Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

The iPhone 15 Pro’s biggest upgrade is hiding in plain sight

iPhone 15 Pro in hand.
Prakhar Khanna / Digital Trends

Apple added plenty of upgrades to the iPhone 15 Pro and the iPhone 15 Pro Max. The Lightning port is now replaced with USB-C, so you don’t have to carry around a separate wire for your phone anymore. You can now take better photos with improved HDR and portraits. The Pro series gets Log video recording and an Academy Color Encoding System to make it more useful for creators. There’s a new Action button that you can customize to open apps that you like.

Recommended Videos

However, the best upgrade, in my opinion, is hiding in plain sight. You’ll notice it only when you hold the iPhone 15 Pro or the 15 Pro Max. I’m talking about the ergonomics.

The lightest Pro iPhone ever

iPhone 15 Pro display.
Prakhar Khanna / Digital Trends

Apple moved to a flat-edge design with the iPhone 12 and stuck with it through the iPhone 14 series. The flat-edged iPhones felt premium in 2020, but over its the three-year duration, the Pro series became more and more uncomfortable to hold due to the weight added each year.

I’ve written in the past about how bad the ergonomics were on my iPhone 14 Pro Max. But holding the iPhone 15 Pro Max and then using the iPhone 15 Pro as a daily driver came as a pleasant surprise. And that’s because of two reasons: weight and design.

I can tell you that the iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max are 19 grams lighter than before, but that’s not the whole story here. The 19-gram number might not seem like a big deal on paper, but these phones feel brilliant in the hand. To put things into perspective, here are some numbers:

The iPhone 14 and 14 Pro Max weighed 206 grams and 248 grams, respectively, while the iPhone 13 Pro and 13 Pro Max measured 204 grams and 240 grams, respectively. This year, the iPhone 15 Pro weighs 187 grams, which is lighter than 2019’s iPhone 11 Pro (188 grams). The same goes for the iPhone 15 Pro Max at 221 grams versus 226 grams for the iPhone 11 Pro Max. This means that the iPhone 15 Pro is the lightest iPhone ever to use the “Pro” branding.

Titanium makes a world of difference

iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max sides.
iPhone 15 Pro (left) and iPhone 14 Pro Max Prakhar Khanna / Digital Trends

This is largely thanks to Apple replacing its stainless steel design with titanium, which is bonded with aluminum on the inside for the edges. You get a brushed finish instead of the glossy one like before. My iPhone 14 Pro Max still feels a bit more premium in the hand when compared to the iPhone 15 Pro, but it’s a small price to pay for the difference in weight.

Coming to the design, the edges are no longer as sharp as before. The slight curves make a whole lot of difference when using the iPhone for long durations. I’ve been using the iPhone 15 Pro for the past week, and I haven’t once felt a strain on my wrist or the need to move my pinkie finger from the bottom to give it a rest.

The new design makes my day-to-day experience with the phone much more enjoyable. I no longer need to adjust my grip on my iPhone every few minutes when I’m reading. I don’t have to seek a solid object to place my iPhone on during long video calls or meetings. When clicking pictures in landscape, I can now easily hold the phone and shoot without needing to adjust the grip – and risk losing the shot.

The iPhone 15 Pro is brilliant

iPhone 15 Pro in hand with iPhone 14 Pro Max and iPhone 14 in background.
Prakhar Khanna / Digital Trends

The combination of curved edges and a lighter form factor make the iPhone 15 Pro my favorite iPhone in years. It’s got all the bells and whistles without compromising on the ergonomics. This hasn’t been the case on the Pro lineup for at least two years due to the added weight in each generation.

If you are buying the iPhone 15 Pro, I urge you to use it without a case to experience the new design. That’s because you might not feel much of a difference if you are using it with a case.

That being said, I like what Apple has done with the iPhone 15 Pro design-wise. I’m still not fully satisfied with the battery life, as I need to carry a power bank if I’m planning to stay out all day. But having a phone in my pocket that has a telephoto camera, offers a great display, and doesn’t compromise on performance — all while being comfortable to hold throughout the day — is a new experience for me. It’s an experience I absolutely love, and I think you will too.

Prakhar Khanna
Prakhar writes news, reviews and features for Digital Trends. He is an independent tech journalist who has been a part of the…
Five reasons I’m excited for the new Google Pixel 9a
Person holds Pixel 9a in hand while sitting in a car.

Google has consistently ranked among the best smartphones for its affordable devices over the past six years, particularly with its Pixel A series. The Pixel 3a set the trend for major phone manufacturers to provide a compelling experience at half the price of flagship models, intensifying competition in this segment.

In the last three months, we’ve seen Samsung introduce the Galaxy A56 and Galaxy A36, which deliver features from the Galaxy S25 series at a significantly lower price point. Then there’s Apple, which entered the market with the iPhone 16e, priced considerably higher than its rivals. Additionally, Nothing offers the Nothing Phone 3a and Phone 3a Pro, arguably the best phones available at $379 and $459, respectively.

Read more
iPad Pro with next-gen M5 silicon could arrive later this year
Magic Keyboard and iPad Pro.

It seems tablets are increasingly becoming the unofficial launch testbed for Apple’s next-gen silicon. The 2024 iPad Pro marked the debut of Apple’s M4 chip, ahead of its appearance inside the Mac hardware.
Carrying forward the torch, the next iPad Pro refresh could be “one of the first devices” to get a M5 series processor. According to Bloomberg, the next-gen iPad Pro has progressed into the advanced stages of internal testing. Moreover, it is expected to hit the shelves later this year, likely in the Fall season.
Apple gave the M4 series refresh to the Mac lineup, including the MacBook Air, Pro, and Studio models, earlier this year. The M4 Pro and M4 Max processors were only introduced late last year, so it seems increasingly plausible that the baseline M5 would arrive later this year, followed by its Pro, Max, or Ultra variants.
Given the “freshness” status of the current Mac hardware, the upcoming iPad Pro seems like the first candidate to get a taste of the next-gen M5 processor. “The new versions of that model, code-named J817, J818, J820 and J821, are in late testing within Apple and on track for production in the second half of this year,” adds the report.
What to expect from M5 iPad Pro?

Starting with the design , Apple is not expected to make any notable changes, given the company’s history. The iPad Pro got a major design overhaul in 2024, embracing a super-sleek look, one fewer camera, and a new keyboard accessory to go with it.
As far as the silicon goes, the M5 series will reportedly be based on the 3nm process and built atop ARM’s next-gen CPU architecture. In addition to the 2025 iPad Pro, Apple is also expected to launch new MacBook Pro models later this year, armed with an M5-tier processor.

Read more
The iPhone 16e made me face a hard truth about mobile cameras
OuttaFocus: The iPhone 16e made me face a hard truth about mobile cameras.

I’ve spent a few days taking photos with the Apple iPhone 16e, which has a single camera on the back. One, solitary lens on the back of a current smartphone makes it look rather old school, and somewhat under equipped next to the multi-lens competition. But instead of feeling short changed by the iPhone 16e, it made me face a hard truth. I don’t need a wide-angle camera on my phone as much as I think I do.
One camera is better?

Wide-angle cameras have been a staple addition on smartphones since the days of the LG G5. Most have a 120-degree field of view, allowing us to capture photos of vistas to help convey scale in a way cameras with a narrower field of view cannot. It’s normal and accepted to have a “0.6x” mode in the camera app, and to not see it as an option on the iPhone 16e was quite jarring at first.

Read more