iPhone 17 Rumored to Feature Mechanical Aperture

Apple is planning to release at least one iPhone 17 model next year with mechanical aperture, according to a report published today by The Information.

iPhone 17 Plus Feature Purple
The mechanical system would allow users to adjust the size of the iPhone 17's aperture, which refers to the opening of the camera lens through which light enters. All existing iPhone camera lenses have fixed apertures, but some Android smartphones have offered variable aperture over the years, such as Samsung's Galaxy S9 series.

Apple is expected to release the iPhone 17 series in September 2025, and it is possible that mechanical aperture will be limited to the rumored high-end "iPhone 17 Ultra" model (dubbed "iPhone 17 Slim" for now). With the devices still being over a year away, however, some of Apple's alleged camera-related plans could change.

This story has been revised.

Related Roundup: iPhone 17
Buyer's Guide: iPhone 17 (Buy Now)
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Top Rated Comments

breenmask Avatar
16 months ago
uh...first of all a smaller aperture would create a sharper background

secondly, fixed aperture in current phones means it's already wide open. being able to control the aperture would only mean you make the background less blurry compared to the current setup
Score: 29 Votes (Like | Disagree)
blazerunner Avatar
16 months ago

Camera companies must be getting worried. I'm a huge fan of dedicated camera equipment, but the iPhone keeps getting better and better at capturing and already is the king of easy distribution.
LOL..... NO.

The difference in quality between even your most precious iPhone doesn't come anywhere near even cheapest entry level camera of the last 10 years. Take a Micro Four Thirds camera, that gets mud thrown at it all the time for its 'small sensor' still performs leaps and bounds better than an iPhone; noise, dynamic range and resolution; all better. Compare a smart phone to a full frame and the difference is even more painful.

But the one differentiating factor are the lenses; take something like a Sigma 56mm f/1.4 lens... you're gonna be getting a ton of light coming through the lens and beautiful REAL bokeh that smartphones cannot and will never be able to do; the AI stuff and that fake 'portrait mode' always looks like ass, especially around hair so there's really no comparison.

If all you care about are flat looking snapshots with everything in focus from a camera that can fit in your pocket, then any smartphone from the last 4 years will be more than adequate.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
jhwalker Avatar
16 months ago
"With a mechanical system, users could manually set a [S]smaller[/S] larger aperture. This would allow photos to be shot with a shallow depth-of-field effect, where the subject stays in focus while the background is blurred."

A larger aperture, but smaller f number (e.g., f/5.6 is a smaller aperture than f/2.8).
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
fromgophonetoiphone Avatar
16 months ago
This article makes no sense because as usual writers and most average users don't understand aperture. Camera phones by virtue of having small sensors already are all shooting wide open which gives you the shallowest aperture. There's literally no option to go larger, so I'm not sure what this will change.

If you look at the 15 Pro Max, all 3 lenses are basically the largest possible aperture.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
sniffies Avatar
16 months ago
Yet another reason to skip iPhone 16 and all the AI fluff
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Jimmy_Banks Avatar
16 months ago

Camera companies must be getting worried. I'm a huge fan of dedicated camera equipment, but the iPhone keeps getting better and better at capturing and already is the king of easy distribution.
You will always be limited by the sensor size.

Camera companies have already gone through the pain of smart phones being in everyone's pocket, it's why they focus on professional and high-end consumer cameras now, and point and shoots essentially no longer exist.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)