Discover the exciting IPhone features that make 2027 the year to wait for.
If you’re hyped for the iPhon 18 Pro and Pro Max in 2026, here’s my honest take: the smarter move might be waiting one more year.
Because 2027 is the iPhone’s 20th anniversary, and if Apple follows its own history, that’s the year we get the biggest design shift in a long time. And the rumors are already pointing to a very different kind of iPhone.
So yeah, the iPhone turns 20 in 2027. That’s wild. And when Apple hits big milestones, they tend to swing hard with design.
Think back to the iPhone X: it didn’t just upgrade the iPhone 8… it basically reset the vibe of the whole lineup.
Today, I’m going through the main iPhone 20 rumors: the name, the design, the display changes, the buttons, battery, chips, and cameras.
Obviously, this is all leaks and speculation right now, so take it as “likely direction,” not confirmed facts.
First, the naming question: why are people calling it iPhon 20 and not iPhone 19?
The simple reason is the anniversary branding. Apple has done this kind of thing before. We never got an iPhone 9.
We got the iPhone 8 and then the iPhone X for the 10-year anniversary.
And the numbering has been “mostly” yearly, but it hasn’t always been perfectly aligned because of the S models in the past, like 4S, 5S, 6S, and so on.
So what I personally think happens in 2027 is this: we get an iPhon 19 lineup that looks a lot like the current design language… and then we get the iPhone 20 as the special anniversary model.
Basically the modern version of “iPhone 8 plus iPhone X.”
Now the big one: the display.
The loudest rumor is a true full-screen iPhone. That means no visible bezels, and potentially no Dynamic Island cutout at all.
The idea is that Apple pushes Face ID sensors under the display, and even the selfie camera under the display too, so the screen looks completely uninterrupted when you’re watching videos, gaming, or just scrolling.
And if that happens, it’s instantly the most noticeable iPhon redesign since the iPhone X. Because every iPhone right now, even the Pros, still has that obvious “screen with a frame” look.
This would be the opposite: just pure display.
Now, some rumors and renders show this super dramatic “waterfall” curve where the screen spills way down the sides.
Personally, I don’t think Apple goes that extreme. Apple tends to do curves in a controlled way, not the super flashy style.
My guess is a subtle curve that wraps just enough so, from straight-on, you can’t really see a metal border. It creates the illusion of a truly borderless phone without making it awkward to hold or easy to trigger accidental touches.
And then there’s the Dynamic Island question. Even if the cutout disappears, I doubt Apple throws away the idea of Dynamic Island completely.
They’ll probably keep the functionality as a software layer. So instead of a physical cutout area, it becomes a UI zone that appears when you need it: timers, music, calls, navigation, notifications. Same concept, just not permanently taking up space.
Next big rumor: haptic buttons.
There’s talk that Apple could go all-in on solid-state buttons. So your volume buttons and power button wouldn’t physically click anymore.
They’d feel like they click, using haptics, kind of like a MacBook trackpad or the old iPhon 7 home button. The benefit is durability and sealing, and it can free up internal space too.
And that leads into the next point: battery.
If Apple saves space with internal redesigns, and they combine that with more efficient chips, iPhone 20 could be a serious battery jump.
Not just “a little better,” but a real step up in all-day and maybe even into two-day territory for lighter users.
Chip-wise, by 2027 we should be deep into Apple’s next process improvements. People are already throwing around names like A21 Pro for that generation.


And with each efficiency leap, Apple can choose to either go harder on performance, or keep performance strong and push battery life. On an anniversary iPhone, I could see them trying to deliver both.
Connectivity should also improve around then. Wi‑Fi will be further along, cellular modems should be more mature, and Apple’s own silicon keeps expanding into more parts of the phone.
So even if you don’t care about benchmarks, you’ll probably feel it in stability, heat management, and power draw.
Now, cameras.
One of the spiciest rumors is Apple pushing toward a 200-megapixel main sensor, similar to what we’ve seen on some Samsung flagships.
The point isn’t that you’ll shoot everything at 200MP. The point is what it enables: better detail, better cropping, improved low light through pixel binning, and potentially a big jump in computational photography.
If Apple pairs that with a new lens design and its image processing, you could end up with an iPhon that’s not just “slightly better camera,” but a real leap in main camera quality. Especially for everyday shots where iPhones already do well, but could do even better with more sensor data to work with.
So if you’re trying to decide between upgrading in 2026 versus waiting for 2027, this is the vibe:
- iPhone 18 Pro sounds like a refinement year.
- iPhone 20 sounds like a redesign year.
A special anniversary model with a full-screen look, under-display Face ID, possibly under-display selfie camera, haptic buttons, bigger battery potential, and a major camera sensor upgrade? That’s the kind of combo that makes waiting feel worth it.
If you’re planning your next upgrade, drop a comment: are you upgrading in 2026 with the iPhone 18 series, or are you holding out for the iPhone 20 in 2027? And if you want more Apple rumors, leaks, and upgrade advice as things develop, hit like, subscribe, and turn on notifications so you don’t miss the next update.
Alright, that’s the latest on the iPhone 20 rumor mill and why 2027 could be the year to watch. Thanks for Reading, and I’ll see you in the next one.
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