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Apple users are holding onto their devices for increasingly long periods of time as upgrade cycles slow, data from Consumer Intelligence Research Partners (CIRP) suggests.

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In recent years, a shift has occurred in the behavior of Apple customers, who are increasingly opting to retain their iPhones, iPads, and Macs for extended periods before upgrading. In the most recent 12-month period, 71% of iPhone owners and 68% of Mac owners reported that their previous device was over two years old, up from 63% and 59%, respectively, in 2020.

In the specific case of the Mac, CIRP indicates a substantial increase in the length of time users keep their devices. Currently, 56% of Mac customers hold onto their laptops or desktops for three years or more, a significant rise from 40% in 2020. This trend has led to a decline in shorter lifecycle lengths, with fewer users keeping their Macs for less than three years. CIRP's research suggests that the transition to Apple Silicon, which began in 2020 with the introduction of the M1 chip, has played a crucial role in this shift. Apple Silicon has delivered significant performance and energy efficiency improvements, making Macs more capable of handling demanding tasks for several years.

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Age of previous Mac for Apple customers buying a new Mac (12 months ending March of each year)

The economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic also likely influenced consumer behavior. During the early stages of the pandemic, there was a surge in demand for technology to support remote work and online education, but economic uncertainy followed and many consumers became more cautious with their spending, opting to maximize the lifespan of their existing devices rather than investing in new ones. Battery life improvements in MacBooks have also reached a satisfactory threshold for many users, further reducing the incentive to upgrade frequently.

This phenomenon has similarly been noted by Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, who recently said that the percentage of iPhone and Mac users whose previous device was older than two years has risen sharply. He attributed the shift to several factors, including fewer significant features in new models, improved durability and reliability of devices, and changing user needs. The increased reliance on streaming services and web-based applications means that for many users, their current devices remain sufficiently powerful and capable for everyday tasks. As a result, the traditional motivations for frequent upgrades, such as the need for better cameras, more storage, or faster processing speeds, have diminished.


Article Link: Apple Users Are Keeping Their Devices for Longer as Upgrades Slow
 
Devices are a commodity these days, no reason to upgrade. Innovation is dead at Apple. We don't need more emoji. We certainly don't need AI, which is all Apple is focusing on for the next couple of years.

Apple failed with the car, failed with Carplay 2, failed with Siri. Just imagine where we would be if Apple had applied the car investment into Siri. Apple increases bugs with every new release, and never seems to reduce them.

We need tech leadership at Apple, not a supply chain guy.

It is time for Cook to be replaced.
 
Also, Macs are such great computers that can continue performing good for many years, unlike PCs.
I used to replace my PCs every two years because these would become painfully slow.

As an example, my first Mac, a 2007 17" MBP lasted me until 2015.
My M1 is turning 4 this year, but it's such a great laptop I don't yet see the need to replace it. But if I did, it will replace a 2018 MBP I use on the field and get a Mac Studio or better.
 
Most people don't need to update phones, tablets and laptops every year. The incremental advances are minimal for users of the current model, but add up for users whose devices are 3-4 years old. I never get why people with current devices deride the next one as "just a spec bump". That's what most mature product categories are. I assume most people don't upgrade their TVs or cars every year because of some slight improvements.

I have always gotten the newest iPhone and Apple Watch each year, because the incremental improvement is worth the trade in price for me. Definitely not for most of my friends and family. Probably will upgrade to the M4 MBPs this year if they prove to have a substantial speed increase with the Neural Engine / Apple Intelligence. Time will tell ...
 
Yup. Probably keep my series 7 again this cycle unless something markedly improved with this new watch. As for my 14 PM, wait and see. I’ll probably upgrade when my free three years with satellite expires.
 
I'm not surprised.

I used to buy every model, then every other model... but stopped around the iPhone X and settled with the iPhone 14.

two reasons:

1. Upgrades are incremental, I don't really care anymore if the camera is better, it's already amazing and better than my eyes can ever see.

2. Everything is really expensive and I cannot justify cost.


I've got a 2020 Intel MacBook Pro, which replaced a 2010 intel MacBook Pro. I doubt I'll upgrade again until it's closer to 2030.
 
I switched from iPhone 14 Pro Max 256GB to iPhone 13 Pro 512GB

Battery is not as good as the base model counterpart [iPhone 13] but I went with it because of ProRAW and telephoto...

I don't see myself upgrading to a newer model anytime soon since I only have 1 USB Type C cable but so many Lightning cables...
 
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Trade in values are generally good on the Pro phones, so the primary factor for me is if I like the new version.

That said, there is no sense in upgrading Apple Watches every year. I usually wait until the battery degrades too much, or if there is a major feature overhaul like S5 or S7.
 
I feel like in the last few years, there’s less social pressure to have the latest phone. Now that there are so many models and everyone has a smartphone, people (like myself) who once might have upgraded to the latest model every two years, would rather just save the money and time now.

I am not saying you are wrong, but this is so alien to me, the idea that anyone remotely cares what device/car/clothes etc.. I choose to own. I hear it mentioned on various forums a lot (the whole "keeping up with the Jones'"). It reminds me of an old quote:

When you’re 20, you care what everyone thinks, when you’re 40 you stop caring what everyone thinks, when you’re 60, you realise no one was ever thinking about you in the first place"

Topic wise, I went from an 11 Pro to a 15 Pro for the USB-C port. As a device I find it pretty much the same, possibly worse - near item focussing for a start. For the cost and having hit peak incremental iteration, it would be frivolous to keep on replacing YoY.
 
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I just hope this doesn't make Apple resort to unethical methods to get people to upgrade - such as feature barriers unrelated to hardware limitations, a reduction on software support and cheaper batteries that degrade faster.

We're already sort of seeing this with Apple Intelligence and software support on Apple Watches.

It's really easy for them to camouflage those methods and spin them into a neutral way, but we'll know what's going on.
 
I just hope this doesn't make Apple resort to unethical methods to get people to upgrade - such as feature barriers unrelated to hardware limitations, a reduction on software support and cheaper batteries that degrade faster.

Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but they've long been engaging in these tactics

The entire reason SSDs are locked down on Macs is so they can absolutely screw customers on horrendously overpriced SSD upgrades at the time of initial purchase
 
Can’t see that more than maybe 5% of mac users would actually need to upgrade every 2 years. If that. Surely only applies to true power users who require the very fastest machines at all times.

Those folk aside not many people would really need to upgrade sooner than 4 or even 5 years. My last mbp lasted me 8, it was still in great condition too just a bit slow and noisy.
 
Because the prices in Australia are an absolute joke, when Apple released the M4 iPads here recently they put the prices up which they’ve done with every new release. Considering how much the cost of living is hurting everyone at the moment only Apple Inc with Timmy Cook at the helm would have the b@lls to up the prices right now.

My a$$ they’re an altruistic company that wants equality for all🙄.
 
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