iPhone Air Review: Is this the one Steve Jobs would have liked?

By Dave Nason, 17 November, 2025

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

The iPhone Air launched in September 2025 alongside the iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max. It may not turn out to be the biggest seller of the four, but it is the most talked about. Apple have kindly loaned me an iPhone Air to review, and I’ve been using it full time for the past three weeks.

Unsurprisingly, the first thing that jumps out at you when you unbox this phone is how thin and light it is. But how does it perform, and is it worth considering ahead of the other models? The word “compromise” has been used a lot in discussions of this phone, but all phones have trade offs; it’s just a question of what you value. I wanted to love this phone, but I expected those compromises to be too much. I was pleasantly surprised to find I would very happily keep it as my daily driver.

Size, weight and form factor

However aware I was in advance that this is a thin and light phone, however many YouTube videos had told me the same, I was still blown away by just how thin and light this phone is when I first took it out of the box. In fact, three weeks on, I still marvel at it. If I pick up my 15 Pro now, it feels heavy.

One take I saw online is that this is an iPhone Steve Jobs would have been proud to release. I know what they mean; the man loved beautiful design and feats of engineering, which this phone delivers. At just 5.64mm (0.22 inches) thick and 165 grams (5.82 ounces) in weight, it truly is a pleasure to use and comfortable to hold for long spells.

Like the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max, the Air sports a new camera plateau on the back of the phone. Rather than the square camera bump in one corner, it is a strip right across the back of the phone. It doesn't stretch very far down the back of the device however, only about as far as where the Action button is on the side, so it's not intrusive when holding the phone. Personally I prefer it to the old bump, but that's very much a subjective thing.

The Camera Control button isn't new on this year's models, but it is new to me. I use it from time to time, but leaving its utility aside, I was worried I'd be pressing it by mistake a lot due to where it is located. As it turns out I do exactly that, but thankfully you can set it to require a double press to activate. Definitely recommended in my view.

It's not all sunshine and lollipops on the form factor side however. Perhaps it's just me, and the fact that I typically prefer and use slightly smaller phones, but I have found that I am accidentally selecting things more often than I'd like due to my palm touching the edge of the screen as I reach my thumb across the display. I've also found that swiping left and right with my thumb is sometimes ineffective if I cradle the phone in a particular way. This may just be a case of getting used to a larger screen device, or it may be related to the narrow boarders and thinness of the device, so I'll be interested to see whether or not it remains a bugbear in a few months.

Performance

The iPhone Air has the same A19 Pro chip, minus one GPU core, as the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max. It is lightning fast. While my 15 Pro was no slouch, and I would not feel the need to upgrade yet for performance alone, the speed bump is nonetheless noticeable. Apps open in no time at all, and navigation is silky smooth. I've no doubt that this phone will perform well for years to come, including support for Apple Intelligence should more features come our way.

Battery

The most talked about compromise with the iPhone Air since its launch has been its battery. The trade off to achieve the thin and light form factor is a significantly smaller battery than its chunkier cousins. My experience however has been very good indeed, certainly exceeding my expectations, or perhaps my fears. Granted I am directly comparing my experience to an iPhone 15 Pro, which is now two years old and is a regular size phone, and not to a Pro Max.

So confident have I become in being able to get a full day out of it that I have now set the charging limit to 90%, a feature I’ve never felt the desire to use before. And still I’m typically finishing the day with over 30% remaining, perhaps closer to 20% on days with heavier usage such as weekends. The only time I have felt the need to top up in the afternoon or evening is if I’m heading out for the night and I want to be extra safe. For me, a single charge every 24 hours is perfectly acceptable, and as good as I’ve ever had on any iPhone I’ve owned.

If you want truly great battery performance then the Pro or Pro Max may be a better fit for you. But if you'd like the benefits of a larger screen and/or a thinner and lighter form factor, and are ok with a perfectly average battery, then the Air may be worth a look.

Speaker

Perhaps the biggest concern I had myself in advance of getting this phone was the fact it only has one speaker. I can honestly say it has not been an issue though. I was in fact half way through set up before I even remembered the fact, and even then my memory was not triggered by me actually noticing it.

I will caveat this by saying that I do not play music, podcasts or audiobooks through the phone speaker, I always use earphones or other speakers in the house for that. But for general navigation with VoiceOver, web browsing, email management, social media and so on, it has been absolutely fine. If I put it side by side with the iPhone 15 Pro there is a noticeable lack of bass in the Air, but in my regular day to day use, I don't particularly notice it and I'm certainly not bothered by it. Even watching the likes of Instagram reels has not been an issue. Occasionally if in a noisier environment such as my office, I don’t have that ability to hold the bottom of the phone to my ear, but honestly even in those environments it’s mostly just fine, and I can pop an earphone in if needed. If you use your phone like I use mine in this respect, then I wouldn’t let the mono speaker stop you going for this model.

