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- Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: What you need to know
- Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Price and competition
- Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Design and key features
- Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Display
- Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Cameras
- Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Performance
- Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Verdict











- Better performance and battery life
- Camera button is very clever
- Sharper ultrawide shots
- Display is still 60Hz
- Camera button hard to reach
- Camera housing creates serious flat surface wobble
Ooooh. PINK! These are the first two words that fell out of my mouth when I first extracted my review sample of the iPhone 16 Plus from its box. Not oooh vertically orientated camera lenses or wooow, look at that sexy new camera button or even gasp consider the implications of the big leap in processing power.
All of those things are new to the iPhone 16 Plus and the iPhone 16, of course. But that colour, coupled with the matte glass finish is just lovely. If it isnt to your taste, you can also get your hands on the iPhone 16 Plus/16 in black, white, green (Teal) or blue (Ultramarine), but I just happen to think this pink finish is the most eye-catching of the lot. It is, truly, a lovely looking phone.
Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: What you need to know
The new iPhone 16 Plus isnt all about the colours, however. Ive already intimated this above but there are plenty of other new things about the iPhone 16 worth taking note of. Although this still very much looks like the old iPhone 15 Plus from the front the screen is the same 6.7in across the diagonal (the iPhone 16 measures 6.1in across), the borders are the same thickness and the resolution is identical the frame and rear of the phone are all new.
Theres a new camera bump design, which incorporates the phones main 48MP camera and new 12MP ultrawide camera in a vertical stack instead of a square as before. This is a neater arrangement to my mind, although I appreciate it may not be universally accepted as such.

The customisable Action button remains in place from last year and theres an all-new key located just along from the power button: the touch-sensitive, haptic camera button. This gives quick access to the camera app and allows you to quickly adjust various parameters by tapping and sliding your finger along it.
Up front, the screen is clad in Apples new 2024 Ceramic Shield glass, which it says is now 50% tougher than before. And last, but by no means least, the iPhone 16 Plus and 16 come with the same Apple A18 processor as featured inside the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, with bigger batteries than before and faster wireless charging.
The iPhone 16 family of phones is also the first to be built from the ground up for Apple Intelligence, the tech giants first move into the world of AI, including a far more advanced (and hopefully more effective) version of Siri.

Alas, Apple Intelligence is one of those coming soon features. Thats certainly disappointing so for now Id encourage you to judge the phone on the merits of its hardware. Apple promises it will make its debut for US users in October, while internationally well have to wait a couple of further months. It should debut in the UK in December so maybe wait until then.
Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Price and competition
Configurations tested: Apple iPhone 16, black, 8GB RAM, 128GB storage. Price: £1,299 | Apple iPhone 16 Plus, pink, 8GB RAM, 512GB storage
The good news is that prices, for once, havent risen since last year, so youre effectively getting a better phone for the same amount of money especially good news considering the 2023s iPhone 15 was cheaper than the iPhone 14 that preceded it.
The Apple iPhone 16 starts at £799 and the Plus model starts at £899, with 128GB of storage. Add £100 to these prices for the 256GB model or £200 for 512GB and you max out at £1,099 for the most expensive iPhone 16 Plus.
Contract, wise, you’ll be paying around £39/mth and £30 up front 30GB of data for the iPhone 16, and around £49/mth and £30 up front for the iPhone 16 Plus, also for 30GB of data (both prices from Vodafone and on a 36/mth contract).
If you want to move up to the Pro model, with its bigger screens and even faster processor, then prices for that start at £999 for the 128GB 6.3in Pro and £1,199 for the 6.9in Pro Max.

Those prices look pretty good when you compare it with the recent Google Pixel 9. That also costs £799 and gets you a phone with a 6.3in screen, 128GB or 256GB of storage and a similar camera setup: a 48MP main camera and a 48MP ultrawide shooter.
The Samsung Galaxy S24 is the next up in the list of obvious alternatives, and its currently much better value, with the 6.2in available for around £600 and the 6.7in Samsung Galaxy S24 Plus model available for as little as £717. That phone is due a refresher in January 2025, when we expect the Samsung Galaxy S25 range to be launched; in the interim, the S24 is still a great phone, offering in particular a superior camera lineup to the iPhone 16 and 16 Plus, with a 10MP 3x telephoto, a 12MP ultrawide and a 50MP main camera.
Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Design and key features
Aside from the colours, the new camera design and the camera button, theres nothing all that new to discuss on the design front. The dimensions of 78 x 7.8 x 161 (WDH) for the iPhone 16 Plus and 72 x 7.8 x 148 are exactly the same as last year and theres only a gramme or so of difference in the weight. Thats 170g for the 16 and 199g for the 16 Plus.
If you arent planning on using a case, the new camera housing makes the phone an awful lot more wobbly than it used to be when placed on a flat surface. Annoying? It could be, I suppose, but since most smart people will put their iPhones in a case, it wont be a deal breaker for many.
Apple has made more significant changes to repairability, though, so its now possible to fix an iPhone using OEM parts sourced from other phones instead of being forced to buy them new. Theres also an easier method for releasing the battery, which is genuinely clever: once youve managed to pry off the rear glass, just disconnect the ribbon cable and apply a small amount of electric current to a tab on the rear for a short period. This weakens the glue, allowing the battery to simply drop out. Its magical.

And that new camera button is definitely a more significant change than you might at first assume its no ordinary button. Set slightly into the surface of the right edge of the phone, a couple of centimetres away from the power button, it falls within reach of your right index finger when the phone is held in landscape orientation or the right thumb in portrait. You can click it at any time to launch the camera app, then click it again to capture a photo, or click and hold to record a video.
Thats the camera button at its most basic, but it has hidden depths. Give it a light squeeze and a small tab appears on the screen right next to it, showing an icon representing the currently selected setting; this can be exposure, zoom, depth, camera selection, styles and tone. From this point, you can slide your finger along the button to tweak that selected setting or give it a light double-squeeze to choose a different setting.

