Tag Archives: iPhone 17 Pro Review

iPhone 17 Pro Camera Review: Is This Apple’s Most Serious Camera Yet?

Watch our video review

The iPhone 17 series is here — and while the regular models got camera tweaks, the Pro lineup takes a major leap forward. All three rear cameras now feature upgraded 48 MP sensors, signalling Apple’s ambitious move in mobile photography yet.

Starting at ₹1,34,900, I’ve been using the iPhone 17 Pro as my daily driver for two weeks, snapping over 500 photos. Here’s what stood out:

Design: A Functional Plateau 

Apple calls it the ‘camera plateau’ — and it’s got the internet split. Some love it, some don’t. But there’s no denying that Apple’s sleek design language has shifted toward function over form this year.

The raised module now packs the A19 Pro chip, creating more room for a larger battery, and even a vapour cooling chamber beneath. There’s also an antenna band built into the ridge for stronger 5G reception — and yes, I actually noticed a slight signal boost.

Surprisingly, this chunkier design helps the phone rest flat on a desk. But you’ll likely use it with a case anyway.

Hardware: What’s New Under the Hood

The iPhone 17 Pro’s camera setup brings some serious upgrades:

  • Triple 48 MP Fusion Cameras at the back
  • 18 MP front camera with a square sensor and Centre Stage
  • A19 Pro chip paired with 12 GB RAM
  • 4K video at 120 fps, plus ProRes RAW and Genlock
  • Updated Photonic Engine for richer colour and better low-light shots.

Daylight Main Camera Shines

The primary 48 MP Sony IMX903 sensor outputs detailed 24 MP images, thanks to smart pixel-binning and sensor cropping. Colours are punchy yet natural, contrast is balanced and highlight control is excellent. For the first time, though, I did spot some processing in the images – a first for me. At 2x zoom, resolution drops to 12 MP, and you lose a bit of texture. It’s still solid, but pixel peepers will notice.

Ultra-Wide: A Turnaround

Ultra-wide cameras have traditionally been weakest link for most phones. The 48 MP Sony IMX972 ultra-wide delivers surprisingly crisp images even in tricky lighting. It handles shadows and highlights gracefully, and while there’s mild processing visible up close, overall dynamic range and colour reproduction are good.

Telephoto: The Showstopper

This is where Apple flexes. The new 48 MP Sony IMX973 telephoto sensor is 56% larger than last year’s and offers 4x optical zoom, 8x optical-quality zoom and digital zoom up to 40x.

At 4x and 8x, images are razor-sharp with rich tonality and texture. Even at 20x or 40x, detail retention is decent — though you’ll spot some colour shifting and processing artefacts.

It’s easily the most usable long zoom ever on an iPhone. My only gripe: AE lock could be steadier, especially at higher zooms.

Low-Light Performance

Lowlight telephoto

Low-light shots are vibrant, clean and accurate, with minimal visible processing. The main camera captures sharp, noise-free results. The wide sensor holds its own, though fine details fade a little. The telephoto, however, continues to stand out — retaining clarity even at long zooms, something previous iPhones struggled with.

Portraits: Natural and Cinematic

Portrait mode now lets you choose 1x, 2x, 4x, and even 5x. Skin tones look authentic, colours pop naturally, and edge detection is spot-on. Occasionally, I noticed minor skin smoothing and some distortion at 4x, but overall, portraits are pleasing, refined and cinematic – sure to be a hit with the users.

Macro: Detailed but Confused

Macro mode still activates automatically — and sometimes overstays its welcome. It occasionally stays locked in 12 MP mode – due to the minimal focusing distance, even when it should switch back to 24 MP, it doesn’t.

Despite this, macro shots are shockingly detailed, with rich depth and texture that make you forget they’re technically half-resolution.

Front Camera: Smarter, Sharper Selfies

The all-new 18 MP front camera features a square sensor and Centre Stage, which adjusts framing dynamically as you move. Selfies are crisp, well-lit and colour-accurate — with minimal low-light noise.

Apple’s dual capture mode also makes it easier for vloggers to record front and back simultaneously — a thoughtful touch for creators – but it’s not for me personally.

Video: Still the Gold Standard

When it comes to smartphone video, Apple remains in a league of its own. The iPhone 17 Pro shoots 4K at 120 fps, supports ProRes RAW, and can now record directly to external devices for advanced workflows.

Footage is smooth, stabilisation is top-notch (thanks to 3D sensor-shift), and the phone handles heat exceptionally well. There’s still some lens flare and ghosting, but overall, this feels like a mini cinema camera in your pocket.

Battery Performance 

With a 3,988 mAh battery, the 17 Pro comfortably lasts a full day — even with heavy photo and video use. The new vapour cooling chamber keeps temperatures in check during long recording sessions or gaming. For creators who push their phones hard, this is a quiet but meaningful upgrade – although coming from a Max it does feel like a compromise.

Verdict

I think the iPhone 17 Pro marks one of Apple’s biggest leaps in mobile photography in years.
Photographs are sharper, colours are truer, and the telephoto system finally delivers usable long-zoom shots.

