Over the past few years, Appleās standard iPhone looked a little neglected. The Pro models got new chipsets, camera features, and a customizable Action Button, while the standard models made do with the leftovers.
But this year, things are different: the iPhone 16 and 16 Plus played catch-up, and the gap between these phones and the Pro models isnāt as wide as it once was.
That matters a lot, especially on the more basic models. If youāve been holding on to an older iPhone for the past couple of generations wondering whether this is the year to upgrade, then I think thereās an easy answer this time around: go for it. Itās a good year for the basic iPhone, and itās a good year to upgrade.
But this iPhone is still very much a work in progress. For starters, Apple Intelligence is supposedly a major component of this phoneās software, and itās just not available at launch. Itās out in beta now, and some features will begin to ship next month with iOS 18.1 ā still marked as ābeta.ā But itās not on the phone Iām reviewing, which is running 18.0, and therefore, itās not part of this review.Ā
I also have mixed feelings about the Camera Control, a new button on both the Pro and regular iPhone 16 models that allows you to launch the camera, take photos, and adjust some settings. I appreciate that it isnāt a Pro-exclusive feature, and boy, do I love a button. But in practice, I find it hard to use and have largely been ignoring it.
But the thing is, the foundational stuff is good. This yearās chipset is in the same family as the one on the Pro models, which means theyāll likely be on roughly the same software update schedule. The camera itself is as capable as ever, and the phone hardware itself looks great ā Appleās using some saturated colors again, thank God. And it still starts at $799, so anything added this year just feels like a nice-to-have. Even if Apple Intelligence never ships, youād still have a good iPhone in your hands.
Thereās one particularly conspicuous hardware feature missing from this, a high-end phone in the year 2024: a high refresh rate screen. Only the Pro phones get smoother ProMotion displays that go up to 120Hz, while the 16 and 16 Plus are stuck in 60Hz. By now, itās a standard feature on modern smartphones from the midrange on up, and the iPhone looks awfully dated without it.
On principle, itās irritating that Apple doesnāt offer this on the basic models, but in reality, how much that bothers you is entirely personal. I use phones with 120Hz screens for most of the rest of the year, and itās always jarring for the first few minutes when I switch back to a 60Hz screen. But I get used to it pretty quickly, and I only notice the more stuttered scrolling when I think about it. Some people will find this an inexcusable omission, and theyāre probably right. Some people will be perfectly happy with a 60Hz screen, and theyāre also right. Everyone else exists somewhere between the two.
The 16 and 16 Plus also miss out on the always-on display offered on the Pro models. I like being able to glance at my notifications and my wallpaper when the iPhone is idle, so I miss having the always-on display on the 16. Still, I know a lot of people who donāt like it, so on balance, itās no great loss here.Ā
Now, if anyone is on the record as a full-fledged button supporter, itās me. I canāt get enough of āem. So, imagine my delight at having two new buttons on this phone ā the programmable Action Button from the 15 Pro and the new Camera Control. I use the Action Button to open the app I use to sign my kid out of daycare. Usually, I have to fumble around looking for the app while thereās another parent in a rush waiting behind me, so it soothes my anxious brain every time I press that button. You can program it to do all kinds of things if youāre willing to learn the ways of Shortcuts. But for the rest of us, itās pretty straightforward to map it to open a specific app and leave it at that.Ā
I wish I had better things to say about the Camera Control. Believe me, I wanted to like it. Iāve used it a bunch, and I plan to keep trying it, just in case Iām missing something. But so far, Iām not impressed. Itās an actual button, and fully pressing it will launch the camera app. Once youāre there, another full press will take a photo. Itās also a capacitive control with haptic feedback ā lightly pressing it will bring up exposure settings that you can adjust by moving your finger along the control.Ā
Surprisingly, thatās the action Iām most comfortable with. Itās pressing the actual button and firing the shutter Iām struggling with. The mechanism feels too stiff to me, and no matter how hard I try to support the phone, I end up shaking the whole device every time I take a picture. And if I linger on that light press too long, I end up changing the exposure compensation or some other setting inadvertently. I have to take my focus away from the moment and think about pressing a damn button, and at that point, what are we even doing here?
I do like using it to launch the camera, but once Iāve done that, Iāve mostly gone back to using the onscreen shutter. Iām also using the capacitive control for exposure compensation, but I canāt help feeling that Iām underutilizing one of this phoneās fancy new features. If this button had one job instead of two, it would be more intuitive. Still, I now have a dedicated button to launch the camera and a capacitive exposure comp dial for the camera, and I canāt complain about that at all. I just wish the dual functions of this button worked better together.
