iPhone 17 Manufacturing Reaches Key Milestone as Launch Nears

Foxconn has begun importing iPhone 17 parts from China to India for trial production, marking a significant step ahead of the device's expected launch in September.

iPhone 17 Base Model Rumored to Come in New Green and Purple Colors Feature
According to customs data reviewed by The Economic Times, Foxconn, Apple's primary contract assembler, began receiving shipments of critical components such as display assemblies, cover glass, mechanical housings, and integrated rear camera modules at its Indian facilities in June. These components account for approximately 10% of Foxconn's total imports from China for the month, with the remainder allocated to other iPhone models, including the ‌iPhone‌ 14 and iPhone 16.

Industry experts cited by The Economic Times interpret the scale of the shipments as indicative of early-stage trial production. Mass production is apparently scheduled to begin in August, in time for launch in September.

India has already begun to participate in Apple's New Product Introduction (NPI) process, which governs the early stages of new model development and previously took place exclusively in China; it joined the NPI process for the ‌iPhone 16‌ and ‌iPhone 16‌ Plus in 2024. This allowed production to begin nearly simultaneously in both countries, a significant shift from the ‌iPhone‌ 14, when manufacturing in India began six weeks after the China ramp-up.

For the ‌iPhone 17‌, Apple is reportedly targeting same-day production starts in both China and India for the first time. Sources cited by DigiTimes suggest that Apple intends to deepen its manufacturing footprint in India as part of its plan to diversify its supply chain, with Foxconn playing a central role under India's Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme.

However, the effort has encountered challenges. Recent reports have pointed to the recent mass departure of Chinese engineers from Foxconn's Indian facilities. These individuals were responsible for factory design, precision machining, and employee training, which are essential functions during the early phases of ‌iPhone‌ assembly. An executive quoted by The Economic Times said:

Chinese engineers are crucial because iPhone 17 manufacturing involves complex precision machining of many small parts, and even a 1mm difference can cause a product to fail quality testing. They are needed to train employees on the intricate assembly processes and specific molds for components.

Despite these complications, the Indian government apparently remains optimistic. A source quoted by the Press Trust of India (PTI) said that the return of Chinese technical staff to China will have "no impact" on the production of the ‌iPhone 17‌.

The source added that Apple continues to scale production according to plan and noted that import bottlenecks for machinery and equipment needed for large-scale manufacturing have begun to ease. The entire ‌iPhone 17‌ lineup is expected to launch in the fall.

Related Roundup: iPhone 17
Buyer's Guide: iPhone 17 (Buy Now)
Related Forum: iPhone

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Top Rated Comments

flopticalcube Avatar
14 weeks ago
Teardown comparisons between Indian and Chinese phones should be interesting, even if they reveal no differences.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
iF34R Avatar
14 weeks ago
All that info is nice, but I just wanna say that green phone will be mine!!
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
con2apple Avatar
14 weeks ago
„Chinese engineers are crucial because iPhone 17 manufacturing involves complex precision machining of many small parts, and even a 1mm difference can cause a product to fail quality testing. They are needed to train employees on the intricate assembly processes and specific molds for components.“

That‘s marketing for the typical American customer.
Because, of course, every modern smartphone requires this level of precision. Today, micrometers (millimeters / 1000) are standard.
We don't even want to talk about the chips inside the devices. They are manufactured in nanometers: i.e., micrometers / 1000.

But it's really important to buy the new iPhone. For sustainability reasons alone.
It will be manufactured in a way that is 5% more environmentally friendly than the iPhone 16 and even 7% more environmentally friendly than the iPhone 15.
So it's definitely justified to replace two-year-old iPhones and thus save our place of life a little bit more.
And if one wants to take an almost eco-terrorist approach, can buy a new Watch as well.
Nothing is more environmentally friendly than supporting environmentally friendly production.
?
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
DBZmusicboy01 Avatar
14 weeks ago
I HOPE The Pro Maxes get made in China for American customers. I really don't want us who pays a premium to have quality problems.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
svish Avatar
14 weeks ago
Great to hear that everything is progressing smoothly. Happy to see India also making all the new iPhones at launch.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)
flopticalcube Avatar
14 weeks ago

India-assembled iPhones have existed for many years now (since 2018 at least?), not sure why there should be any significant new insights now.
Because now they are being built at the same time, rather than having the benefit of the Chinese factory doing it first. Losing the Chinese engineers also means that Indian manufacturing engineers will be winging it more on their own. If there are no differences in quality, it means that India is ready to fill in, probably at reduced quantity, however. Of course, most of the components are still made in China, so this is really just an assembly issue.
Score: 1 Votes (Like | Disagree)