Camera

The other major difference versus the rest of the iPhone 17 range is the rear facing camera system. The iPhone Air only has one 48 megapixel main camera lens. It is missing the ultra wide lens from all of the other 2025 models, and the telephoto lens from the Pro and Pro Max. I take a few photos and videos with my phone, but not many, and use it with apps like Be My AI, PiccyBot and Gemini camera share. So far I have noticed no difference at all versus my old phone, so it’s looking good. This might be one to check back on in a few months when I’ve got a larger body of evidence to work off, but as of today, I'm not concerned.

Conclusions

The iPhone Air is amongst the most talked about, perhaps even controversial, iPhones in many years. This makes it intriguing if nothing else in a world where phones have matured and updates have become more evolutionary than revolutionary. My view is that this is a great phone with great performance and a beautiful design.

The iPhone Air does everything I need and the trade offs have not to date been an issue for me. I could never use a Pro Max as I find it too big and unwieldy, but the Air is a large screen phone that perhaps I can get on board with. I don't deny I'd still prefer if the screen were a little smaller than its 6.5 inches though, or at least narrower.

The price perhaps puts the Air in a tricky spot. It is more expensive than the very good base model, and not a huge leap to the Pro, so its selling point versus other iPhones really is the form factor. If I were buying a phone this year, there's every chance this is the one I'd go for, but I understand it's a curious value proposition for some.

The base iPhone 17 is probably the one that most people should buy, the Pro and Pro Max models are great for people who want the most utility from their phone, and perhaps the iPhone Air is for those of us who simply want to love again.

Have you purchased a new iPhone this year, or are you considering an iPhone Air? Let me know your thoughts in the comments.

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Comments

By Brian on Monday, November 17, 2025 - 21:35

This was a great review and an interesting read. Now, if we can only have a side-by-side comparison of the iPhone 16e and the iPhone Air. Because honestly, they are not too dissimilar from one another. 😀

On a sidenote, I am wondering how different the sound is between that of an iPhone Air, and any other iPhone set to mono audio?

By Karok on Monday, November 17, 2025 - 21:46

David,

Thank you for this review, I agree with all the sentiments that you have said even though I have only received my iPhone air today. Do you use braille screen input, though? I’m really struggling, when I activate braille screen input, nothing seems to register when I type, I don’t know what’s going on. I hold the phone in screen mode as usual, on my iPhone 14 Pro Max I did not have any difficulties.

By Michael Hansen on Monday, November 17, 2025 - 21:52

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

Hi David,

This is an excellent review. I was particularly intrigued by your findings regarding battery life. When I reviewed the iPhone 16e, I had low expectations and was pleasantly surprised by how good battery life actually was. Apple's tech specs for both models suggests that the iPhone Air gets one more hour with both video playback and streamed video playback than does the iPhone 16e, and your review bares that out.

By Dave Nason on Monday, November 17, 2025 - 22:06

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

Thanks all. @Karok, I’m afraid that braille screen input is one feature I don’t use so I can’t speak to that one.
Keep us posted on how you get on.

By Dave Nason on Monday, November 17, 2025 - 22:07

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

Indeed Michael. Clearly it’s not a mind blowing battery, but I’ve been pleasantly surprised and satisfied with it.

By Ash Rein on Monday, November 17, 2025 - 22:23

The charging on this phone is much slower. 15w wirless and 25w plug. It also uploads data and media at a slower rate than the pro phones. Maybe not a deal breaker, but definitely needs to be part of a persons awareness.

By tyler chambliss on Monday, November 17, 2025 - 22:33

I guess this goes for really any phone but why won't Be My Eyes let you choose what lens you use to take the picture. I really think this would be useful especially for Be My Eyes. But I suppose for iPhone air users it won't matter lol

By Karok on Monday, November 17, 2025 - 22:43

david

you were right about the screen edges; i have to hold the phone, admittedly caseless, a certain way to type, all resolghed now.

By onetrickpony on Tuesday, November 18, 2025 - 06:22

Great review! Spatial stereo sounds on a mono speaker still magically tend to produce some kind of spatial experience, but of course less. The speakers of the normal iPhones are close to each other, but still have a stereo effect. Now I wonder how noticeable the difference is between the Air and a normal iPhone with two speakers. If for example you have HearLight installed, this might be a good test (I could provide a promotional code for that test).

By macOS_Skyline on Wednesday, November 19, 2025 - 16:34

FYI the iPhone Air will not play spatial audio without headphones or external speakers connected.

By onetrickpony on Wednesday, November 19, 2025 - 16:46

Probably it will mix stereo to mono without external speakers. The question is: how much perceived difference does the mono mix make compared to the two side by side speakers of a normal iPhone, as their distance is so small.

By Oliver on Wednesday, November 19, 2025 - 20:21

All you have to do is cover one of the speakers on a dual speaker iPhone and you'll get the flavour of it.

Recently I've been watching some things on my phone and am really impressed with the atmos soundstage and, though I'm sure there is some magic going on to 'fling' audio from a mono speaker, it won't be able to create a discrete stereo field.

