If the latest leaks are even close to accurate, Apple may be lining up its biggest iPhone generational jump since the iPhone X. That’s why some buyers are already asking a practical question: is it smarter to hold off until 2027 and skip the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max?
Below are 10 iPhone 20 rumors making the rounds right now, with a focus on what could materially change day-to-day use: screen design, biometrics, efficiency, battery life, and camera performance.
A decade-style redesign with a truly edge-to-edge display
Apple tends to keep a core design language for years, then reset it. The iPhone X-era move to Face ID and an all-screen front is the best recent example. For iPhone 20, the headline leak is a near-bezelless front with a subtle curve around the edges, meant to make the phone look like a single uninterrupted sheet of glass when viewed straight on.
A big unanswered question is durability and accessories: screen protectors and cases may need new approaches if the border essentially disappears.
Face ID and selfie camera could finally vanish from view

The second cluster of leaks is about eliminating visible cutouts. Two approaches are being rumored: 1) A small hole-punch selfie camera, while Face ID sensors sit under the display and only activate visibly when needed. 2) Both the selfie camera and Face ID components move under the display, leaving no notch or Dynamic Island at all.
If Apple pulls this off with minimal image-quality tradeoffs, it would be a genuine usability win for video, gaming, and full-screen apps.
COE display tech may enable the thinner, brighter front
A rumored COE display stack could reduce layers that impact brightness and color, while also thinning the panel. Practical benefits could include better outdoor visibility and more internal space for components. Even small savings matter when you’re trying to add battery capacity without making a phone noticeably thicker.
Haptic buttons could return, but everywhere
Another hardware rumor: solid-state, haptic buttons for power, volume, and the Action button. The pitch is reliability (fewer moving parts) and space savings, potentially freeing room for other internals. Apple has done this before with the iPhone 7/8-era home “button,” so the concept isn’t new—scaling it to all external buttons would be.
Bigger battery plus silicon-anode chemistry
Battery talk is heating up: leaks suggest a notably larger cell, potentially around 5,500 mAh, helped by the space gains above. On top of that, silicon-anode battery technology could increase energy density and improve long-term health, meaning less degradation after two to three years of heavy use.
A21 Pro on a 2nm process
The iPhone 20’s chip is widely rumored to be an A21 Pro built on a 2nm process. If true, expect the familiar benefits: better performance per watt, stronger sustained speed, and efficiency gains that translate directly into longer battery life.
3D-stacked, high-bandwidth mobile memory
Leaks also point to 3D-stacked RAM (mobile high-bandwidth memory). For users, that could mean faster on-device AI, smoother pro apps, and less power draw during heavy multitasking.
A newer Apple modem generation
After Apple’s push into custom modems, iPhone 20 could feature a later iteration (C2/C3-class, depending on naming). The likely gains are the boring-but-important ones: better efficiency, improved reception, and potentially stronger satellite features.
Apple-built camera sensor with huge HDR claims
One of the biggest claims is a custom Apple camera sensor with up to 20 stops of dynamic range, versus roughly 13 stops cited in current comparisons. If even partially realized on the main rear camera, it could dramatically improve harsh backlit photos and high-contrast video.
Release window and the pricing question
The timing rumor is straightforward: September or October 2027, aligning with the iPhone’s 20-year milestone. Pricing is unknown, but history matters—iPhone X brought a meaningful step-up in cost. If iPhone 20 is a similarly symbolic redesign, a price increase is plausible.
Conclusion

Taken together, these leaks sketch an iPhone that aims to feel genuinely new: a seamless front, hidden biometrics, major efficiency upgrades, and ambitious camera gains. It’s still early, and Apple can change course, but this is the first time in years that the rumor mill points to a true generational break rather than iterative refinement.
If you’re considering an upgrade cycle, the smartest move may be to watch how the iPhone 18 and 19 lines evolve—and whether Apple’s under-display and battery-tech rumors start getting firmer supply-chain confirmation heading into 2027.
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