iOS 26 could deliver a big battery boost to these iPhones — is it time to upgrade?

The iOS 26 developer beta introduces a variety of new features, along with the “Liquid Glass” UI, but perhaps the most valuable addition is the new “adaptive power” mode.

Battery life isn’t the sexy spec that everyone wants to talk about, but I can’t imagine there is a single iPhone owner who wouldn’t appreciate a little more battery life out of their phone.

Now we’ll be interested to see how much of an impact this actually has in use to determine if it’s worth the trade-off, but it certainly sounds compelling. There’s just one big asterisk on this potentially powerful feature: it may not be available for your iPhone.

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Which phones are getting “Adaptive power” mode in iOS 26?iPhone 15 ProiPhone 15 Pro MaxiPhone 16eiPhone 16iPhone 16 PlusiPhone 16 ProiPhone 16 Pro Max

A MacRumors report confirmed that the feature will only run on the iPhones listed above. The reason for the limitation is presumably that this feature is powered by AI, so, like Apple Intelligence, your phone must have at least the Apple A17 Pro processor.

Think of “adaptive power” mode as a more thoughtful version of low power mode. Rather than restricting all background activities, it makes more subtle adjustments, such as lowering the screen brightness and slowing down certain activities to reduce power consumption.

That latter part is where AI comes in; it needs to monitor your battery data to see which apps it can slow down to deliver maximum impact without adversely affecting your phone usage.

If you are on an older iPhone, don’t worry, you are still getting a lot of the iOS 26 features, support for the new OS goes all the way back to the iPhone 11. However, if you want the latest AI features, you’ll need to make the leap to an iPhone 15 Pro or newer phone, or wait for the iPhone 17 this fall.

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What’s next?

While iPhones have solid battery life, they’ve been outperformed by the top Android flagships for the last couple of generations, so this feature could potentially tip the scales back in their favor.

However, the biggest potential winner is the rumored iPhone 17 Air. Battery life could be a real concern for the thinnest iPhone ever.

Comparing it to the similarly slim Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge, our testing revealed a loss of 4 hours and 30 minutes of battery life compared to its 6.7-inch display sibling, the Galaxy S25+. In that case, it was a drop from 16 hours and 55 minutes to 12 hours and 25 minutes. That was with a move from a 4,900 mAh battery in the S25+ to a 3,900 mAh battery in the S25 Edge.

Apple is rumored to be making an even more drastic drop; the iPhone 16 Plus features a 4,674 mAh battery, and the 17 Air may dip to just a 2,800 mAh battery. The iPhone 16 Plus delivered 16 hours and 30 minutes in our testing. If the 1,874 mAh cut to its battery yielded a similar drop in the iPhone 17 Air, it could dip below 10 hours. That’s comparable to the short-lived mini iPhones, which was their biggest flaw.

“Adaptive power” could be the key to preventing the Air from befalling a similar fate.

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