Apple’s March 2026 product blitz hasn’t just been about the “Neo” era of MacBooks; it has also redefined what we should expect from a “budget” smartphone. Following the official unveiling of the iPhone 17e, the first wave of Geekbench 6 benchmarks has hit the database, and the results are as impressive as they are revealing. For $599, Apple is handing over its flagship-grade A19 silicon, but as with all things in the “e” series, there is a carefully calculated catch designed to keep the Pro models safe.
The most shocking takeaway from the early benchmarks is that, in terms of raw processing power, the iPhone 17e is essentially a “standard” iPhone 17 in disguise. Both devices utilize the A19 chip, built on TSMC’s refined 3nm process, featuring a 6-core CPU architecture (2 performance cores and 4 efficiency cores).
According to the leaked Geekbench 6 results, the iPhone 17e achieved a multi-core score of 9,241. To put that in perspective, the standard iPhone 17 averages approximately 9,249. This 0.08% difference is well within the margin of error for thermal fluctuations, confirming that for daily tasks app launching, multitasking, and web browsing, the $599 model is every bit as capable as its $799 sibling.
Geekbench 6 Multi-Core Comparison
iPhone 17 Pro (A19 Pro): 9,805
iPhone 17 (A19): 9,249
iPhone 17e (A19): 9,241
iPhone 16 Pro (A18 Pro): 8,625
iPhone 16e (A18): 7,977
For users upgrading from an iPhone 11 or 12, this represents a 2x jump in speed, making the 17e arguably the most “future-proof” entry-level device Apple has ever released.
The “Tiny Catch”: GPU Binning and Graphics Headroom
While the CPU scores are neck-and-neck, the “e” in 17e stands for a specific type of efficiency, economic efficiency for Apple. The benchmarks reveal that the A19 chip in the 17e is binned.
The standard iPhone 17 features a 5-core GPU, but the iPhone 17e has been restricted to a 4-core GPU. This results in a noticeable, though not catastrophic, dip in graphics performance. The 17e clocked in with Metal scores between 31,000 and 31,500, whereas the standard iPhone 17 sits closer to 37,000.
In real-world terms, this means that while the iPhone 17e can comfortably run AAA titles and handle hardware-accelerated ray tracing, it might lack the sustained frame-rate stability of the more expensive models during long gaming sessions. For the average user scrolling through TikTok or editing a 4K video for Instagram, this “catch” will remain virtually invisible.
8GB of RAM: The Apple Intelligence Minimum
Through Apple’s developer tool Xcode, it has been confirmed that the iPhone 17e carries 8GB of RAM. While some enthusiasts were hoping for a jump to 12GB to match the M5 MacBook Pro’s logic, 8GB remains the “golden number” for Apple in 2026.
This RAM allocation is the non-negotiable floor for Apple Intelligence. By including 8GB, Apple ensures that the iPhone 17e can handle on-device generative models, “Clean Up” in Photos, and the new, more conversational Siri without having to offload every task to the cloud. It’s a clear message: the entry-level user isn’t a second-class citizen in the world of AI.
Connectivity: The C1X Modem Leap
One of the most significant under-the-hood upgrades is the introduction of the Apple C1X modem. This is Apple’s second-generation in-house 5G chip, and it is a beast of efficiency. Benchmarks and technical specs suggest the C1X is twice as fast as the C1 modem found in last year’s 16e.
The C1X is 30% more energy-efficient than previous Qualcomm-sourced modems, which is how Apple has managed to maintain a 26-hour video playback battery life despite the more powerful A19 chip. However, note that the 17e’s modem still lacks mmWave support, staying limited to the more common Sub-6GHz 5G bands, a trade-off most users outside of dense US metropolitan centers won’t mind.
Value King: 256GB and the Return of MagSafe
Apple has finally killed the 128GB base storage tier for its budget line. The iPhone 17e starts at 256GB for $599, a move that effectively doubles the value of the device compared to its predecessor. Combined with the addition of 15W MagSafe charging (a first for the “e” series), the 17e feels less like a compromise and more like a tactical choice.
The exterior remains familiar with its 6.1-inch 60Hz display and traditional notch, but the internal “Ceramic Shield 2” provides 3x better scratch resistance, ensuring that this “budget” phone can survive the rigors of a three-to-five-year life cycle.
The iPhone 17e is a masterclass in product segmentation. By giving it the A19 CPU but trimming a single GPU core, Apple has created a device that feels like a flagship in the hand but leaves enough “pro” features on the table to justify the existence of the higher-tier models.



