Apple iPhone Air review

GSMArena Team, 25 September 2025.

6.5-inch LTPO OLED panel with all the bells and whistles

The iPhone Air features a 6.5-inch LTPO Super Retina XDR OLED screen with ProMotion tech, which is what Apple calls the variable 120Hz refresh rate. Feature-wise, it's exactly the same one used by 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max, but slots in right between them in terms of size. Resolution is 1260 x 2736px, with a 19.5:9 aspect ratio.

Apple iPhone Air review

As before, the display supports HDR10 and Dolby Vision. The True Tone functionality is also here.

When it comes to brightness, the iPhone Air is seemingly less bright than before, but in practice, sunlight legibility is exceptional. In manual mode, the panel reached 780 nits, while in Auto mode, the screen reached to 998 nits.

Max display brightness test

White test pattern, 75% fill (nits)

  • Manual mode
  • Auto mode
Pixel 9 Pro Pixel 9 Pro
1298
6.3" LTPO OLED 1280 x 2856 px
iPhone 16 Pro iPhone 16 Pro
900
6.3" LTPO Super Retina XDR OLED 1206 x 2622 px
iPhone 16 Plus iPhone 16 Plus
891
6.7" Super Retina XDR OLED 1290 x 2796 px
iPhone 17 Pro Max iPhone 17 Pro Max
804
6.9" LTPO Super Retina XDR OLED 1320 x 2868 px
iPhone Air iPhone Air
780
6.5" LTPO OLED 1260 x 2736 px
Galaxy S25 Edge Galaxy S25 Edge
768
6.7" LTPO AMOLED 1440 x 3120 px
Pixel 9 Pro Pixel 9 Pro
2331
6.3" LTPO OLED 1280 x 2856 px
iPhone 16 Plus iPhone 16 Plus
1823
6.7" Super Retina XDR OLED 1290 x 2796 px
iPhone 16 Pro iPhone 16 Pro
1764
6.3" LTPO Super Retina XDR OLED 1206 x 2622 px
Galaxy S25 Edge Galaxy S25 Edge
1416
6.7" LTPO AMOLED 1440 x 3120 px
iPhone 17 Pro Max iPhone 17 Pro Max
1000
6.9" LTPO Super Retina XDR OLED 1320 x 2868 px
iPhone Air iPhone Air
998
6.5" LTPO OLED 1260 x 2736 px

Under strong, direct light on a smaller white patch, the display almost achieve 3,000 nits of brightness Apple promises, albeit only for a short while. So the company's claims are correct, even if like the majority of makers they are only possible when a very small part of the display is lit up.

Even though the panel isn't programmed to sustain high levels of brightness for longer than a few seconds, the new anti-reflective coating helps improve sunlight legibility significantly.

By quickly alternating between different size patches we managed to push the display to just over 1,700 nits on a 75% white screen, but that only lasts for a second or two. The system then dialed down the brightness to approximately 1,000 nits. It appears then that the display can actually run brighter, but it's just not feasible as it's very tricky to achieve.

Battery life

The iPhone Air comes with a mere 3,149 mAh battery, but the slightly cut-down A19 Pro chip and the 6.5-inch LTPO OLED ProMotion display are impressively efficient, because the phone earned a respectable 12:44h Active Use Score, which is way more than the battery capacity would lead you to expect.

In fact, the video playback and gaming runtimes are better than some Android phones with 5,000mAh+ cells on board.

Sure, the call time and the web browsing scores are hardly impressive, but the Air isn't going to be a phone you need to charge multiple times a day, which is all Apple set out to achive with this one.

Obviously there are iPhones that can run for much longer, but as we said the Air's task is not to compete with its siblings, but to claim new territory.

Charging speed

According to Apple's official specs, the phone can reach its peak charging rate with a compatible 20W Power Delivery charger, which in turn means that it doesn't support the new PD 3.2 + AVS charging of the other iPhones in the family. During our testing we never saw the charging rate exceed 18W.

Apple iPhone Air review

This was enough for the phone to charge from 0 to 33% in 15 minutes and 57% in 30 minutes. A full charge took 1 hour and 33 minutes. This is in line with the iPhone 16 Pro from last year, but slower than the iPhone 17 lineup.

The iPhone Air's charging is slow by modern standards and even though it has a very small battery to fill it takes longer to do it than the majority of competitors.

