Apple iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max review: More than just a bold new look
Apple is taking its two Pro iPhones to new levels of performance and functionality, but it’s not all butterflies and rainbows.
By Kenny Yeo -
Note: This review was first published on 23 September 2025.
Maybe it’s the dramatic redesign, or perhaps it’s the striking Cosmic Orange finish, but I haven’t been this excited to test an iPhone in a long time. For 2025, Apple has made big changes to its Pro iPhones this year as it doubles down on performance in a big way with more powerful chips and a new design that is largely dictated by function. These are unquestionably the iPhones to have if you prioritise performance, or if you are a professional who requires the advanced features that only Pro iPhones can deliver. But what does it mean for the everyday user, especially since there’s now the super svelte iPhone Air and the much-improved iPhone 17? Let’s peel the layers to find out.
Design & display
Apple didn’t change the size of the displays, but they now get brighter – up to 3,000 nits.
The iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max look and feel nothing like their predecessors. Though the screen sizes are unchanged, the new phones are slightly thicker and heavier. It’s also no longer made of titanium. Instead, Apple is using a custom aluminium alloy that it says has better thermal properties, which should aid performance.
The big news is the large camera bar that now runs across the entire width of the phone. The camera bar isn’t merely for aesthetics. It’s to house components and free up space in other parts of the phone for a larger battery. Also, the antennas used for cellular and wireless connectivity are strategically placed around the perimeter, resulting in what Apple claims is “the highest-performing” antenna system ever in an iPhone. OveralI, I find the new look refreshing, even if there’s a whiff of Google Pixel about it.
We have to talk about colours, and the star colour this year is unquestionably Cosmic Orange. This is an unusually bright colour for a Pro iPhone, and it’s the one you want if you are the type who wants everyone around you to know you got the latest and greatest iPhone. It reminds me of Thai milk tea.
Apart from Cosmic Orange, the other colour choices this year are Deep Blue and Silver. Many are lamenting that there’s no black option, but to my eyes, Deep Blue can pass off as black. It looks dark most of the time. Silver reminds me of last year’s White Titanium.
The most distinctive thing about the new Pro iPhones is that large camera bar. Also, note how rich Cosmic Orange is.
Look hard and you’ll notice that the bar is actually part of the chassis. That’s because it’s a unibody design – which means the entire chassis is one piece of aluminium, a first for the iPhone. A unibody design confers the phone greater strength, durability, and better heat dissipation. In fact, Apple says its custom aluminium alloy offers over 20 times the thermal conductivity of the titanium used in last year’s phones. To further maximise the thermal properties of aluminium, Apple is also using a vapour chamber cooling system within, but more on it later when we discuss performance.
Apple also claims its aluminium alloy is lighter than titanium. Even so, this year’s phones are actually a little heavier. On paper, the difference is mere grams, but I could tell from the moment I picked them up. They are 0.5mm thicker, too. This extra bulk is accentuated by the fact that the edges are rounded and not squared off like previous iPhones.
One of the first things you’ll notice when you pick up these phones are their rounded edges.
The sizes of the displays are the same. The iPhone 17 Pro still comes with a 6.3-inch screen, while the iPhone 17 Pro Max has a massive 6.9-inch display. Both are still Super Retina XDR displays with 120Hz ProMotion technology, which means they look fantastic. However, peak brightness now goes up to 3,000 nits, which can be handy outside on a sunny day. The displays are now protected by the new Ceramic Shield 2 glass, which Apple says has 3x better scratch resistance. Having experienced scratches on my past iPhones, I’m keen to see how strong this new glass material is.
The buttons are unchanged. These phones still come with the Action Button, Camera Control button, volume buttons, and the side button. Some people still consider the Camera Control button a gimmick, but I found it useful during a holiday last year.
Camera performance
The front-facing selfie camera gets a huge upgrade in terms of features and performance.
The front-facing selfie camera gets a big update this year in the form of an 18-megapixel Centre Stage front camera. If it sounds familiar, it’s because Macs and iPads have something similar, where their front-facing camera tracks the user during video calls. It doesn’t track on the new iPhones. Instead, it can sense if there are more people in the frame and automatically expand to fit everyone in the frame, or even switch to a landscape shot.
It can do this because the front-facing camera is actually a square sensor. If you are taking portrait shots, it just uses the middle vertical section of the sensor. And for landscape shots, it takes the middle horizontal section of the sensor. I hardly take any selfies, but I can see how this can be super handy, particularly for landscape selfies, since holding your phone vertically feels more natural, and it also means everyone’s eyes are more centred and not looking off to the side.
The iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max still feature triple camera systems.