I have to take my focus away from the moment and think about pressing a damn button
And while weāre in the camera app, letās talk about Photographic Styles. Remember those? Theyāre like filters for the iPhone camera, but theyāre applied during capture. On the iPhone 16 series, youāll have a whole new range of custom settings to help you dial in the photographic style you like. You can go into the weeds of how this works in our iPhone 16 Pro review, but at a high level, they let you adjust color cast ā in service of warmer or cooler skin tones ā as well as brightness and contrast. If youāre one of the many people who think that iPhone photos look overprocessed lately, then this is the feature for you.
Iāve landed on a style that I like, but it wasnāt easy getting there. To set a photographic style as your new default, you need to go into the system settings menu and go through a setup process where you audition four of your photos in the new style. If you just pick a new style in the camera app itself, itāll reset to standard when you leave. This is a different behavior than on previous iPhones, and it confused the hell out of me at first.
And hereās the bad news: you need to shoot in HEIF to use the new styles. HEIF is a cursed file format that no other company loves as much as Apple. Most of the time, your HEIF images will be converted to JPEG when sending them outside of the Apple ecosystem, but inevitably, one day youāll have the misfortune of trying to open a .heic file on a non-Apple device and be met with nothing but sadness. I usually avoid shooting in HEIF, but the new photographic styles are so good that Iām willing to put up with the stray compatibility issue.Ā
This level of flexibility makes it kind of hard to evaluate the camera itself. Iāve been shooting with a contrastier photographic style, which dials up shadows in a way I like. Along with the brighter highlights preserved by HDR tone mapping, you get an image with actual highlights and shadows ā not a bunch of gray mush scrunched into a standard dynamic range space. The camera will still go a little intense with blue skies in certain circumstances, but you could play around with the photographic style settings to dial that down. I like my version of the camera app, which may be different from your version.Ā
Mostly, Iām grateful that the iPhone continues to deliver great photos in portrait mode, and Iām always impressed by the video quality in cinematic mode, too. The 2x crop zoom is fine in decent lighting, and itās a handy focal length for portrait shots. Having macro focus on the ultrawide lens is nice for the occasional close-up shot, too.
But the iPhone 16 uses a smaller main image sensor than its Pro peers, and its low-light image quality isnāt quite as good. Image quality is fine if your subjects arenāt moving, but donāt expect to get away with a lot if youāre trying to shoot portraits or moving subjects in dim light. And out of curiosity, I compared the 5x digital zoom on the iPhone 16 with the 5x telephoto lens on the 15 Pro Max. Predictably, the Pro Max blows it out of the water. Thereās still no substitute for good āol optical zoom.
I have nothing shocking to report about the iPhone 16ās overall performance. The A18 chipset (and some additional RAM ā thanks AI!) handles daily tasks easily. I can fire off portrait mode photos about once a second; each one has a little bit of built-in buffering time, but I never had to wait longer than that for the buffer to clear. Even if you never use the AI features Apple is promising for this phone, getting the newer chipset is a win for the regular iPhones this year and should keep this phone running smoothly well into the next four or five years.
Even on the smaller model, the battery keeps up all day. On a day of heavier use that included streaming KEXP with Strava using GPS in the background, I still had around 30 percent by bedtime. If you opt for the 16 Plus, with its larger battery, you can stretch a single charge well into a second day. The real question will be how it keeps up a year or two down the line; Appleās recent track record here isnāt great.
Itās a good year for the basic iPhones, and that hasnāt been the case over the past few generations. To be sure, thereās nothing groundbreaking here, and certainly nothing you should trade in your iPhone 15 for. But if youāve been on the fence for a while about upgrading from an 11 or 12, then I think this is the year to go for it.Ā
Youāll get a couple of new buttons to play with, and who knows, maybe youāll get along better with the Camera Control than I did. And If Apple Intelligence arrives and proves to be the time-saving, stress-easing set of features Apple insists it will be, then this phone will be ready for it. But even if they never arrive, youāre still getting some upgrades that matter in the long run. Itās a catch-up year for the regular iPhone, and thatās a good year to upgrade indeed.Ā
Photography by Allison Johnson / The Verge
Correction, September 18th: A previous version of this article referred to a 5x telephoto lens on the iPhone 15 Pro; only the 15 Pro Max has a 5x telephoto lens.