Deciding which iPhone to buy has always been tricky. Which screen size is best for you, and how much storage do you need? Should you save money by selecting an older model, or should you splash out on the latest iPhone 13 or 13 Pro - or even the 13 Pro Max? Is the iPhone SE or the 11 the best compromise between specs and value for money?
In this article we talk you through each of the phones currently available from Apple, to help you decide which is best for you. We discuss price, specs and features, and you should leave feeling much more confident about your buying decision. Read our iPhone deals roundup for more advice on getting the lowest possible price.
Here's your grand overview of Apple's current iPhone range:
Is now a good time to buy a new iPhone?
Yes, it's a great time to buy. The iPhone 13 launch has just happened, and there won't be any more iPhone updates for a while.
The next big iPhone announcements will probably happen in September 2022, although the next version of the iPhone SE may arrive at a spring event in March or April 2022.
More on this in our guide to the best time to buy an iPhone.
What is the best screen size for iPhone?
This is tricky. The eight models of iPhone feature four different screen sizes:
iPhone 13 Pro Max: 6.7in
iPhone 13 Pro: 6.1in
iPhone 13: 6.1in
iPhone 13 mini: 5.4in
iPhone 12: 6.1in
iPhone 12 mini: 5.4in
iPhone 11: 6.1in
iPhone SE (2020): 4.7in
The size which suits you best is going to come down to personal preference - a larger screen is obviously nice to have, and will make games and videos look much better, but you'll pay for it in terms of price (the 13 Pro), price and a bulkier handset (13 Pro Max) or older tech (the 11). You will probably need to compromise.
There are those, on the other hand, who value portability, and were disappointed when Apple discontinued the 4in iPhone SE from 2016. Those days appear to be gone for good, we're sorry to say, but the 2020 version of the iPhone SE, while a little bigger than its 2016 predecessor, is your best bet in this regard. It's great value, too.
If you're really unsure which iPhone size is going to suit you best, we'd highly recommend visiting an Apple Store and trying them out in person. If that's not an option, try mocking up the sizes with cardboard (you can find the dimensions of each phone listed below).
How much storage do I need?
Each iPhone is available in between two and four capacity options. It's important to consider how much you need before buying because iPhones don't have a microSD card slot that will allow you to add additional storage at a later date - but these days, with the minimum allocation a very respectable 64GB, this may be less of a worry. It all depends how much stuff you like to put on your device.
To be honest, 64GB will be enough for most people; consider carefully whether you need any more than that before you cough up extra cash. Have a look at your current phone's usage (go to Settings > General > iPhone Storage) and think about how much space you really need. Read How much storage do you need on an iPhone? for detailed advice.
The new terabyte option added to the iPhone range for the first time in autumn 2021, and available on the iPhone 13 Pro and 13 Pro Max only, is one for the most demanding buyers of all. If you record, and need to have continual easy access to, large quantities of high-resolution video, this may be a boon. But for most it will be overkill.
With the preliminaries completed, here's a breakdown of each iPhone model to help you decide which is best for you.
iPhone 13 Pro Max
Price: From £1,049/$1,099
Buy from Apple
This is the emperor: the flagship at the top of Apple's phone range. You cannot currently find a better iPhone than this. Or a costlier one: it starts at £1,049/$1,099 for the 128GB option, and tops out at an astonishing £1,549/$1,599 for 1TB. (Most people will be fine with 128GB, but it's nice to have the option of a terabyte.)
Still, you get what you pay for. In this case that means a glorious 6.7in, 458ppi, True Tone OLED screen with ProMotion, the dynamic tech that lets the refresh rate get as high as 120Hz in contexts where the very smoothest of screen movement is called for, but drops it at other times to preserve battery life. Lack of ProMotion was one of the big disappointments in the 12-series, but the 13 Pro Max (and the 13 Pro) have got it at last.
The A15 Bionic processor is of course the fastest Apple has made (that is true every year) but the company has been surprisingly reticent about how exactly its performance compares to the A14 in the 12-series iPhones. Early Geekbench scores suggest a huge leap forward in graphics performance (roughly 50% faster than the 12 Pro), and smaller but valuable improvements (between 6% and 18%) in CPU speed. We'll test all of this in detail when we get review samples.
