iPhone 18 Pro Leaks Reveal a 2nm A20 Pro Chip, 35% Smaller Dynamic Island, and a Deep Red Color

Apple has spent four years refusing to touch the Dynamic Island, treating it like some untouchable monument to software-hardware integration. Samsung cycled through three foldable generations in that time. Google rebooted the Pixel lineup twice. Nothing went from startup curiosity to legitimate competitor. And the iPhone 14 Pro’s pill-shaped cutout just sat there, exactly the same width, height, and visual footprint on the 15 Pro, 16 Pro, and 17 Pro. Leaked screen protectors sourced from Weibo now suggest Apple has finally decided four years is long enough, and the company is gearing up to shrink the Dynamic Island by roughly 35 percent on the iPhone 18 Pro. The mechanism is straightforward: move the Face ID flood illuminator under the display, leave only the infrared camera and front lens in the cutout, and suddenly that wide pill becomes a narrow sliver sitting unobtrusively at the top of the screen. The infrared flood illuminator that powers Face ID is moving under the display on the iPhone 18 Pro, leaving only the infrared camera requiring a physical cutout alongside the front-facing lens.

But the Dynamic Island shrinkage is hardly the headline here, because the iPhone 18 Pro is also the phone where Apple trades in its most iconic color for something it has never tried before on a Pro model. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports that Apple is testing a deep red finish for the 18 Pro lineup, a shade closer to burgundy than the bright Product Red tones the company used on standard models years ago. Apple removed black from the Pro lineup with the iPhone 17 Pro, the first time in the series’ history that no dark option existed, and the 18 Pro appears set to continue that direction rather than course-correct. September 2026 is the expected launch window, which makes this arguably the most important incremental iPhone in years. It is widely believed to be the last model in this design language before Apple delivers a radical overhaul for the 20th anniversary iPhone in 2027, so whatever ships this fall is likely your final chance to buy an iPhone that looks like an iPhone has looked since 2017.

Designer: Volodymyr Lenard

Leaker Ice Universe claimed the Dynamic Island cutout on the iPhone 18 Pro models will be approximately 35% narrower than it is on the iPhone 17 Pro models, with a width of around 13.5mm down from around 20.7mm. That figure refers to the default on-screen Dynamic Island width including surrounding black pixels, not the physical hardware cutout itself, but the visual difference should be immediately apparent in daily use. The iPhone 17 Pro’s Island is a wide, commanding presence even at rest. The 18 Pro’s leaked cutout reads almost delicate by comparison, a narrow pill sitting unobtrusively at the top of the screen. Apple will still need to revisit four years of Live Activities design and the entire interaction vocabulary built around the existing Island’s dimensions, which is a reasonable explanation for why this transition is taking as long as it is. Android manufacturers have shipped under-display cameras for years, with visible quality tradeoffs that Apple’s user base simply would not accept on a thousand-dollar phone. Holding the line until the technology meets the standard, rather than shipping it to win a spec sheet argument, is the kind of call that frustrates people in the short term and builds loyalty over time.

Under the hood, the A20 Pro chip built on TSMC’s advanced 2nm process promises roughly 15% faster performance and up to 30% better power efficiency compared to the current 3nm A19 Pro. Paired with 12 GB of RAM across the lineup, the new silicon should power smoother Apple Intelligence features, enhanced on-device AI processing, and better multitasking. Connectivity upgrades include Apple’s first in-house C2 5G modem, replacing reliance on Qualcomm components. The modem supports improved mmWave performance and expanded satellite connectivity, potentially enabling always-connected cellular service via NR-NTN standards for emergency messaging and basic data in remote areas without traditional coverage. Battery life stands out as a major highlight, especially for the iPhone 18 Pro Max. Leakers report a capacity jump to 5,100 to 5,200 mAh, the largest ever in an iPhone, enabled by a slightly thicker chassis measuring around 8.8mm up from 8.75mm on the iPhone 17 Pro Max. The added thickness and weight would accommodate the bigger cell while the more efficient 2nm chip helps stretch usage even further. Some projections suggest up to 40 hours of mixed use on a single charge.

The deep red finish represents a significant departure for a Pro lineup that has historically favored controlled, conservative colors like graphite, silver, gold, and muted titanium shades. Rumors of purple and brown finishes have also circulated, but Gurman believes those are just variants of the same red idea. The decision to skip black for a second consecutive year has already generated polarized reactions among enthusiasts, with some welcoming the bold direction and others mourning the loss of the classic understated aesthetic. For buyers who want black, Gurman specifically noted that the foldable iPhone is being designed with conservative space gray and silver finishes, suggesting Apple is deliberately separating its color identity across product lines. The iPhone 18 Pro may read as a modest update on paper, but as the final iteration of a design language that has defined the modern iPhone for nearly a decade, it carries more symbolic weight than any spec sheet can communicate.