The foldable iPhone could have much smaller screens than the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7

- A report suggests that the foldable iPhone will have a 7.8 -inch foldable screen and a 5.5 -inch blanket screen
- We have already heard these sizes, so they may well be precise
- This would make screens of the foldable iPhone much smaller than those of its main rival
There are still many more questions about the foldable iPhone than the answers, and one of these questions is the size of the screens it will have. But we are not wondering because of a lack of answers – there have more been many contradictory answers.
Now we are starting to see a consensus, because a trendforce report (via MacRumors) says that the foldable iPhone will have a 7.8 -inch foldable screen and a 5.5 -inch blanket screen – which are the two dimensions that we have heard before.
Ming-Chi Kuo (analyst with a good assessment for Apple information) said the same thing in March, and we also heard almost identical sizes of the Tiptier digital cat station in February.
So, although not all sources agree, there are now enough leaks pointing to these sizes that they seem most likely.
Smaller than competition
If these sizes are correct, the screen of the foldable iPhone would not be particularly large. The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 for example has an 8.0 -inch foldable screen and a 6.5 -inch blanket screen. This means that you essentially have a small tablet and a medium -sized smartphone in one, while the foldable iPhone could be found with a foldable screen which is still a little smaller than that of a tablet, and a fairly compact cover screen.
We direct that it could remember, because it would probably not fulfill either smartphone or tablet roles for most people, but the size of the screen is only a piece of the puzzle. If the remaining specifications impress, the phone is properly thin and light, and it is not prohibitive, then it could always be the device to make foldable phones.
We will probably not discover it for a while, because the foldable iPhone is unlikely to start before the end of 2026 – and can happen even later than that.




