For nearly a decade, Apple’s industrial design team has chased a singular, “holy grail” vision: a device that looks like a seamless, uninterrupted slab of glass. While the transition from the notch to the Dynamic Island was a clever software-led compromise, a report confirmed that the dream of a truly “all-screen” iPhone remains stuck in the laboratory. Despite internal pressure to deliver a design revolution for the iPhone’s upcoming 20th anniversary, technical snags with hidden sensors have forced Apple to temper expectations.
The primary obstacle to a full-screen display isn’t just the camera; it’s the complex TrueDepth sensor array required for Face ID. According to supply chain leakers “Fixed Focus Digital” and “Digital Chat Station,” Apple has encountered significant “yield and reliability” issues while attempting to move the Face ID flood illuminator and dot projector beneath the active pixels of an OLED panel.
When these sensors are placed under the screen, the light they emit must pass through the display’s pixel structure. This causes diffraction and signal loss, which can lead to slower authentication speeds or, in worse cases, a failure to recognize the user in challenging lighting conditions. Apple is reportedly unwilling to compromise on the “instant-on” security of Face ID simply to gain a few extra millimeters of screen real estate. As a result, the fully hidden sensor suite has been pushed back yet again.
The Selfie Camera Quality Trap
While some Android competitors have experimented with under-display cameras (UDCs), the results have historically been lackluster producing “hazy” or “soft” images that fail to meet professional standards. Apple’s internal testing has reportedly reached a similar impasse.
To make a camera work under a screen, the display density in that specific area must be lowered to let light through. This creates two problems:
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The “Screen Door” Effect: The area above the camera often looks slightly different from the rest of the display, ruining the “seamless” illusion.
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Optical Fidelity: Apple is currently leaning heavily into Apple Intelligence for high-end video calls and “Spatial Persona” avatars. These features require a crystal-clear 48MP input, something current under-display prototypes simply cannot deliver.
What to Expect from iPhone 18 Pro (2026)
With the “invisible” camera off the table for the immediate future, the iPhone 18 Pro (slated for Fall 2026) will instead focus on an incremental refinement of the current design. The “pill” isn’t disappearing, but it is going on a diet.
Rumors suggest Apple will successfully move the flood illuminator, the least “sensitive” component of the array under the display this year. This will allow the Dynamic Island to shrink by approximately 35%, reducing its width from 20.76mm to roughly 13.5mm. While it won’t be the “hole-punch” design some fans were hoping for, it will provide more status bar space for icons and notifications, making the 2026 flagship feel like a meaningful, if not revolutionary, visual upgrade.
The Road to 2027 (and 2030)
The timeline for the “perfect” iPhone continues to shift. While earlier reports from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman suggested a 20th-anniversary “all-screen” iPhone in 2027, more conservative roadmaps from display analyst Ross Young suggest a longer wait.
The current projected evolution looks like this:
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2026 (iPhone 18 Pro): Smaller Dynamic Island; partial under-display Face ID.
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2028 (iPhone 20 Pro): Full under-display Face ID; a single, tiny “hole-punch” for the camera.
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2030 (iPhone 22 Pro): The first true “All-Screen” iPhone with a hidden camera.
This cautious approach suggests Apple is prioritizing the iPhone Fold (also rumored for late 2026) as its primary “design statement” for the near future, allowing the traditional “slab” iPhone to mature at a slower, more deliberate pace.
Apple’s refusal to ship a sub-standard under-display camera is a testament to the company’s “perfectionist” DNA, but it may frustrate users who feel the design has become stagnant. For now, the Dynamic Island remains the center of the iPhone’s interface, a “feature” born from a necessity that Apple still hasn’t quite figured out how to hide.