Apple appears to have focused more on battery performance than overall speed, and the 13 Pro Max should last around 2.5 hours longer than the 12 Pro Max under typical usage conditions, the company claimed in the event. The battery life estimates on the product page are even more promising: the figure for offline video playback has gone up from 20 hours to 28 hours, and the figure for video streaming from 12 hours to 25 hours.
The camera lenses have been upgraded (there's also a cool new feature that functions a little like Portrait mode for video), and Apple promises that 5G support has been widened, but this too is something we'll need to test for ourselves.
Find the best deals on the 13 Pro Max, and on all of the 13-series handsets, in our article discussing where to buy the iPhone 13.
iPhone 13 Pro Max specs
6.7in OLED (2778 x 1284 at 458ppi) with ProMotion
A15 Bionic processor
128/256/512GB/1TB storage
12Mp/12Mp/12Mp triple-lens camera, f/2.8, f/1.5 and f/1.8, OIS
12Mp front camera, f/2.2
802.11ax dual-band Wi-Fi 6
Dual SIM (Nano-SIM and eSIM, or dual eSIM)
Haptic Touch
IP68
GPS
NFC
160.8 x 78.1 x 7.65mm
238g
iPhone 13 Pro
Price: From £949/$999
Buy from Apple
Largely identical to the 13 Pro Max, the 13 Pro suffers by comparison only in terms of its screen (6.1in rather than 6.7in) and battery life (up to 22 hours of video playback rather than 28). For those reasons it's cheaper, but these things are relative; it starts at £949/$999, and tops out at £1,449/$1,499 for the 1TB version.
So you still get ProMotion on the OLED screen, the super-fast A15 Bionic processor, the upgraded triple-lens camera with its various photographic upgrades, the improved battery performance compared with the previous generation, the wider 5G support. And even though the screen is smaller, it shares the 13 Pro Max's exceptional brightness and contrast.
iPhone 13 Pro specs
A15 Bionic chip
128GB/256GB/512GB/1TB storage
6.1in Super Retina XDR OLED display (2532 x 1170 at 460ppi), 2,000,000:1 contrast ratio, 1,000/1,200 nits max brightness (typical/HDR), True Tone, ProMotion
Triple 12MP rear-facing cameras (f/1.8 Ultra Wide, f/1.5 Wide and f/2.8 Telephoto), flash, 6x optical zoom, OIS, Portrait Mode, Night mode portraits, Photographic Styles, Smart HDR 4, Apple ProRAW, 4K video recording at 24/25/30/60fps, Cinematic mode, ProRes video recording at up to 4K and 30fps
12MP front-facing camera (f/2.2), Retina Flash, Portrait Mode, Smart HDR 4, Cinematic mode
Wi‑Fi 6 (802.11ax) with MIMO
Bluetooth 5.0
IP68 water- and dust-resistant (6m up to 30 minutes), Ceramic Shield
Claimed battery life up to 22 hours of video playback
146.7 x 71.5 x 7.65mm
203g
iPhone 13
Price: From £779/$799
Buy from Apple
The iPhone 13, inevitably, misses out on the flagship ProMotion feature that for now is limited to the Pro and Pro Max editions of Apple's newest iPhone generation. That's a shame, and there are a few other compromises, but this remains an extremely high-class, well-specced mid-size smartphone.
The notch is about 20% smaller than on the iPhone 12 (read our iPhone 13 vs iPhone 12 comparison for a deeper head-to-head), the A15 Bionic is the fastest mobile processor on the market right now - although it has one fewer GPU core than on the Pro models - and the cameras have been upgraded, including a new Cinematic mode.
