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China's BOE Planning 100M+ iPhone Comeback

Chinese display manufacturer BOE is aggressively ramping up its OLED production capacity for future iPhone models as part of a plan to recapture a major role in Apple's supply chain.

iphone x flexible oled display
In May 2022, Apple halted BOE's inclusion in the iPhone 13's supply chain after detecting unauthorized design modifications. The crisis began when BOE, facing component shortages and yield issues, expanded the circuit width of thin-film transistors in its panels without Apple's approval. When Apple discovered this, Apple instructed BOE to halt production.

Since then, BOE has gradually sought to return to Apple's good graces. The company was later granted approval to resume supplying OLED panels for the iPhone 14, albeit in limited quantities. According to data published in UBI Research's latest China Display Trend Report (via ZDNet Korea), the Chinese supplier intends to play a major role in iPhone production in the future and grow its share of Apple's highly competitive display supply chain.

BOE has concentrated its iPhone panel production capacity at its B11 fabrication plant in Chengdu, Sichuan Province. The facility has been under continuous expansion and now includes 26 Apple-only OLED module lines. Of these, 11 are reported to be in mass production, while an additional three are used solely for development. With each line capable of producing 350,000 panels per month, BOE's output capacity for iPhone displays now totals approximately 8 million units per month. At a 90% utilization rate and an 85% yield, this equates to an annual output of at least 100 million panels.

Today, Apple sources the majority of its OLED panels for iPhones from South Korea-based Samsung Display and LG Display. The reintroduction of BOE into Apple's main iPhone production plans is expected to put price pressure on Samsung Display and LG Display, giving Apple much more negotiation power on unit prices. BOE is also planning to narrow the gap with Samsung and LG in terms of panel brightness, efficiency, and long-term durability.

BOE's presence in Apple's panel supply chain still remains contingent upon meeting strict quality and reliability standards. BOE has been gradually increasing its supply share over successive iPhone generations, but its participation in the initial shipments of new iPhone models remains limited. For the iPhone 16 lineup, BOE did not play a significant role during the early stages of the launch cycle, and a similar outcome is expected for the iPhone 17. As a result, a major increase in supplier share may not occur until the iPhone 18 next year.

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Top Rated Comments

10 months ago
So Apple and BOE agreed on a certain design in the past but BOE decided to modify it thinking Apple wouldn't notice? Kinda insane if you think about it. How can they be trusted again?
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
CWallace Avatar
10 months ago

This is why I hate it when there are multiple companies producing a display for a product.
When you are building literally nine-figures worth of displays a year, that even two suppliers can handle the load is impressive. And if you only have one supplier and they suffer an issue, then Apple has to stop selling iPhones until it is resolved. So even if Samsung or LG was capable/willing to make all of the panels, Apple cannot risk depending on a single-point of failure.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
jlc1978 Avatar
10 months ago

So Apple and BOE agreed on a certain design in the past but BOE decided to modify it thinking Apple wouldn't notice? Kinda insane if you think about it. How can they be trusted again?
They can't; but the possibility they could become a supplier is useful to pressure current suppliers to lower costs, as TFA points out.


With all the uncertainty on tariffs, I guess you can use this as a bell-weather. If Apple is not only considering reusing a Chinese vendor & that Chinese vendor is planning on expanding, how bad can the actual out the door tariff cost be? I mean Apple or this vendor is not going to eat the entire tax.
Or they could be primarily used in iPhones sold in China, avoiding tariffs and placating the Chinese by using more of their products.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
10 months ago
I dont think People understand how it works. Apple is *actively* helping BOE so they could produce the panel they want at a much cheaper price.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Ramchi Avatar
10 months ago
I believe OnePlus which is using BOE panels have been faced with severe green line issues in their OnePlus flagship mobiles (8 Pro, 9 Pro, 10 etc). When I went for service near my place, entire floor with 100 people carrying OnePlus green line mobiles. Fortunately, they gave me (and mostly others as well) coupon worth $500 to exchange it with the newer mobile, first when I encountered it after 3 years of use, they replaced the panel without any charge but when it happened again, they parted with the coupon. Even my Samsung Note 20 Ultra panel started getting green lines after 3+ years of normal use. I never encountered any screen issues with my iPhones so far.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
10 months ago

With all the uncertainty on tariffs, I guess you can use this as a bell-weather. If Apple is not only considering reusing a Chinese vendor & that Chinese vendor is planning on expanding, how bad can the actual out the door tariff cost be? I mean Apple or this vendor is not going to eat the entire tax.
They wouldn’t be importing the display from China to the US - so no tariff at all. It’ll certainly be sent to India or Vietnam for assembly, purchased by the local Apple subsidiary in those countries. And the completed device would be imported from one of those countries - not from China. At least not for the US market.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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