It all works brilliantly, as you might expect. You can adjust the sensitivity down and up if you find it too sensitive (or vice versa) via the accessibility settings menu, and Apple will be adding a half-press function to let you lock focus soon, aping the controls on a traditional DSLR or mirrorless camera.
I do have a couple of complaints about it, though. First is that the button is a little too far inboard for my liking, making reaching it more of a stretch than it should be. The second problem I have is that Ive pressed the camera button by accident on more than one occasion through the simple action of picking up the phone. That seems a small thing right now but I can envisage it becoming increasingly annoying over time.
Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Display
The rest of the user-facing phone is identical to the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus, and that includes the display. On my test iPhone 16 Plus, this is a 6.7in expanse of OLED display with a resolution of 2,796 x 1,290 (2,556 x 1,179 across 6.1in for the 16) and a 60Hz screen.
Ill make no bones about it, on a phone costing at the very least £799, the fact that this is still 60Hz is a major letdown. No other phone costing this much is stuck at 60Hz and you can really tell when you come back to a regular iPhone from another handset with a higher refresh rate display. It just feels sluggish, which is a shame when the chipset is so fast and powerful.

Aside from that, theres nothing to complain about on the image quality front, as usual. Brightness reaches 845cd/m2 with auto brightness disabled and I measured 1,554cd/m2 in HDR playback with a 10% window displayed on a black background.
In SDR, colour accuracy was as youd expect an iPhone to be, with a Delta E of 0.52 as good as it gets, in other words. And the great news is that in media playback, youll not notice the issues with the refresh rate. Its only when youre opening apps, scrolling through social media and web pages and flicking quickly between tasks that youll experience that. Basically, everything else a smartphone does.
Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Cameras
The camera lineup looks the same as last year, but there is a subtle difference. The main camera is identical, hardware-wise, so image quality will be largely similar, but theres a new sensor for the ultrawide, which does seem to make a difference to detail capture.
Just to recap, the main camera here is a 48MP 26mm f/1.6 camera with sensor-shift image stabilisation, while the ultrawide is a 12MP f/2.2 camera, where last years was a 12MP f/2.4 unit those are the same specifications as the iPhone 15 Pro Max. The main camera shoots 24MP images by default and its very, very good, the highlight being for me as it always has been Dolby Vision 4K video recording.

You can get a better smartphone camera for similar money if you go with an Android phone such as the Google Pixel 9, but you wont be disappointed with the images the iPhone 16 and 16 Plus camera is capable of churning out.
Meanwhile, its great to see that the other cameras are actually getting some attention for once. I dont have an iPhone 15 to hand for comparison but I captured a few comparison images with the iPhone 15 Pro Max, whose ultrawide camera has the same core specifications and the two were virtually inseparable.


The new hardware also unlocks the ability to shoot macro images with autofocus, with which you can capture some stunning close-ups, which is nice.


In general, though, the more significant improvements this year surround the camera button and a small handful of minor software tweaks, such as the new tone control feature, which gives you instant in-viewfinder control over the mood of your images. If you were hoping for something more dramatic, then you might want to maybe wait for the next iPhone, look to move up to an iPhone Pro model or just switch to Android.
Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Performance
When it comes to performance, the iPhone 16, somewhat surprisingly, moves to a new chipset: the Apple A18. This has six CPU cores (two performance and four efficiency cores), five GPU cores and a 16-core Neural Engine, the latter enabling all the local AI processing that will be required when Apple Intelligence eventually appears.
More significantly, perhaps, this represents a leap forward of not one generation but two from its predecessor, which employed the A16 Bionic chipset. The A18 used here isnt quite on parity with the A18 Pro used in the Pro and Pro Max chipsets it employs a cut-down GPU but mostly its the same, with what looks like the same CPU and neural engine.
You can see below what this means for performance: I havent received an iPhone 16 Pro Max yet for testing but you can see a significant advancement on CPU performance over the iPhone 15 Plus. The GPU is also a chunk more powerful than its predecessor, but bear in mind that real-world games performance will be capped by that 60Hz display.
Cast your eye over the charts below and youll also see the iPhone 16 Plus is quicker than the iPhone 15 Pro Max and all its near rivals for CPU performance. Impressive stuff lets hope Apple maintains its stance on keeping its phones on the same generation of chipset across both standard and Pro models.
As for battery life, well thats also seen a notable increase, rising from the 23hrs 41mins the iPhone 15 Plus achieved last year to 27hrs 3mins for the iPhone 16 Plus this year. Ill add results from the iPhone 16 when I get that phone in for testing itll be shorter but this result indicates the result should still come in at longer than 20 hours.
Apple iPhone 16 Plus review: Verdict
The iPhone 16 Plus and iPhone 16 dont do anything particularly special this year. In fact, its determinedly mixed in many areas. The design of the camera housing has changed, which I dont think does it any favours, and while the camera button is great in the way it works, I think its positioning could be improved. The display, meanwhile, really needs to move away from 60Hz because currently, Apple is shortchanging its customers.
However, the faster chipset and better battery life are significant steps forward, and Apple Intelligence (when it arrives) may well prove another reason to upgrade from the iPhone 15 and earlier models, since those wont support it. Its also good to see the price stay stable year on year.
Ultimately, though, its another year, another iPhone. Its better yes, not significantly so but just enough to keep customers buying.