iPhone Air long term review: Both an easy and a difficult phone to recommend

By Dave Nason, 17 March, 2026

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

In November 2025 I published my initial review of the iPhone Air, loaned to me by Apple, based on my first few weeks with the device. Now, after several months with Apple's ultra slim phone, , and following the recent addition of the iPhone 17E to the line-up, I thought it a good time to revisit it.

Design

The iPhone Air's unique selling point is of course its physical design. Five months on, I can honestly say I still love it. My work phone is an iPhone 15; when I pick that up it feels like a brick by comparison. It's not just that the Air is thin, it's how light it feels that is probably most remarkable. It's comfortable to pick up, hold and use for long periods of time.

My one small bugbear with the design is one I feared in my initial review, and that's the width of the screen and device. If the screen was just a little smaller than it's 6.5 inches, perhaps similar to the regular iPhone 17, I think I'd find it a little more comfortable and may eliminate accidental selections due to those occasional palm taps. This is quite subjective of course; I've always had a preference for smaller phones that I can use one-handed, but it seems those days may now be behind us. The slim and light design though does mean it's not a deal breaker for me, as it likely would be with a Pro Max model, and I have slowly gotten used to it. The occasional issues with swiping left and right which I reported back in November have thankfully not continued, whether because issues in iOS have been fixed, or because I've adapted how I hold and use it, I don't know.

Overall I really love the design. In fact it's up there with the iPhone 7 and iPhone 12 mini as one of my favourite iPhones ever.

Durability

When I hand this phone to people there are two typical lines of discussion that follow. One is how nice it is, the other is their fear that they would break it. In fact, the iPhone Air is very durable indeed. While other models have moved to aluminium, the Air retains a titanium frame, making it lightweight but very sturdy. I tend to look after my phones quite well (I hope I don't regret saying that), but it has naturally had a few drops, which it has survived perfectly. Nor have I managed to bend or break it by sitting on it or had any other such calamities.

If you considered this phone but had that same fear about breaking it, I'm comfortable in reassuring you that you're no more likely to damage the iPhone Air than you are any other iPhone model.

Battery

It's well documented that this phone has a smaller battery than its iPhone 17 siblings, particularly the Pro and Pro Max, and in our community for sure is seen as its biggest compromise. My verdict in the initial review was that it's better than expected, and that verdict has stood the test of time. While a top-up can be needed on days of extreme usage, this has truthfully been very rare. I almost always get through the full day on a single charge, and that's with a 90% charge limit set. I typically finish days with over 30% and it's not unusual to finish the day with over 40% battery. Even on days with heavier usage, such as weekends in my case, I generally have 10% to 20% remaining. I'd also point out that, as I have limited usable sight, I do not use the screen curtain. If travelling I will take a power bank with me for sure, but day to day I haven't needed one.

So I still think that while the battery in the 17 Pro and Pro Max may Destroy the Air, and the base 17 and possibly even 17E may marginally out-perform it, the Air is going to be fine for most people. This feels like I'm being controversial, because compromise has been the word most associated with this phone, but really I think it's all relative.

Camera and Speaker

Back in November I said that the fact of having only one camera and one speaker had not to date been an issue for me. Again, this remains my experience. I think it's important though to caveat that by saying my usage of these two features is limited. I take the odd photo, and use the camera with apps like Be My Eyes and PiccyBot, but I'm very far from a heavy camera user. Similarly, I use the speaker for day to day navigation with VoiceOver, and would play some reels on Instagram, but I'm not using it to listen to music as I wear AirPods for most media consumption.

The speaker was the compromise I was most worried about though, so I'm glad to have found it to be a non-issue for my use case.

Performance

Funnily enough, I almost neglected to include performance in this review at all; not due to any issues, but because it is good enough that I'm not really cognisant of it. The fact is that it's one of Apple's latest line-up on iPhones, with the A19 Pro processor and other top tier technology, and so it performs every bit as well as you would hope and expect. As with its iPhone 17 siblings, you can expect to get several years of usage from the Air.

Value for money

Now then, this is the question. What should we value? What do you value? A part of me thinks people are sleeping on this phone. News reports all suggest it's not selling gangbusters. But it's a beautiful phone and a joy to use.