The display may not have ProMotion but it is 28% brighter than the one on the previous generation, and of course has more screen space because of that shrunk-down notch. And battery life has been given a big boost: Apple says it should last around 2.5 hours longer than the iPhone 12. This phone won't let you down.
iPhone 13 specs
A15 Bionic chip
128GB/256GB/512GB storage
6.1in Super Retina XDR OLED display (2532 x 1170 at 460ppi), 2,000,000:1 contrast ratio, 800/1,200 nits max brightness (typical/HDR), True Tone
Dual 12MP rear-facing cameras (f/2.4 Ultra Wide, f/1.6 Wide), flash, 2x optical zoom out, OIS, Portrait Mode, Photographic Styles, Smart HDR 4, 4K video recording at 24/25/30/60fps, Cinematic mode
12MP front-facing camera (f/2.2), Retina Flash, Portrait Mode, Smart HDR 4, Cinematic mode
Wi‑Fi 6 (802.11ax) with MIMO
Bluetooth 5.0
IP68 water- and dust-resistant (6m up to 30 minutes), Ceramic Shield
Claimed battery life up to 19 hours of video playback
146.7 x 71.5 x 7.65mm
173g
iPhone 13 mini
Price: From £679/$699
Buy from Apple
We weren't sure Apple would go back to the mini well after the sales disappointments of last year - indeed we didn't think the company should - but the 13 mini accompanies its three larger siblings at a lower price and with an impressive feature set.
The raison d'etre of the mini line, of course, is a combination of power with portability. And while the former is definitely present - the 13 mini gets the same state-of-the-art A15 Bionic chip as the iPhone 13 - it's worth mentioning that, like the rest of the 13-series, this model is slightly thicker and heavier than its predecessor. We're just talking an extra quarter of a millimetre and 7g, so you shouldn't notice, but we want you to have the full picture.
The rest of the iPhone 13's upgrades are present here too. You get Cinematic mode, for playing with focal distances in video; you get a smaller notch; you get a brighter screen; and you get, according to Apple, much-improved battery life (although we'd like to test that claim for ourselves).
It's a hugely appealing package. But will it sell? Only time will tell.
iPhone 13 mini specs
A15 Bionic chip
128GB/256GB/512GB storage
5.4in Super Retina XDR OLED display (2340 x 1080 at 476ppi), 2,000,000:1 contrast ratio, 800/1,200 nits max brightness (typical/HDR), True Tone
Dual 12MP rear-facing cameras (f/2.4 Ultra Wide, f/1.6 Wide), flash, 2x optical zoom out, OIS, Portrait Mode, Photographic Styles, Smart HDR 4, 4K video recording at 24/25/30/60fps, Cinematic mode
12MP front-facing camera (f/2.2), Retina Flash, Portrait Mode, Smart HDR 4, Cinematic mode
Wi‑Fi 6 (802.11ax) with MIMO
Bluetooth 5.0
IP68 water- and dust-resistant (6m up to 30 minutes), Ceramic Shield
Claimed battery life up to 17 hours of video playback
131.5 x 64.2 x 7.65mm
140g
iPhone 12
Price: From £679/$699
Buy from Apple
The inbetweener of the 2020 generation gets a nice £120/$130 price cut to celebrate the launch of the 13 series, and remains an excellent choice.
You get the biggest feature of the 12-series generation, 5G, so can expect fast away-from-home internet speeds where coverage is available. And unlike in previous generations, this slightly cheaper model's screen is just as sharp as those of its costlier siblings, at an impressive 460ppi, although it isn't quite as bright as either the 12 Pro or the iPhone 13.
The camera setup is twin-lens on the rear; for triple you'll need a Pro model. You lose the telephoto, which among other things means weaker optical zoom.
The 12 misses out in some other photographic areas such as Night Mode portraits (because it hasn't got a LiDAR scanner), Apple ProRAW, and the new Cinematic mode available on all four 13-series handsets.
Apple claims you'll see better battery life from the iPhone 13, too (perhaps this is why the 13 is a shade thicker and heavier), and the 12's notch is a bit wider. But on the whole this should provide almost as good an experience as its newer sibling, even if it is obviously less future-proofed.