But there are still some quirks — visible processing in some scenes, occasional colour shifts, and macro confusion — but none are deal-breakers. With improved battery life, cooling and professional-level video tools, the 17 Pro is a capable, pro-grade camera system that fits in your pocket.

iPhone 17 Series: Everything You want to know about the Cameras

  • By Bhavya Desai

The iPhone 17 series just dropped and despite the leaks and updates prior to the launch, this was an update that might’ve surprised many. With a new line up Apple has introduced the iPhone 17, iPhone Air and the iPhone 17 Pro models. And these have many patrons really excited – the Pro models and the iPhone Air run on the new A19 Pro chip, while the 17 use the A19 chip.

Apple’s iPhone 17 lineup features high-resolution sensors, AI-powered framing, a revamped thermal design and imaging upgrades across the board. For photographers and visual storytellers, this launch is less about incremental tweaks and more about what the new cameras can achieve.

In this I’ve dived into what do the cameras offer on these devices.

iPhone 17 Cameras: Two 48 MP Cameras

The base iPhone 17 keeps things tight with a two-camera setup and starts at a price point of ₹82,900, which still feels powerful. Although it looks the same as the iPhone 16 in terms of layout, at the back, it now houses two 48MP Fusion Cameras. It offers optical-quality 2x Telephoto; and a new 48MP Fusion Ultra-Wide camera.

iPhone 17 Back Cameras

While up front, Apple has introduced a new 18-megapixel camera with a new square sensor with Center Stage, ensuring users remain perfectly framed during calls or vlogs. For the first time, all iPhone 17 models also start at 256 GB of storage — a welcome news for those shooting high-res stills and video — and Apple has kept pricing consistent with last year.

New Square Sensor at the Front/Selfie Camera

The iPhone 17 now also features dual capture, allowing simultaneous front and rear video recording, a feature tailor-made for vloggers and event documentarians. Although this has been available on android devices for a long time, it’s still a welcome change for many users, maybe.

iPhone 17 Pro cameras: 48 MP cameras

Where the standard model makes smart refinements, the iPhone 17 Pro takes an audacious leap. The Pro models now feature three 48-megapixel Fusion cameras. iPhone 17 Pro camera offers 4× optical quality zoom at 100 mm and an all-new 8× reach at 200 mm, with a digital zoom maxing out at 40×. While this may sound like less reach compared to the iPhone 16’s 120 mm equivalent, Apple has focused on sharper, cleaner results, focusing on quality and not numbers.

Three 48 MP Cameras at the back of iPhone 17 Pro

The phone features a 56% larger sensor on the main camera along with an updated Photonic Engine, which is supposed to deliver richer colour accuracy and dramatically better low-light performance says Apple.

It’s not just the cameras that’ve changed – it is also the layout. Apple has also re-engineered the hardware to support these advances and the camera module on the back now has a new look which also houses some important elements. The Pro introduces a laser-welded vapour chamber that dissipates heat faster, so long video shoots or continuous burst photography won’t cause the device to throttle or heat up uncomfortably in hand. That’s critical, especially now that the iPhone 17 Pro is capable of ProRes RAW video capture — a feature that until recently belonged exclusively to cinema-grade equipment. In fact, as tradition Apple underscored its confidence by shooting the entire launch event on the iPhone 17 Pro itself, a bold statement on just how production-ready this device has become.

iPhone Air camera: One 48 MP All-in-One Camera

With the launch of the iPhone Air is Apple flexing Its engineering prowess. Adding to the family, the new iPhone Air stakes its claim with feather-light design at just 5.6 mm thin and built with titanium. It houses a 48 MP Fusion Main Camera with a built-in 2× telephoto lens and optical-quality zoom versatility, alongside the same 18 MP Center Stage front camera and dual-capture video found in its siblings. That means you get four-in-one framing flexibility—28 mm, 35 mm, and 52 mm equivalents.

iPhone Air camera housing

The Selfie Camera: A New Square Sensor

With the new front cameras, it is clear that Apple is looking to target the creators and make their life easier. The 18 MP front camera with Center Stage means your selfies and livestreams are always perfectly composed. And the new square sensor means that everyone fits into the frame without having to rotate the phone – that is surely a great move.

The dual capture feature lets storytellers record themselves and their subject in one take without third-party gear. The Fusion system allows photographers to crop deeply into 48 MP files without sacrificing sharpness. And with ProRes RAW now in your pocket, post-production workflows gain the kind of latitude usually reserved for full-frame rigs. Add in the vapor chamber’s thermal stability, and the iPhone 17 Pro becomes a device that can shoot, process, and export content at a professional level without compromise.

Stay tuned for the full review because in a longtime we are really excited about the new devices. 

All models run iOS 26 and features Apple Intelligence. Pre-orders have started with availability from September 19 in over 60 countries. In India, iPhone 17 starts at ₹82,900; while the iPhone Air is at Rs. 1,19,900 and the iPhone 17 Pro starts at Rs. 1,34,900 and Max at Rs. 1,49,900.