Charging speed

  • in 15 min
  • in 30 min
  • Time to full charge (from 0%)
iPhone 17 Pro Max iPhone 17 Pro Max
38%
4832 mAh 42W PD
iPhone 17 Pro Max (do not use) iPhone 17 Pro Max (do not use)
37%
4832 mAh 42W PD
iPhone 16 Pro iPhone 16 Pro
33%
3582 mAh
iPhone Air iPhone Air
33%
3149 mAh 18W PD
Pixel 9 Pro Pixel 9 Pro
30%
4700 mAh 45W PD
Galaxy S25 Edge Galaxy S25 Edge
30%
3900 mAh 25W
iPhone 17 Pro Max (wireless) iPhone 17 Pro Max (wireless)
28%
4832 mAh 25W Qi2
iPhone 16 Plus iPhone 16 Plus
27%
4674 mAh
iPhone 17 Pro Max iPhone 17 Pro Max
65%
4832 mAh 42W PD
iPhone 17 Pro Max (do not use) iPhone 17 Pro Max (do not use)
63%
4832 mAh 42W PD
Galaxy S25 Edge Galaxy S25 Edge
59%
3900 mAh 25W
iPhone 16 Pro iPhone 16 Pro
58%
3582 mAh
iPhone Air iPhone Air
57%
3149 mAh 18W PD
Pixel 9 Pro Pixel 9 Pro
56%
4700 mAh 45W PD
iPhone 16 Plus iPhone 16 Plus
55%
4674 mAh
iPhone 17 Pro Max (wireless) iPhone 17 Pro Max (wireless)
50%
4832 mAh 25W Qi2
Galaxy S25 Edge Galaxy S25 Edge
1:04h
3900 mAh 25W
iPhone 17 Pro Max iPhone 17 Pro Max
1:12h
4832 mAh 42W PD
iPhone 17 Pro Max (do not use) iPhone 17 Pro Max (do not use)
1:17h
4832 mAh 42W PD
Pixel 9 Pro Pixel 9 Pro
1:24h
4700 mAh 45W PD
iPhone Air iPhone Air
1:33h
3149 mAh 18W PD
iPhone 16 Pro iPhone 16 Pro
1:38h
3582 mAh
iPhone 16 Plus iPhone 16 Plus
1:39h
4674 mAh
iPhone 17 Pro Max (wireless) iPhone 17 Pro Max (wireless)
1:42h
4832 mAh 25W Qi2

The software offers an "optimized charging" toggle, which works in mysterious ways. Sometimes, it would stop charging altogether at around 80%, usually at nighttime, or slow down charging in certain scenarios, depending on your usage habits. The end goal is to provide fast charging when needed and slow down when the phone senses it's going to be on the charger for a long time. Your experience may vary, and we found it to be a hit and miss affair.

Speakers

The iPhone Air features just one speaker and it's not even where you expect it to be. There's no speaker at the bottom, and the only one available resides in the earpiece.

Understandably then, the Air is quiet and delivers unsatisfactory audio quality. The phone earned an "Average" -29.8 LUFS loudness score, while the tracks sound thin and lack bass. Vocals are clean, but overall everything sounds flat.

This is most likely due to the space constraints inside, and there's not enough room for proper echo chambers.

Use the Playback controls to listen to the phone sample recordings (best use headphones). We measure the average loudness of the speakers in LUFS. A lower absolute value means a louder sound. A look at the frequency response chart will tell you how far off the ideal "0db" flat line is the reproduction of the bass, treble, and mid frequencies. You can add more phones to compare how they differ. The scores and ratings are not comparable with our older loudspeaker test. Learn more about how we test here.

Reader comments

  • Wals
  • 23 Oct 2025
  • YUU

I like it for me an Asian using not to big not to small yet slim and powerful, it is the best phone so far for me ,using it almost a month no issues, its because I already have an insta 360 so I think the other camera is no use for me so no regrets.

  • Bee
  • 17 Oct 2025
  • t@T

Have yet to use my unit as I need to set it up. But I have held it in the hand and it does feel premium and well put together. I will be honest I was expecting it to be a bit lighter (I know it's already very light but for some reason it doesn&#...

  • Bee
  • 17 Oct 2025
  • t@T

Don't agree with you at all. It's a niche phone. Some may find it to be well suited to their needs. It's a thin phone with a larger display. There are some tradeoffs (you can't have it all unless you buy the pro), but overall it&#...