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iPhone users are upgrading their devices at a slightly faster rate, reversing a long-term trend of increasingly long upgrade cycles, Consumer Intelligence Research Partners (CIRP) reports.

iphone-16-lineup-colors.jpg

According to data from the quarter ending in December 2024, more iPhone buyers retired their devices at an earlier point compared to previous years. Specifically, 36% of those who purchased a new iPhone during the period had owned their previous device for two years or less. This marks an increase from the 31% reported in the same quarter a year earlier. Meanwhile, the percentage of users who kept their previous iPhone for three years or more declined slightly, falling to 33%.

This shift represents the first notable deviation in upgrade cycles since CIRP began tracking the data in 2014. While a long-term trend toward extended ownership remains, recent factors appear to be accelerating upgrades among a segment of users. CIRP says that the proportion of users upgrading after two years has returned to levels last seen in 2020.

The firm attributes this change to a variety of factors, including ongoing carrier promotions and incentives that encourage earlier upgrades. A major factor influencing upgrade behavior may also be the introduction of Apple Intelligence, the company's suite of AI-powered features.

The timing of this shift coincides with Apple's recent financial performance, which has indicated some weakness in iPhone sales. CIRP speculates that the composition of Apple's customer base could be influencing the trend.

If iPhone sales are slowing overall, those who are upgrading may be the most engaged segment of Apple's user base—individuals who are more likely to adopt new hardware sooner than more casual users. CIRP suggests that slower upgraders may be delaying their purchases even further, waiting for a more compelling reason to replace their current devices.

Article Link: iPhone Upgrade Cycles Are Getting Shorter Again
 
The firm attributes this change to a variety of factors, including ongoing carrier promotions and incentives that encourage earlier upgrades. A major factor influencing upgrade behavior may also be the introduction of Apple Intelligence, the company's suite of AI-powered features.

Let’s not forget bloated iOS burning through everybody’s aging battery
 
I’m currently on an iPhone 13. I usually update every 4-5 years. I adjust this usually so that I get a better camera in time for a vacation. I’m due for a new one in this year I guess as my battery get weaker.
 
The firm attributes this change to a variety of factors, including ongoing carrier promotions and incentives that encourage earlier upgrades. A major factor influencing upgrade behavior may also be the introduction of Apple Intelligence, the company's suite of AI-powered features.
And a great con that has turned out to be for many so far...
 
I think the factor that the vast majority of people ignore is that most people don’t purchase their phones, at least not in the US.
Most people are on carrier contracts, and it’s always about every two years that they start with basically a constant barrage of “trade in you’re phone today and get the iPhone 16 for free, or the 16 Pro for the $200 difference” deals.
And after two years, the user’s phones battery has degraded, maybe their storage is always full, and they have a free upgrade. So it’s literally just easier to do the trade-in instead of paying for a battery replacement and messing around with storage management.
Much like the Mac, we are long past the days of people actually upgrading their phones because “new and flashier”. That hasn’t really been a thing since at least the iPhone X and the Galaxy S8.
 
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iPhone sales have been falling for a long time. Apple telegraphed that they were falling and would never recover years ago, when they said they'd no longer report the number of units sold.

Have Android sales noticeably gone up? I keep saying that I'll jump ship and get an Android... and yet I just keep getting used iPhones instead. New iPhones just aren't worth anywhere near what Apple charges for them. And... Androids don't have particularly compelling features either to justify switching.
 
iPhone sales have been falling for a long time. Apple telegraphed that they were falling and would never recover years ago, when they said they'd no longer report the number of units sold.

Have Android sales noticeably gone up? I keep saying that I'll jump ship and get an Android... and yet I just keep getting used iPhones instead. New iPhones just aren't worth anywhere near what Apple charges for them. And... Androids don't have particularly compelling features either to justify switching.
The only way I'd jump ship and go Android is if Apple got broken up by antitrust (certainly not for the next 4+ years...) and the ecosystem was broken. In a way, it would free me to try other stuff.
 
If I'm a holdout of iPhone X/XS, I would upgrade to iPhone 16 since that is the model closest...

The chip advancements seem to be canceled out due to bloat, unnecessary changes, and bugs, introduced in iOS through the years...
 
No connector hate from me. Just better to need only one cable type as USB-C becomes the device standard everywhere.

Agree with that for sure

I'm probably just not concerned with that as it'll be a LONG time before I can do that given all the Lightning devices I have in daily usage right now (some with no upgrade path .. like iPhone 13 Mini)
 
According to data from the quarter ending in December 2024, more iPhone buyers retired their devices at an earlier point compared to previous years.
Apple finally got rid of awful lightning connector, so no wonder people want to jump the ship
If people really wanted to move away from lightning port to USB-C port, we would have seen this in the quarter ending December 2023 or one of the three following quarters, not December 2024, as 2023 was the year the first iPhone (iPhone 15) had a USB-C port.
 
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