iPhone Fold Will Be eSIM-Only, But Chinese Users May Have Other Ideas

Apple's first foldable iPhone will reportedly drop the physical SIM card slot in favor of eSIM technology, according to a well-known Chinese leaker posting on Weibo today.

Apple Foldable Thumb
Apple is expected to introduce the device late next year or in early 2027, based on multiple reports. The so-called "iPhone Fold" is rumored to feature a 5.5-inch outer display and a book-style design that opens to reveal a roughly 7.8-inch inner screen reminiscent of an iPad mini.

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has described the foldable as "super thin and a design achievement," comparing it to "two titanium iPhone Airs side by side." Internal volume will therefore be tightly constrained.

"It's highly likely that the foldable iPhone will come without a SIM card slot, supporting eSIM only," said leaker Instant Digital, echoing earlier expectations from Gurman and analyst Ming-Chi Kuo.

Instant Digital also highlighted the current shortcomings of eSIM in mainland China, where users strongly prefer physical SIM activation and dual-SIM slots. China's fast-moving resale and device-trial culture makes quick SIM transfers essential, meaning an eSIM-only foldable would rely heavily on seamless carrier provisioning.

Apple is aware of the hurdles. The iPhone Air, which adopted an eSIM-only design for similar space-driven reasons, depends on dedicated support from China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom. It allows up to two active eSIMs, but activation still requires an in-store visit.

Globally, iPhone Air sales have undershot expectations, to say the least. Many consumers have focused less on its thin profile and more on the trade-offs it introduced, such as reduced battery life and a single rear camera. In China, the eSIM limitation will have surely added another layer of hesitation.

The foldable iPhone is rumored to introduce several new technologies, including a 24-megapixel under-display camera and a crease-free inner panel. Apple will be banking on these advances to overcome concerns about usability, especially in markets where eSIM adoption lags.

Reports suggest the device could cost between $2,000 and $2,500 in the United States, suggesting it could be the most expensive iPhone to date.

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Top Rated Comments

musteky Avatar
1 week ago
I keep getting older and I still don’t understand the purpose of foldable phones or who they’re actually meant for. This isn’t a jab at Apple or any other brand, I just genuinely don’t see the appeal of foldable devices.
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
WarmWinterHat Avatar
1 week ago

[S]For security reasons[/S] alone eSIM is the future. This is one area that every tech company is pretty much in agreement on. China’s government can resist this all they want. In the end it’s not going to make a difference.
For carrier lockdown reasons alone…

Carriers are looking forward to returning to the days of CDMA, where they have control over what phone you use, and how often you switch.

I used to toss my SIM in a flip-phone when going on multi-day backpacking trips. Can’t do that anymore…
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
H.E. Pennypacker Avatar
1 week ago

I keep getting older and I still don’t understand the purpose of foldable phones or who they’re actually meant for. This isn’t a jab at Apple or any other brand, I just genuinely don’t see the appeal of foldable devices.
Some people want foldables for the same reason others want trucks, gaming PCs, or 83” TVs they solve specific use cases, not universal ones. A foldable isn’t supposed to replace the standard slab for everyone. It’s meant for people who want a pocket sized device that becomes a mini tablet when they need it. More screen real estate for multitasking, watching content, editing docs, reading, gaming, whatever. That’s the entire value proposition. A slab phone can’t shrink and grow. A foldable can. So no, it’s not magic. It’s just a niche product for people who prioritize screen versatility over durability and simplicity.

Hope that helps because honestly, explaining this over and over to the “i don’t see the reason” group is exhausting.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Omega Mac Avatar
1 week ago
iPhold
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Spock Avatar
1 week ago

I keep getting older and I still don’t understand the purpose of foldable phones or who they’re actually meant for. This isn’t a jab at Apple or any other brand, I just genuinely don’t see the appeal of foldable devices.
I picked up a second hand Pixel Fold for my work phone. Having the larger screen that I could open up and see my works job system easier was a game changer. Being able to walk into a room and pull up a larger wiring diagram, running two apps at the same time. It has changed a lot of my work flow and I know that Apple will make it better.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
bigglow Avatar
1 week ago

I keep getting older and I still don’t understand the purpose of foldable phones or who they’re actually meant for. This isn’t a jab at Apple or any other brand, I just genuinely don’t see the appeal of foldable devices.
I dont want to spend 2x the cost of an iPhone Max on a phone with a hinge that is likely to break after >2 years of daily open/closing.

I rather buy a separate iPhone Pro Max & iPad mini.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)