Read our iPhone 12 review for more information and in-depth testing.
iPhone 12 specs
A14 Bionic chip
64GB/128GB/256GB storage
6.1in Super Retina XDR OLED display (2532 x 1170 at 460ppi), 2,000,000:1 contrast ratio, 625/1,200 nits max brightness (typical/HDR), True Tone
Dual 12MP rear-facing cameras (f/2.4 Ultra Wide and f/1.6 Wide), flash, 2x optical zoom, OIS, Portrait Mode, Smart HDR 3, 4K video recording at 24/30/60fps
12MP front-facing camera (f/2.2), Retina Flash, Portrait Mode, Smart HDR 3
Wi‑Fi 6 (802.11ax) with MIMO
Bluetooth 5.0
IP68 water- and dust-resistant (6m up to 30 minutes), Ceramic Shield
Claimed battery life up to 17 hours of video playback
146.7 x 71.5 x 7.4mm
162g
iPhone 12 deals
You can monitor the best prices on the iPhone 12 in our automated price table:
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iPhone 12 mini
Price: From £579/$599
Buy from Apple
Like its larger sibling, the baby of the 2020 generation gets a £120/$130 price cut to celebrate the arrival of the 13 series. Will that be enough to shift some units? Maybe.
Other than screen size, battery life and price tag, the 12 mini matches the iPhone 12 feature for feature and spec for spec. It's the cheapest and smallest iPhone to support 5G (albeit only fractionally smaller than the iPhone 13 mini). If you want 5G and a fast processor - the A14 remains fast enough for any task you throw at it, although it's less future-proofed than the A15 - then this is the most accessible way of getting them.
Read our iPhone 12 mini review for more information and in-depth speed, graphics, battery and camera testing.
iPhone 12 mini specs
A14 Bionic chip
64GB/128GB/256GB storage
5.4in Super Retina XDR OLED display (2340 x 1080 at 476ppi), 2,000,000:1 contrast ratio, 625/1,200 nits max brightness (typical/HDR), True Tone
Dual 12MP rear-facing cameras (f/2.4 Ultra Wide and f/1.6 Wide), flash, 2x optical zoom, OIS, Portrait Mode, Smart HDR 3, 4K video recording at 24/30/60fps
12MP front-facing camera (f/2.2), Retina Flash, Portrait Mode, Smart HDR 3
Wi‑Fi 6 (802.11ax) with MIMO
Bluetooth 5.0
IP68 water- and dust-resistant (6m up to 30 minutes), Ceramic Shield
Claimed battery life up to 15 hours of video playback
131.5 x 64.2 x 7.4mm
133g
iPhone 12 mini deals
Keep an eye on the lowest iPhone 12 mini prices with the help of our automated price table:
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iPhone 11
Price: From £489/$499
Buy from Apple
The iPhone XR is discontinued, and the iPhone 11 drops into its space as the oldest phone in Apple's stable. The 11 has dropped in price again - by a further £110/$100 - and looks like an appealing deal. It's all a question of whether you can stomach the compromises.
For one, you get an LCD screen rather than the nicer OLED of the 12 and 13 series, which means you're missing out on deeper blacks and superior colour reproduction. And, at 326ppi, resolution is far lower than you'll get on a newer iPhone.
Camera performance in the most demanding conditions won't match the latest phones, based as it is on Apple's older 'next-generation Smart HDR' rather than the Smart HDR 3 and Smart HDR 4 versions that have come out more recently. And of course you miss out on some of the newer camera features such as Cinematic mode, Photographic Styles and Night Mode.
Physically the iPhone 11 is more susceptible to damage than its newer siblings, missing out on the Ceramic Shield feature that was launched in 2020 and offering water resistance to a depth of 2m rather than 6m. And it doesn't support MagSafe accessories.
But the greatest worry may be the A13, which seemed so fast at launch but may start to seem sluggish in the next few years, particularly if you use graphically demanding games or video editing suites. The newer phones may be intimidatingly expensive, but their superior future-proofing means you won't need to replace them so soon.
