Report says no foldable iPhone in 2022 — and that's great news for Galaxy Z Fold 4

iPhone Flip foldable iPhone
(Image credit: #iOS Beta News/YouTube)

Update: The foldable iPhone could launch next year.

With the success of the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 and Galaxy Z Flip 3, demand has been percolating among some hardcore Apple faithful for the company to make a true iPhone Flip. Well, for those holding out for a potential 2022 release, it might be worth upgrading to the iPhone 13 for the time being or holding out for the iPhone 14

A new blog post by Display Supply Chain Consultants, or DSCC, claims that Apple will not introduce a foldable iPhone in 2023. The news comes way of MacRumors. Ross Young, co-founder and CEO at DSCC, believes that a foldable iPhone won't be seen until 2023 at the earliest, maybe 2024. Mr. Young didn't detail exactly how he and his team had come to this conclusion.

In an email to Tom's Guide, Mr. Young clarified that information is "based on discussions with members of their display supply chains which consist of panel suppliers, backlight manufacturers, LED manufacturers, other materials suppliers, etc."

DSCC's report does fall in line with other analysts. Prominent Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo also said earlier this year that we should not expect to see an iPhone foldable until 2023. Apple leaker Jon Prosser also felt a 2022 release was too optimistic for Apple. If these reports turn out to be true, then likely Samsung will continue to rule our best foldable phones list for all of next year. 

Presumably, Samsung will launch the Galaxy Z Fold 4 in 2022, and there are some early rumors about what to expect. We've heard an improved under-display camera, and a lighter design, and we'd expect the latest Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip powering the phone. 

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Imad Khan

Imad is currently Senior Google and Internet Culture reporter for CNET, but until recently was News Editor at Tom's Guide. Hailing from Texas, Imad started his journalism career in 2013 and has amassed bylines with the New York Times, the Washington Post, ESPN, Wired and Men's Health Magazine, among others. Outside of work, you can find him sitting blankly in front of a Word document trying desperately to write the first pages of a new book.