Nor am I surprised though. The value proposition is all in the design. Against that, aside from the iPhone 17E, the Air is equal at best with the rest of the iPhone 17 line-up in terms of features, and is compromised in some areas.

The price is an important part of this story. At $999 it is $200 more than the base iPhone 17, which packs more punch in terms of features, and $400 more than the recently launched iPhone 17E. My colleague's first impressions of the 17E suggest real value for money there too. Above it too the competition is fierce from a Pro model starting at only $100 extra. If a little closer in price to the base iPhone 17, the iPhone Air would be a lot easier to recommend and I suspect may have tempted much more interest.

Conclusions

If it were closer to the base 17 on price, or closer to the 17 Pro on features, I'd happily recommend the iPhone Air to anyone. As it is though, despite its undoubted qualities and my personal fondness for it, it's not hugely surprising that it is missing the mark for many people.

That said, if I had bought this phone, I don't think I'd regret it at all. It is beautiful, and it truly is difficult to go back to a standard design after using it. Plus the compromises have not proved significant for me in practice. There's every chance, should one arrive, that I will buy the second generation of the iPhone Air.

I hope the iPhone Air turns out to be a test run of what the future of iPhone could be as the technology improves.

You can probably sense my internal struggle here. It's fair if you don't feel it's a phone worth investing in, but it is a beautiful phone, and a breath of fresh air, that I really like. My final word is to say don't dismiss this phone out of hand because of battery fears, but nonetheless it's understandable if the design benefits aren't worth the extra cost to you.

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Comments

By Singer Girl on Tuesday, March 17, 2026 - 20:05

Quick review on this. I wouldn’t get this phone for me because of the one speaker. I do use my speakers of my phone to listen to music and to watch YouTube videos and other forms of media consumption. I also think this may make it harder to hear voice speech. I wouldn’t mind going into my Apple Store at least look at the design though. I’m glad that this phone is working for you and that you’re enjoying it.

By chicken joe on Tuesday, March 17, 2026 - 21:09

I am saying no, a very hard no to the IPhone air.

By chicken joe on Tuesday, March 17, 2026 - 21:11

First of all, Apple, please stick to what you know. Secondly I pray the IPhone air 2 is better than this one.

By BlackCat on Wednesday, March 18, 2026 - 12:03

Hi
I use an iPhone Air since December last year after upgrading from iPhone 13Pro. Congratulations Dave! Excellent review and I agree %100 with everything you mentioned. Listening to music with the iPhone Air's 1 speaker is not the end of the world. I just turn the volume higher and the same can be said when I listen to Audio books and narrated movies. Recently I signed up to Apple Music and I can still kick myself for not doing so a long time ago. What a treat. The excellent sound quality of songs to find in Apple Music causes listening to my playlists with 1 speaker not to be an issue at all

By Mister Kayne on Monday, April 13, 2026 - 14:22

At 83% battery health and updated to IOS 26.4.1 I am one happy camper still sporting the iPhone 12. I know I would have to say goodbye to the love of my life soon as support will end and the phone will get heavier and slower, nothing of that as of yet. If I am going to upgrade, it is the 16E next although the action button is something I say ugh to, would have been really happy with the 16E if it still sported the silent ringer switch. apple could have done the vice versa, put the 16E internals in the iPhone 12 body with 128GB as the base model and yes not asking for flashier cameras but a power house in terms of performance and battery life

By Brian on Monday, April 13, 2026 - 18:38

May I ask why the 16E, and not the 17E? Price is the same if I recall correctly.

By Dave Nason on Monday, May 4, 2026 - 23:22

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

@Chicken Joe: I'm curious, what makes it a hard no for you? What in particular would you want to see in a second generation that might win you over? Also curious as to what you mean when you say that you'd like Apple to stick to what they know? Personally I like that Apple are experimenting a little.
@BlackCat: Glad you're enjoying the phone too. There's definitely something to be said for slick design.
@Mister Kayne: Ah yes, the iPhone 12 was a nice series. My heart still aches a little for my 12 mini. I too am curious why you'd go for a 16E rather than a 17E?

