What’s happened? A new report claims Apple is set to include a variable-aperture camera on iPhone for the first time in 2026. According to the leak, the iPhone 18 Pro will use it on the main camera to better handle tough scenes, bright or dark.
- Industry sources speaking to ETNews claim Apple has greenlit variable aperture for the iPhone 18 series and is commercializing the parts and modules.
- They go on to say the camera tech will land on the Pro models’ primary camera, not the ultrawide or folded telephoto.
- Aperture size will adjust light and depth of field, via automatic control or a manual f-stop.
- Suppliers are in place: LG Innotek and Foxconn on the module, Sunny Optical and Luxshare ICT on the actuator.
This is important because: The camera race is shifting from raw pixels to features that change image character. Variable aperture can shape exposure and background blur in ways software alone struggles to, giving the Pro models a clear, usable advantage.
- Analysts say the megapixel sprint has hit a ceiling, so feature-led innovation is the next front.
- It opens wider at night for brighter shots, and stops down in harsh light to hold highlight detail and keep more of the scene sharp.
Why should I care? Because this affects your photos more than another spec bump. You, or the phone, can decide how much light hits the sensor and how much blur you want, similar to a DSLR’s control.
- This should make the iPhone 18 Pro a serious number contender for the best camera phone title.
- Portraits can pop with stronger separation, while landscapes can stay crisp front to back.
- Results should be more consistent than software bokeh in tricky lighting.
Okay, so what’s next? Apple’s push could bring hardware-first thinking back to phone cameras. Samsung tried variable aperture on the Galaxy S9 and S10, then dropped it in 2020 to prioritize handset thickness and overall cost. Now it’s about scale, tuning, and follow-on moves.
- Interface tweaks may matter too, given Apple’s evolving Camera Control button with some reports suggesting it could be ditched.
- Watch how Apple sets f-stop options: fully automatic at launch, or a Pro setting for manual control.
- 2026 production ramp will show how widely Apple can deploy the feature, and if Apple nails thin modules and cost, rivals could revisit the idea.
- Expect fresh shooting guides and side-by-sides once the units land.