Read our iPhone 11 review for more information.
iPhone 11 specs
6.1in LCD, 1792x828, 326ppi
A13 Bionic processor
64/128/256GB storage
12Mp/12Mp twin-lens camera, f/2.4 and f/1.8, OIS
12Mp front camera, f/2.2
802.11ax dual-band Wi-Fi 6
Nano SIM with dual eSIM compatibility
Haptic Touch
IP68
GPS
NFC
150.9 x 75.7 x 8.3 mm
194g
iPhone 11 deals
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iPhone SE (2020)
Price: From £399/$399
Buy from Apple
No price cut, despite the launch of new iPhones in September 2021? We can only assume that the iPhone SE was already as cheap as Apple is prepared to stomach.
The reason for the (by Apple's standards) bargain-basement price tag is the number of compromises the SE contains. Most obviously, the fact that its chassis is virtually identical to the iPhone 8, which came out in 2017 and looked old-fashioned then.
The innards are more modern - but still not as modern as you might like. The SE has a much better and quicker processor than the 8, for example, but while the A13 chip trounces the iPhone 8's A11 for all-round performance it will be outshone in turn by the A14 and A15 that have since become available. That shouldn't be a problem just yet, but the SE clearly has fewer years of top-level performance in front of it than the 12 and 13 series handsets.
We suspect, though, that the iPhone SE will continue to live or die by its price tag and its Home button. If they're what you're looking for, we won't blame you for compromising in other areas.
Read more in our iPhone SE (2020) review.
iPhone SE (2020) specs
A13 Bionic processor
64GB/128GB/256GB of storage
4.7in (1334x750 at 326ppi) display, 625 nits brightness, 1400:1 contrast, True Tone
12Mp (f/1.8) rear-facing camera with flash, Portrait mode, 4K video
7Mp (f/2.2) front-facing camera, Portrait mode
IP67 water and dust resistance
Touch ID fingerprint sensor
Wireless charging
Apple Pay
No headphone jack
138.4 x 67.3 x 7.3mm
148g
iPhone SE deals
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Buying an iPhone on contract
The two most common ways to buy an iPhone are SIM-free from Apple itself or a third-party reseller (which is where the pricing information throughout this information fits in, because you'll be paying upfront for the phone, you will own it, and you will then need to pay for a SIM-only contract for minutes, texts and data), or buying an iPhone on contract.
A contract usually starts with an upfront payment that will vary depending on the iPhone model you go for and also how much you'll be paying each month. That upfront payment is followed by monthly payments, normally for a total of 24 months, after which you own the phone (in most cases). Those monthly payments also cover data, minutes and texts.
You can find iPhone contracts from the following networks:
You can also find them from the following third-party resellers:
The iPhone Upgrade Programme
Apple offers a scheme called the iPhone Upgrade Programme, where you make an upfront payment of £69 followed by regular monthly payments of between £38 and £64. You can then upgrade to the new iPhone each time one is announced, staying on the same or a very similar plan.
You should be cautious about the value this offers (as the phone is not yours to sell at the end of your contract so you're effectively renting it), but in some circumstances it may be the right approach for you.
It's also important to note that this is for a SIM-free iPhone. You will then need to get a SIM-only contract for your data, minutes and texts.
You do get AppleCare+ included in the Upgrade Programme, though, which is a two year insurance for your iPhone that will cover you for two incidents of accidental damage. You'll still have to pay an excess fee should you need to use it, but it'll be much cheaper than having to cough up the full price of a repair.
You can find out more about the iPhone Upgrade Programme on Apple's website.
Second-hand iPhones
You'll have noticed that buying an iPhone doesn't come cheap. However, if you're strapped for cash you don't have to dismiss the idea of buying an iPhone completely. You may be able to get a good deal on one of the older handsets if someone is looking to sell their current handset. Here's how to buy a second-hand iPhone.
Bear in mind that if you want to run iOS 15 (the newest version of Apple's mobile operating system) you'll need an iPhone 6s or later; the same was true of the two previous versions, iOS 13 and iOS 14. iPhones reaching back to the iPhone 5s can run iOS 12, but that really is quite an old operating system to be running and some features such as AR won't work properly on older models anyway.