Apple Eyes Camera Upgrade and Price Cut for iPhone Air 2
- Apple is reportedly planning two changes to make the iPhone Air 2 more appealing: a second rear camera and lower pricing.
- The second camera is expected to be an Ultra Wide lens, complementing the current 48MP Fusion sensor and 2× optical-quality zoom.
- Apple may reduce the iPhone Air 2’s starting price—today’s iPhone Air begins at $999—to better compete with iPhone 17 models.
- The changes aim to reverse weak demand and supply cuts after the original iPhone Air underperformed.
What Apple is planning for iPhone Air 2
A report from The Information, summarized by MacRumors, says Apple is weighing two clear moves to broaden the appeal of the iPhone Air lineup. The company is focusing on feature parity and price positioning to convince buyers to choose Air over the flagship iPhone 17 and iPhone 17 Pro.
Camera: adding an Ultra Wide lens
The current iPhone Air ships with a single 48‑megapixel Fusion rear camera and delivers a Telephoto‑like, optical‑quality 2× zoom using the main sensor. Apple is reportedly considering adding a second camera on the rear array—most likely an Ultra Wide lens.
An Ultra Wide would fill a long‑standing omission on the Air: wider field‑of‑view shots, better group photos, and improved landscape framing. For many buyers, having a multi‑camera system is now a baseline expectation across mid‑ and high‑end phones.
Pricing: a lower entry price
Apple is also said to be exploring lower pricing for the iPhone Air 2. The current model’s U.S. starting price of $999 has drawn criticism given tradeoffs such as a single speaker and shorter battery life compared with higher‑tier models.
Reducing the entry price would make the Air a clearer value proposition and could stem the device’s softer sales. Apple’s suppliers have reportedly cut back iPhone Air production after the first model lagged behind the iPhone 17 and iPhone 17 Pro in popularity.
Timing and market context
The iPhone Air 2 is expected to arrive in spring 2027 if Apple proceeds. The proposed changes reflect a broader strategy: keep the Air’s ultra‑thin, design‑forward appeal while addressing practical feature gaps that influenced early buyers.
Whether a second camera and a lower price are enough to shift demand remains uncertain. Adding hardware improves appeal, but the final market response will depend on the precise spec upgrades, battery improvements, and the price cut Apple chooses.
Sources: The Information (reported via MacRumors).