdaq.com, 4. www.theverge.com, 5. www.macrumors.com, 6. www.theverge.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. 9to5mac.com, 9. appleinsider.com, 10. wccftech.com, 11. www.macrumors.com, 12. www.macrumors.com, 13. www.nasdaq.com, 14. www.nasdaq.com, 15. www.theverge.com, 16. 9to5mac.com, 17. 9to5mac.com, 18. www.macrumors.com, 19. wccftech.com, 20. wccftech.com, 21. appleinsider.com, 22. www.macrumors.com, 23. appleinsider.com, 24. www.macrumors.com, 25. 9to5mac.com, 26. appleinsider.com, 27. www.nasdaq.com, 28. www.theverge.com, 29. www.macrumors.com

Technology News

  • Dan Ives' bull case for Tesla and Nvidia: AI, robotics, and the next trillion-dollar wave
    November 14, 2025, 3:54 AM EST. Wedbush analyst Dan Ives lays out a bullish case for Tesla and Nvidia, calling Tesla's AI chapter the most important in its history and Nvidia the 'godfather' of AI. He argues Tesla could own a large slice of the autonomous landscape over the next decade, with robotics and Autopilot shaping a multi-trillion-dollar future. For Nvidia, he sees demand vastly outpacing supply (10:1), with a potential market cap surge to about $6 trillion by 2026 and a continued upcycle that bears will fail to derail. The analyst expects strong AI-driven growth to grip both names, with Nvidia leading silicon supply and Tesla leveraging AI, autonomous driving, and Robotics/Optimus to create lasting value. Investors should be patient as this is a long-duration AI cycle, according to Ives.
  • Tesla's AI push in 2026: the hardest year for Autopilot, Optimus and robotaxis
    November 14, 2025, 3:52 AM EST. Tesla's AI division is bracing for a pivotal 2026 as it races to turn years of autonomy promises into commercial reality. Ashok Elluswamy warned the Autopilot, robotaxi, and Optimus teams that the year will be the toughest yet, with milestones tied to a new $1 trillion pay package and a nationwide robotaxi network. Musk has framed the year as a verdict on the company's ability to scale autonomous driving and humanoid robotics, signaling Autopilot taxis without safety drivers in several metros and Optimus production targets for late 2026. Analysts have long valued the AI and autonomous opportunity, while execution challenges persist: tighter margins, talent churn, and the need to move from ambitious slides to repeatable, real-world deployments.
  • 5 Things to Know Before Using an AI Browser
    November 14, 2025, 3:50 AM EST. AI browsers like OpenAI's Atlas and Perplexity's Comet.AI embed a chatbot in the browsing experience, offering on-page answers, clarifications, and an agent mode for tasks. But the trade-off is privacy: these tools can send personal data from the sites you visit to their servers, and Atlas can store a history with browser memories. Users have limited visibility into exactly which parts of a page are shared. Atlas lets you remove pages or block sites from being passed to ChatGPT, while Perplexity currently offers fewer controls. Traditional browsers don't see your page content, making them less data-hungry. Expect a data-sharing dynamic where your browsing context can be used to train models. Consider what data you're comfortable sharing before enabling AI features.
  • Valve Says No New First-Party VR Games in Development for Steam Frame
    November 14, 2025, 3:46 AM EST. Valve has confirmed there are no first-party VR titles in development for Steam Frame, either at launch or in the near future. In a recent interview, a Steam Frame team member answered simply 'no' when asked about Valve's VR plans, ending speculation about an asymmetric Half-Life-style PC vs. VR game. Valve's previous flagship VR title, Half-Life: Alyx, helped establish its early VR credibility, but Valve now says users should not expect new Valve-developed VR content anytime soon. Steam Frame aims to let you access most of your Steam library in VR, but the company isn't signaling new first-party releases alongside the headset.
  • Spectrum Offers Free 1-Gig Internet Boost During Thanksgiving Week
    November 14, 2025, 3:44 AM EST. Spectrum is offering a free 1-Gbps speed lift for eligible customers during Thanksgiving Week, from now until December 1, with auto-revert on December 2. Eligible Spectrum Internet Premier and legacy plans can activate in the My Spectrum App through November 24. The promo - dubbed 'Gig Week' - aims to support more devices for streaming, gaming, video calls and Black Friday/Cyber Monday shopping. The boost runs on Spectrum's Fiber Broadband Network and can be bundled via Seamless Connectivity for savings on mobile, broadband and video. Availability varies by area; check eligibility and terms on spectrum.net.