Apple’s first foldable iPhone is running into trouble before it even gets off the ground. Nikkei Asia reported Monday that the device has hit engineering snags during test production, and those problems could push back the launch timeline by months.
Apple Inc., AAPL
Multiple sources told Nikkei that the challenges are more complex than Apple anticipated. One source said: “It’s true that more issues than expected have emerged during the early test production phase, and additional time will be needed to resolve them.”
The foldable iPhone was expected to be part of Apple’s flagship second-half 2026 launch window, alongside two non-folding models featuring upgraded cameras and larger displays.
Apple has not commented on the report. Reuters could not independently verify the details.
The timing is tight. One source described April through early May as “extremely critical” for the engineering verification test phase. How that goes could determine whether the product stays on schedule or slips further.
Some, though not all, component suppliers have been notified that production schedules may need to shift. That suggests Apple is already managing expectations internally, even if no public announcement has been made.
Interestingly, one source pushed back on the idea that chip or component shortages are the issue. The problem, they said, is purely engineering — the mechanical and design challenges of building Apple’s first foldable form factor.
Apple had already adjusted its broader 2026 iPhone production strategy earlier this year. The company pushed back production of the standard iPhone model to early 2027 to prioritize premium models and manage constrained supplies of memory chips and other key resources.
Apple planned an initial production run of around 7 to 8 million foldable iPhones — less than 10% of its total planned new iPhone production volume for 2026.
Samsung and Huawei have been in the foldable market since 2019, giving them years of experience Apple is still working to match on its first attempt.
The stock dropped 4.3% in Monday morning trade following the Nikkei report.
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