Around the back, the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max still feature triple cameras. The main and wide ultra cameras are unchanged, but Apple says the imaging pipeline has been updated to improve detail and low-light performance. To my eyes, it looks like they’ve reined in the processing, so photos now have a softer look, which, to my eyes, looks more organic and natural. And you can still use Photographic Styles to adjust the colours of the photo to your liking. On the subject of Photographic Styles, all sample photos that you see below were taken with the Standard style with no adjustments made.
The major update this year is with the telephoto camera, which now has a 48-megapixel sensor that is 56% larger. In other words, all three cameras are now 48-megapixel units and can take 24-megapixel photos by default. For those who want all the resolution, you can take 48-megapixel RAW images as long as you can put up with the extra storage that they demand. Speaking of storage, there’s a new 2TB version this year that’s exclusive to the iPhone 17 Pro Max.
The new 48-megapixel telephoto camera shoots at 4x (down from 5x in the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max). But because the telephoto camera’s sensor is larger, it’s able to offer an 8x crop zoom that Apple claims is “optical-quality” – though at 8x you are limited to 12-megapixel photos.
As a result, Apple says the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max have the equivalent of eight lenses. I don’t feel that’s an accurate description since five of those “eight lenses” are in fact crops, but that’s a rant for another day. Here’s a summary of the three cameras and the focal lengths that Apple says they can capture with “optical-quality” (all in 35mm equivalent).
| Ultra Wide camera | Main Camera | Telephoto |
|---|---|---|
| Macro | 1x (24mm) | 4x (100mm) |
| 0.5x (13mm) | 1.2x (28mm) | 8x (200mm) |
| 1.5x (35mm) | ||
| 2x (48mm) |
As you can see from the sample photos above the new telephoto camera is a big improvement. Not only do I find the 4x 80mm equivalent focal length more usable (5x often feels too tight), but the photos that it takes are noticeably superior in terms of sharpness and detail. Furthermore, the performance at 8x is good. In fact, the images that this year’s Pro iPhones take at 8x are slightly sharper and more detailed than the 5x photos of last year’s phones. That’s how big a leap in image quality this year’s new telephoto camera delivers. Quality still drops fast when it gets dark, but Night mode helps mitigate this by a significant degree.
My only gripe with the Pro iPhones’ camera is the ultra wide camera is noticeably weaker than the main and telephoto cameras. Though it’s a 48-megapixel unit, the photos it captures are appreciably less crisp, less sharp, and less detailed than the main and telephoto cameras. It offers interesting perspectives with its wide field of view, and it has the ability to take incredible macros if you can get the lighting right, but the main and telephoto cameras are optically superior.
Pro iPhones have always had great video capabilities, and the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max are no different. The fact that Apple uses its own phones to record its event presentations should tell you just how good they are. Some pro users will lament that there’s no support for 8K, but since 8K is still far from mainstream, I doubt many will see it as an issue. What they will be happy to know, however, is that this year’s phones add support for ProRes RAW, which will unlock even more flexibility and options in post-production. Apple also added support for Genlock, which allows professionals to precisely sync multiple video devices to create special effects like bullet-time.
Though the on-paper improvements seem small, they combine to have a profound impact on the usability of the cameras of the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max. There’s no question that the telephoto camera is the standout, and I can definitely see myself using it more this year. However, the improved image processing pipeline with its seemingly less aggressive processing is just as, if not more important. It helps the main camera take more pleasing photos. Overall, the photo and video capabilities of these phones are strong and are only let down by the slightly lacklustre ultra wide camera.
Performance & battery life
The A19 Pro is immensely powerful.
Inside the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max are Apple’s latest A19 Pro chips. I’ve covered them extensively in a separate feature, so I urge you to check that out. But to put it briefly, it is one of, if not the most powerful chip you’ll find in a smartphone today. To give you a taste, just take a look at its performance on Geekbench’s CPU test.
Geekbench CPU test results. Click on the link to see more performance charts.
These chips have 6 CPU cores and 6 GPU cores and employ a sophisticated vapour chamber cooling system to keep them cool. Not only is the vapour chamber effective at drawing heat away from the chip, but the chamber itself is also laser-welded in parts to the chassis, allowing heat to be transferred away from the chamber and into the rest of the body. The result is that the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max have performance that rivals an Apple M2 desktop chip.
The vapour chamber draws heat away from the A19 Pro chip and spread it to the rest of the phone.
To see the impact of the vapour cooling chamber, we ran 3DMark’s Solar Bay stress test on the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro. This test loops the intensive Solar Bay test over and over again for 30 minutes and records the scores the phones achieved. And as we can see from the results below, the iPhone 17 Pro’s dip in performance is less dramatic than the iPhone 16 Pro’s. That said, if given an intensive enough task, we can see that the vapour chamber will also start to lose its effectiveness at some point.
iPhone 17 Pro on the left, iPhone 16 Pro on the right. You can see the drop in performance is less severe at the start.
