# iPhone 18 Pro tipped for a much smaller Dynamic Island

> Reports point to a roughly a-third-smaller island on the iPhone 18 Pro. Treat it as a leak, but it fits a decade-long trajectory that only points one way.

Author: Tim Humphreys

Published: 2026-07-07T09:00:00.000Z
Updated: 2026-07-07T09:00:00.000Z
Canonical: /news/iphone-18-pro-smaller-dynamic-island

## Why it matters

The cutout is the last visible compromise on a phone's front. Each shrink is years of sensor engineering, and it hints at when the truly all-screen phone finally arrives.

## Story

Apple's next flagship may take its biggest visible step yet toward the all-screen phone, if the current leak picture holds.

Reports around the iPhone 18 Pro point to a Dynamic Island roughly 35 percent smaller than today's pill-shaped cutout. That area houses the front camera and Face ID hardware, so shrinking it is not cosmetic work alone. It means Apple has found ways to compress the sensor package again.

The usual caution applies: this is supply-chain rumor, not an announcement, and cutout claims have missed before. Still, the direction fits a trajectory Apple has followed with unusual patience.

The 2017 iPhone X introduced the notch, a broad bite out of the display holding the camera, dot projector, infrared camera, proximity sensing, and more. Five years later, the iPhone 14 Pro compressed that compromise into the Dynamic Island and turned the hole into a software surface people actually used.

Since then, the interesting changes have been internal. Face ID components have been consolidated and shrunk generation by generation. A one-third smaller island would suggest more unglamorous engineering work: combined modules, tighter packaging, optical redesigns, and under-display experiments that rarely become headline features but define the phone's face.

The destination everyone assumes is obvious: Face ID under the glass, then eventually the camera too. Rival brands have attempted under-display cameras, but image quality has often disappointed. Apple's habit is to arrive late and polished rather than first and compromised.

That is why a smaller island, rather than a disappearing one, feels believable. The technology may not be ready to vanish, so Apple makes it smaller until it can.

There is a rival context too. Samsung's foldable leaks show one path to making phones feel new again, which we cover at /news/samsung-unpacked-july-z-fold-8-leaks. Apple is working the other path: make the front look less interrupted until the phone face finally becomes all screen.

Should you care? If you buy phones on looks, a cleaner face is genuinely nice. The honest translation of this leak, though, is about time. The all-screen iPhone still looks generations away. The iPhone 18 Pro, if the report holds, is a waypoint.



## Sources

- [9to5Mac iPhone rumor coverage](https://9to5mac.com/guides/iphone-18/)
- [MacRumors iPhone 18 coverage](https://www.macrumors.com/roundup/iphone-18/)


A smaller Dynamic Island would not reinvent the iPhone. It would show that Apple is still slowly sanding away the last visible compromise.