Apple reportedly delays iPhone Air 2 to 2027 as weak sales prompt redesign with a second camera (Nov. 11, 2025)

Apple reportedly delays iPhone Air 2 to 2027 as weak sales prompt redesign with a second camera (Nov. 11, 2025)

  • Apple has pulled the next iPhone Air from its 2026 release window, after softer‑than‑expected demand for the first‑generation model, according to The Information and subsequent mainstream coverage. Apple did not immediately comment. [1]
  • A follow‑up briefing says Apple is exploring a second rear camera for the ultra‑thin iPhone Air sequel to address customer complaints. Coverage today suggests internal hopes to target spring 2027, but the date isn’t firm. [2]
  • Supply‑chain adjustments reportedly include scaled‑back (and even dismantled) production lines for the current Air at Foxconn and a halt at Luxshare—signals of a pause rather than outright cancellation. [3]
  • Several outlets question the claims’ certainty, noting the report is unconfirmed and that Apple’s roadmap can shift. [4]

What changed today (Nov. 11)

Overnight, The Information published a free briefing indicating Apple is considering adding a second camera to the next iPhone Air “to boost sales,” following internal moves to delay the product from its originally planned fall 2026 launch. That update is being amplified by major Apple‑watching sites, with 9to5Mac reporting Apple engineers are aiming for spring 2027—though even that could slip. MacRumors echoed the camera addition and the 2027 timeframe. [5]

The broader “delay” narrative first gained traction late Monday U.S. time via Reuters, which summarized The Information’s original report and noted that Apple declined to comment. The Verge followed with its own write‑up, underscoring that the Air 2 won’t arrive in fall 2026 and that Apple has trimmed output of the current model. [6]


Why Apple may be changing course

Early feedback on the first‑gen iPhone Air—Apple’s thinnest iPhone and the fourth flagship tier alongside iPhone 17/17 Pro—centered on trade‑offs for thinness: a single rear camera, smaller battery, and premium pricing that started at $999, just $100 below the iPhone 17 Pro. Reporting ties the delay to underwhelming demand and a desire to rework the hardware before a second‑gen release. [7]

Beyond sales, Apple’s supply‑chain steps appear to match a pause: Foxconn has dismantled all but 1.5 production lines for the current Air with production expected to stop by month‑end, and Luxshare is said to have ended Air builds in October, according to summaries of The Information’s sourcing. (AppleInsider rates the rumor “unlikely,” underscoring that this remains unconfirmed.) [8]


What the redesign could add

  • Second rear camera. Today’s briefing says Apple is evaluating an ultra‑wide lens alongside the main 48MP shooter, addressing one of the Air’s most‑criticized omissions. [9]
  • Thermals and battery. Previous planning reportedly included vapor‑chamber cooling (as seen on iPhone 17 Pro) and a larger battery, both of which would directly target performance and endurance complaints. [10]

What it means for Apple’s 2026–2027 iPhone roadmap

If the Air is indeed off the 2026 fall slate, coverage today reiterates a split launch cadence:

  • Fall 2026: iPhone 18 Pro models (and a long‑rumored foldable iPhone).
  • Spring 2027:iPhone 18 and iPhone 18e, and potentially the reworked iPhone Air 2 if it’s ready.
    These details come from reporting that cites The Information’s sources and should be treated as tentative. [11]

Is iPhone Air canceled?

No. Current reporting stresses Apple has “stopped short of canceling” the project. Teams and some suppliers are still working on it, but the next release is no longer on the 2026 calendar, and 2027 is an aspiration, not a lock. Apple declined to comment when asked by wire services. [12]


Context: the Air’s rocky start

Apple introduced the iPhone Air in September 2025 as a showcase for extreme thinness, but its compromises—single camera, smaller battery, and $999 price—left many shoppers steering to either the less expensive iPhone 17 or the feature‑richer 17 Pro. Reports of soft demand grew through October, culminating in this week’s timeline shift. [13]


Bottom line for buyers (as of Nov. 11, 2025)

  • If you were waiting for iPhone Air 2, plan on a longer wait and expect noticeable hardware changes—especially the second camera—before it arrives. [14]
  • If you need a phone soon, compare the current iPhone Air against the iPhone 17 and 17 Pro on camera versatility and battery life; the Pro remains just $100 more than Air at launch pricing. [15]

Timeline of reports (all times Nov. 10–11, 2025)

  • Nov. 10 (evening UTC): Reuters reports Apple won’t release the next iPhone Air in fall 2026, citing The Information; Apple declines comment. [16]
  • Nov. 10 (later): The Verge summarizes that Apple scaled back first‑gen Air production and could push Air 2 to spring 2027 at the earliest. [17]
  • Nov. 11 (early): The Information posts a briefing: Apple is exploring a second camera for the next iPhone Air; coverage from 9to5Mac and MacRumors points to an ambitious spring 2027 target. [18]
  • Nov. 11 (morning):AppleInsider calls the 2026‑exit claims “questionable,” urging caution. [19]

Sources: The Information briefings and articles as summarized by Reuters, The Verge, 9to5Mac, MacRumors, and AppleInsider. [20]

How To Turn Off Security Delay On iPhone | Easy

References

1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.theinformation.com, 3. www.macrumors.com, 4. appleinsider.com, 5. www.theinformation.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.macrumors.com, 8. www.macrumors.com, 9. www.theinformation.com, 10. www.macrumors.com, 11. 9to5mac.com, 12. 9to5mac.com, 13. www.macrumors.com, 14. www.theinformation.com, 15. www.macrumors.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.theverge.com, 18. www.theinformation.com, 19. appleinsider.com, 20. www.reuters.com

A technology and finance expert writing for TS2.tech. He analyzes developments in satellites, telecommunications, and artificial intelligence, with a focus on their impact on global markets. Author of industry reports and market commentary, often cited in tech and business media. Passionate about innovation and the digital economy.

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