Apple's Pro iPhones will not be returning to titanium frames anytime soon. This is not due to design decisions, but rather to the thermal efficiency calculated by local AI. A well-known Weibo leaker thus contradicts a much more optimistic report from last week.
The question of materials remains one of the central topics of discussion surrounding Apple's Pro iPhones. While reports in November indicated that Apple would increasingly rely on titanium for the iPhone in 2026, the Chinese Weibo leaker Fixed Focus Digital now speaks a much more sober language: aluminum will remain the standard for the Pro models – specifically for thermal reasons, which have become even more important due to local AI functions.
Aluminium remains fixed for thermal reasons
The statement is clear: Apple's Pro iPhones will not be returning to titanium in the foreseeable future. This is justified by the thermal requirements resulting from the growing importance of local AI calculations directly on the device. Aluminum dissipates heat better than titanium and is therefore the only practical solution as long as smartphones have to handle increasing computing loads locally.
Fixed Focus Digital adds an important point: This isn't an Apple-specific problem. Android manufacturers and devices running Huawei HarmonyOS are sticking with aluminum for precisely the same reason. This transforms the material issue from a purely Apple-centric discussion into an industry-wide consequence of the trend toward on-device AI.
The theory of a titanium renaissance is faltering
This current assessment directly contradicts a report from Instant Digital last week. That report posited that Apple's switch from titanium to aluminum in the iPhone 17 Pro was a temporary compromise – while the company simultaneously worked on long-term alternatives. Liquid metal and a revised titanium alloy were mentioned as possible materials for future Pro models. According to Instant Digital, both materials are also planned for the upcoming foldable iPhone.
Fixed Focus Digital doesn't disagree with this interpretation in every detail, but it does agree with the core point: A return to titanium is simply not plausible from a thermal perspective as long as AI demands continue to increase. The switch to aluminum in the iPhone 17 Pro is therefore significantly more structural than Instant Digital portrays it – and not a transition to a titanium renaissance.
Apple's zigzag course regarding casing materials
Apple first used titanium with the iPhone 15 Pro in 2023, positioning the material as a premium feature. Following reports of overheating issues with the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro, the company switched to an all-aluminum casing with improved heat dissipation for the iPhone 17 Pro – including a new internal cooling design with a vapor chamber. Even then, aluminum wasn't marketed solely as a cost advantage, but explicitly as a thermally superior solution.
The key point in Apple's current lineup: While the Pro models feature aluminum, the iPhone Air retains its titanium frame, which is designed to stabilize the ultra-thin casing. Material choices and model categories have thus partially departed from the classic premium model. Titanium is no longer automatically a Pro feature, but is used selectively where the design demands it.
The all-aluminum unibody design remains with the iPhone 18 Pro
From Fixed Focus Digital's perspective, the direction is clear: aluminum will remain a given for the iPhone 18 Pro. The leaker assumes that the next Pro generation will retain the all-aluminum unibody design introduced with the iPhone 17 Pro. This would likely mean that the weight profile, which was introduced with its predecessor, will hardly change.
For the materials debate, this means one thing above all: anyone hoping for a swift return to titanium will likely be disappointed. As long as on-device AI remains a central component of Apple's hardware strategy, aluminum has a clear thermal advantage. A return to titanium would require either significantly more efficient chips or Apple implementing a completely new cooling concept that would once again open up the material options.
iPhone: Two interpretations from the same supply chain
What's remarkable is the sharpness of the contradiction between two well-connected sources in China, both known for their reliable predictions in the past. Instant Digital and Fixed Focus Digital draw different conclusions from apparently similar supply chain signals: While one interprets potential new materials as an indication of an impending comeback, the other sees them at most as preparations for specialized applications such as the hinge of the foldable iPhone.
This discrepancy illustrates how difficult it is to interpret the current situation regarding material decisions. Apple is pursuing multiple approaches – using aluminum for the Pro models, titanium for the iPhone Air, and potentially special solutions like liquid metal for the foldable. A unified material line, as existed in the days of stainless steel or titanium, no longer exists. This is precisely what makes the discussion among leakers so intriguing – and so contradictory. (Image: Shutterstock / Runrun2)
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