Next year, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) is expected to launch three new iPhones. The lowest-cost model appears to be a phone with a 6-inch liquid crystal display, the mid-priced model should be a direct successor to this year's iPhone X with a 5.85-inch display, and the highest-priced iPhone should be a larger version of the mid-priced phone, sporting a 6.46-inch display.
Let's consider how Apple might price these new iPhones, and why such a pricing structure would make a lot of sense for Apple's business.
Image source: Apple.
The pricing
I expect the LCD iPhone to come in the same two storage configurations that all three of this year's iPhone come in: 64GB and 256GB. I also expect the baseline model to start at $799 -- the same price Apple's asking for the baseline iPhone 8 Plus this year -- with the higher-end storage configuration to go for $949. In other words, next year's cheapest new iPhone would be priced as the iPhone 8 Plus is today.
Next, I could see Apple retaining the same pricing structure for the next 5.85-inch iPhone X: $999 for the configuration with 64GB of storage and $1,149 for the variant with 256GB of storage.
The first two iPhones in the lineup are priced similarly to this year's models, but where things have the potential to get interesting is in how Apple prices the rumored 6.46-inch iPhone X.
It may be tempting to think Apple will follow the same basic pricing pattern in going from the iPhone 8 Plus to the iPhone X, but after giving it some thought, I'm not convinced that it makes sense for Apple to release both 64GB and 256GB variants of an ultra-ultra-premium iPhone. Instead, I think it's more likely that the 6.46-inch iPhone X will be a device targeted at the most enthusiastic of iPhone enthusiasts. To that end, I expect storage configurations of 256GB and 512GB for the 6.46-inch iPhone X.
If I'm right, then the 256GB model could be priced at $1,299, a $150 premium to the 5.85-inch iPhone X with the same amount of storage, and the 512GB model could come in at $1,499.
Boosting Apple's iPhone business
I think this product stack has the potential to help Apple's iPhone business in several important ways. First, with the presence of iPhone X models that start at $999 and $1,299, the LCD iPhone, which I think Apple will simply market as "iPhone" with no suffixes, starts to look like a good deal, especially if it shares the same basic internal specs as the higher-end models -- an A12 applications processor, Wi-Fi and cellular capabilities, a TrueDepth camera, and so on. If Apple can successfully convince people that an iPhone that starts at $799 is a good deal, then that's a pretty big win for the company.