Apple will reportedly sell the iPhone as a subscription service

Joe Money

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Apple will reportedly sell the iPhone as a subscription service

Apple is reportedly working on selling iPhones and iPads themselves as part of a hardware subscription service, according to a new report from Bloomberg, whose author Mark Gurman writes the service could arrive next year.

The move would fit into Apple’s ongoing push towards subscription services as a whole. Over the past several years, Apple has increasingly been emphasizing recurring subscriptions like Apple Music, Apple TV Plus, Apple News Plus, Apple Fitness Plus, and Apple Arcade as key new revenue streams for the company. Many of those services have already been bundled together into the company’s Apple One bundles, too.

We’ve already seen a similar shift on the hardware front: Apple added a monthly subscription model for its AppleCare extended warranties back in 2019. And Apple has offered its iPhone Upgrade Program — which allows customers to pay for the combined cost of AppleCare and an iPhone over 24 months and the option to trade in their device after 12 months of payments — since 2015. Both those programs already resemble a hardware subscription in many ways.

APPLE ALREADY OFFERS MONTHLY IPHONE PAYMENTS
According to Bloomberg’s report, the monthly charge wouldn’t simply be the price of the device divided by 12 or 24 months, but rather be a still-undecided monthly cost, potentially with the option to upgrade to new hardware as its released. And like Apple’s other subscriptions, it would be tied to a user’s existing Apple ID account, with the possibility of bundling in AppleCare or Apple One services as well.

Right now, you can pay Apple monthly for its services, and you can pay it monthly for an iPhone — but they’re still separate fees and plans to manage.
It’s hard to imagine that Apple will simply be lending out devices on a monthly basis — will you really be able to just pay to “subscribe” an iPhone for a single month, like you can for Apple TV Plus to binge a season of Ted Lasso? Similarly, a world where Apple has customers invest months of capital to rent a device only to have them return it at the end of the process seems equally unlikely.

It’s possible that Apple is simply looking to cut out the middleman and expand its installment-based payment offerings to other products. The iPhone Upgrade Program effectively has customers take out an interest-free loan with Citizens One, which they then repay over the course of the 24-month plan. Apple also allows Apple Card customers to pay for Apple products over monthly installments without paying interest, but that too is only limited to a small subset of Apple customers. An Apple-based subscription service could eliminate those requirements, and allow Apple to expand it to other hardware products (like the iPad or its Mac computers) too.
But while details are still slim, one thing is clear: Apple’s subscription ambitions are still only just getting started.

 
This is basically what cellphone companies do, if apple undercuts them what incentive will they have for offering discounted rates?
 
This is basically what cellphone companies do, if apple undercuts them what incentive will they have for offering discounted rates?

none apple wants to control that market making carriers focus more of BYOD making them less money, smart move by Apple honestly but messes up carriers.

I'm guessing carriers get a discount buying iphones in bulk and apple wants to stop that.

Good for consumers though, imagine prepaid service as good as postpaid for the same cost.
 
I spent $1100 on my iPhone 11 Max a few years ago, I’m not done getting my money’s worth yet

same here, spent 1k in '20 on my 11 max, I dislike apple but selling it means losing money and I don't want to do that.
 
I'm guessing carriers get a discount buying iphones in bulk and apple wants to stop that.
Common misconception people have.

Carriers have been paying the asking price on mobile devices dating back to the Hitachi G1000.

Carriers will lose out on the ability to sell that insurance, accessories, etc if devices aren't in their stores though.
 
I just realized how big this would be for them as far as a global plan… in america and like 2 or 3 other countries iPhone is the number 1 seller..but outside of those 3-4 countries android phones lead in sales and overall lead in market share.. cheap android phones tend to be 1 of the biggest sellers globally.. so iPhone is usually to costly for the average global consumer.. but if they push this monthly rented phone some of those people might jump on it as a luxury cheap item..especially if they make more of those se phones or sell some of their older models for cheap.. most people don’t know that the 2020 se was actually probably their biggest selling phone in the last 2 yrs..think it had 20 million sales in America or globally ( forget which 1)..which goes to show affordable phones is really where the money is
 
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