By onetrickpony on Wednesday, November 19, 2025 - 21:08

@Oliver wrote: All you have to do is cover one of the speakers on a dual speaker iPhone and you'll get the flavour of it.
Actually I don't think so, because two stereo speakers output different things, so you need both for a complete mix. one mono speaker also delivers a complete mix. my question is: when I compare the complete mixes from both phones, is the difference of the missing stereo effect of the mono actually significant in perception? I don't have an Air so that test would be interesting for me.

By MarkSarch on Friday, November 21, 2025 - 06:39

Hi Dave, first of all thank you for taking the time to write a review.
I hope my comment doesn't bother you, and honestly I wish you had made the review from your own device, And not from a loaned device that they sent especially to do it.
When you make a review of your own device you have no pressure to express yourself freely of the device, However, when it is loaned from the manufacture you cannot express yourself freely.
No one doubts that it is a very beautiful and lightweight device and possibly this is the only reason that drives us to mention good things about it, but on the other side it hides the downsides of the device.
With all respect for me personally, your review sounds more like a sentimental and impressed more than an objective review.
There is no reason to recommend a device considered high cost, and that in reality the hardware has many limitations.
Poor battery life
Single camera
No MagSafe
In addition, by the time you wrote the review, Apple considerably or totally stopped the production of this iPhone due to its poor acceptance by the public.
I perfectly understand the use you give to the device, I share with you I have some iPhone 12 somewhere on my desk that I do not use and the battery lasts for several days.
greetings.

By Oliver on Friday, November 21, 2025 - 10:08

It always surprises me how much people fall over themselves to inform others of just why they shouldn't be enjoying an acquisition.

The iPhone air is perfect for some, almost perfect for others and, still others, won't like it... And that's absolutely fine. Apple haven't cancelled the Air, there is still rumoured to be a second version of it coming out in a couple of years time. Demand has been lower, as it always tends to be with the fringe phones such as the iPhone mini, but you'll find a small yet fierce gang who still bemoan its demise on reddit and elsewhere.

It's not a phone I'd want but, for those who are interested, go in to an apple store, try it and, even buy one and see how you get on with it. In most parts of the world return windows are generous which is a very good thing for us as we've got more specific requirements than most and only we will be able to tell if it fits in with our needs and desires.

By macOS_Skyline on Friday, November 21, 2025 - 12:53

As an owner of the iPhone Air which I paid for myself, I can tell you that it…
A: absolutely does have MagSafe. I’m charging it via MagSafe right now. Apple literally sells a MagSafe battery for it. It absolutely does have MagSafe.
B: has fine enough battery. Not the best battery, but about the same battery as my previous 15 Pro Max, and according to Apple‘s tech spec page, slightly above the 16 Pro and 16e.

Also as for Apple stopping production, that is complete and total speculation from analysts, not a fact. Analysts can pretty much say whatever they want with very little repercussions, if they want the narrative to be that the iPhone Air is a failure They can easily spin it that way, to their own financial benefit. The only one who truly knows how successful the device has been is Apple themselves.

By Holger Fiallo on Friday, November 21, 2025 - 13:49

It was so. Long live cats.

By Dave Nason on Friday, November 21, 2025 - 20:16

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

Hi @MarkSarch. Thanks for reading and feeding back on the review.
I don't mind at all. However I must rebut some of your points.
Firstly, I dispute that I am unable to be objective or balanced as a result of it being a loan device. I can assure you that Apple gave me absolutely no instruction, no pressure, no suggestion of any consequence. They provided AppleVis with a review unit, as they and other companies do with many publications, with no input on the content. Michael may wish to speak more on AppleVis policies, but suffice it to say we would not accept a device if conditions were attached.
I also believe that even if one reviews a device they have purchased themselves, there can be a tendency to defend the purchase, even subconsciously, so even that doesn't necessarily offer a clearly objective view.
I use the word "objective" advisedly though, as of course my review is subjective to my experience, albeit backed by factual aspects such as battery percentage, and my usage patterns. This is true of all reviews of this kind.
I felt I did adequately tackle the downsides of the phone, but am happy to provide more information if you have questions or feel I got anything wrong.
If excellent battery is important to you, then as I said in the review, this is not the model for you. However of you're happy with an average battery, similar to what you might typically have experienced on a model with a smaller display such as the iPhone 15 Pro or the iPhone 16, and you like the other features the phone offers, then it might be an option for you. My honest experience is that the battery is far from terrible, it's pretty good, "perfectly average" as I put it, and that's good enough for some people, me included.
The single camera is a little bit of a wait and see, but so far has caused me no problems at all. Perhaps it could be more of an issue for people who are more into photography.
The solo speaker is noticeable but far better than I feared, so it exceeded my expectations. But as I said in the review, if you use the phone speakers to listen to music and other media, then this is likely not the best option for you. If it's just VoiceOver speech and sounds, I'd have no hesitation recommending it.
As others have said, the phone does have MagSafe, and it is simply not true that Apple has pulled the plug on production. Be careful of sensationalist headlines.
I say it all the time, Apple have multiple models available to suit different needs and preferences. If one doesn't float your boat, or offer value to you, that's ok. Buy the one that does.
Thanks again for your thoughts, and I'm very happy to answer any other questions.
Dave