By Brian on Tuesday, May 5, 2026 - 01:46

If only it had extra speakers, like in other iPhones. I am probably a minority here, but I am someone who actually enjoys listening to an audiobook, or a podcast, directly from my phone speakers. Without having to shove something in my ears. 🤷

By Holger Fiallo on Tuesday, May 5, 2026 - 02:40

Same here. Happy for my 16 pro max the sound is great and. Long live cats.

By SeasonKing on Tuesday, May 5, 2026 - 05:39

I find the Air incredibly sexy. The bulge that the 15 Pro max creates in my tight genes pocket, almost making it look as though I have a sideways perpetual boner, I think Air might be able to tackle that somewhat. Pardon the graphic descriptions.
But again, I am not willing to go back on battery life and speakers. I sometimes listen to movies or Netflix on speakers, and stereo speakers do make a difference. Mono speaker would be a significant downgrade for me. Same for music.
If the second generation is able to tackle speakers issue and increase battery life a bit, I might be convinced to upgrade.

By flexcord on Friday, May 22, 2026 - 10:59

I suppose that most users here bewaring of the iPhone Air never had one in their hands. I can only recommend it: if you are not a heavy iPhone-photographer or constantly listen to music via its loudspeakers, the size / weight ratio is as wonderful als it's big screen.

The most dicussed item in most tests is the battery. And in many cases reviewers compare the iPhone Air to the Pro Max. This to me is plain stupid: if I you want to carry a brick: go for the pro max, all fine. Someone looking at the Air is looking for something light with a good screen. Does the Air have the smalles battery of all actual models? Yes, it has. But... what about other iPhones? I come from a 14 Pro. And guess what? The battery of the 14 Pro has nearly exactly the same size as the Air battery. And a lot less of usage time, because the entire system was less effective than the new Air. Did anyone write big stories about the battery being way too small? No, the 14 Pro was perfect. As is the Air nowadays.

The only negative about the Air is it's prize. But that came down by a lot in the last months: I got my Air for less than I would have payed for the standard 17. But I would have bought it even for slightly more.

So, I personally hope the Air has come to stay. If an Air 2 may improve things... I don't know. For what I need, the actual Air deliveres. With a lot more battery time than my old 14 Pro.

By Holger Fiallo on Friday, May 22, 2026 - 13:43

If I update from the 16 pro max, it will be another pro max. Long live and strong and worth the money and do not need to get an extra battery. Long live cats.

By Singer Girl on Friday, May 22, 2026 - 15:10

Good point I’ve forgotten about that. Yeah I’m definitely not in an interested in a phone that we need to get an extra battery back. My next one will be one of the standard miles. Whatever number we end up with. I can’t get a new phone for a while though, but I’m OK with that.

By Dave Nason on Friday, May 22, 2026 - 16:49

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

As @flexcord correctly pointed out, the Air does not need an extra battery. Apple sells a MagSafe battery pack, but it is not required unless you want battery more comparable to the Pro or Pro Max.
I have survived just fine with this phone, without the battery pack, since last October.
@SingerGirl, I can virtually guarantee that you would get as much, in fact probably more, battery usage from the iPhone Air as you do from the iPhone 15 that you are currently rocking. It’s certainly performing better than my two year old iPhone 15 Pro was.
Of course the 17 Pro Max blows it out of the water, but it blows the 15, 16 and 17 base models out of the water too.
Dave

By Singer Girl on Saturday, May 23, 2026 - 13:58

Ok, that makes sense. Thanks for the clarification. Well then, maybe I will look at that phone at some point. I’m still not sure about the one speaker though. Because I do use my phone speakers for music and other media consumption. I don’t know. I think I’d have to look at the phone and hear it first things like that to see but this is still a great review.

By Holger Fiallo on Saturday, May 23, 2026 - 19:08

Samsun did similar phone with the same side yet they put 2 speakers. We keep believing the same crap that apple likes to do innovation yet they do not.

By Brian on Sunday, May 24, 2026 - 01:33

I do just fine on my SE3, without any additional battery packs or anything like that. And with my use case, I'm sure the iPhone Air would be great. My one and only complaint, which I believe I have already stated, is the speaker issue. Yes, I am one of those who actually listens to music, books, and podcasts through the iPhone speakers, without necessarily requiring a headset/earbud.

//$0.02

By Holger Fiallo on Sunday, May 24, 2026 - 11:23

Testify brother. Me to. Long live cats.