Apple has taken great pains to improve the battery life of this year’s models. The A19 Pro chip is more power-efficient, and the phones also feature larger batteries. Apple is coy about the batteries’ exact capacities, but reports say the iPhone 17 Pro Max’s battery is about 3% larger, whereas the iPhone 17 Pro has an 11% larger battery. This was how long the phones lasted in our battery test, which involves playing a 720p video at 100% display brightness, 100% volume, and with Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on.
Model | iPhone 17 Pro Max | iPhone 17 Pro | iPhone Air | iPhone 17 | iPhone 16 Pro Max | iPhone 16 Pro | iPhone 16 Plus | iPhone 16 |
Battery life (in mins) | 688 | 620 | 505 | 593 | 627 | 557 | 570 | 515 |
Unsurprisingly, battery life has improved appreciably. Both Pro iPhones have crossed the 10-hour mark in our test. In the real world, the battery life gains are equally noticeably. My days start at 6 am and often end near midnight. Even then, I found that the iPhone 17 Pro Max would have around 35% to 40% of charge left. With last year’s iPhone 16 Pro Max, that number was often closer to 20%. Charging speeds have also been improved. These phones can now get 50% of charge in 20 minutes (down from 30 mins), but this requires a compatible charger that supports the new USB-PD PD3.2 SPR AVS charging protocol.
Where’s the AI?
More than a year on, Apple Intelligence remains half-baked and a work-in-progress.
There’s one thing that’s glaringly missing from the new iPhones this year: any flashy announcement around and about Apple Intelligence. When Apple first announced Apple Intelligence back at WWDC 2024, it said it would have a “more personalised Siri” that understands you better and could take action based on your “personal context” and what’s showing on your screen. Sadly, Apple announced earlier this year that that incredible-looking feature has been delayed and hasn’t said much about it since.
Apple also didn’t make much noise about AI features during its iPhone unveiling. Image Clean Up is useful for cleaning up photos, and Writing Tools can help polish your emails, but rivals are doing arguably more interesting things where you can use conversational text to edit your photos, or voice commands to find and add events to your calendars. Granted, I don’t think anyone should be making their phone purchasing decision based on what AI features it has, but it’s also true that Apple is being very quiet on this front.
A good year for the Pro iPhone
This year’s Pro iPhones are some of the best we’ve had and feels like a big step forward.
This year’s iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max are the strongest updates we’ve had in a while. Taken individually, the updates don’t seem that exciting. But when viewed as a whole, this year’s phones present compelling reasons to upgrade. It really is a case of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts. It also helps that Apple has kept prices the same.
A large part of it probably has to do with the new design and, of course, that striking Cosmic Orange finish. But there’s no denying that this year’s phones also offer measurably better performance, cameras, and battery life. Even if you have last year’s phones, I’d say it could be worth upgrading for the improved image processing, the new front-facing and telephoto cameras, as well as the longer battery life.
| Model / Storage | iPhone 17 Pro | iPhone 17 Pro Max |
|---|---|---|
| 256GB | S$1,749 | S$1,899 |
| 512GB | S$2,049 | S$2,199 |
| 1TB | S$2,349 | S$2,499 |
| 2TB | -- | S$3,099 |
But I have some gripes. To start, these phones are noticeably chunkier and heavier. The smaller iPhone 17 Pro remains manageable, but the larger iPhone 17 Pro Max puts considerable strain on my pinky finger. I suppose that’s the price to pay for a larger display and longer battery life. But at 233g, the iPhone 17 Pro Max must surely be one of the heaviest phones you can buy now. My other gripe is the ultra wide camera. Now that the telephoto camera has been improved significantly, I think the ultra wide camera should do better.
Cosmic Orange is definitely the colour to have.
Ultimately, these are minor grumbles because the rest of the package is so good. Upgrading to a new iPhone is usually a tricky thing, particularly if you are coming from a fairly recent model – you have to weigh the costs against what’s new and decide whether it’s a worthwhile endeavour. Thankfully, I think the decision is easier this year, because these are simply some of the best Pro iPhones we’ve had in a while. If you can stomach their high prices, they are excellent phones to have.
What about the iPhone Air and iPhone 17?
The iPhone Air is a very different type of iPhone that deserves a separate conversation.
I’m still in the midst of evaluating the iPhone Air and iPhone 17, but I’d say that the iPhone Air is a very different type of phone. Because of its super-svelte body, it demands some sacrifice from its users. The iPhone 17, on the other hand, is the best regular iPhone we’ve had in years, and I think it should be the iPhone most people should get.
Note: You can find the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max on Lazada, Shopee, Amazon and the Apple Online Store.
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