Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Apple has quietly killed its cheapest iPad

Add as a preferred source on Google
Three 2021 iPads are stacked on a table.
Adam Doud / Digital Trends

The iPad lineup has received a price bump after Apple quietly killed its cheapest iPad model. Apple’s 9th-generation iPad used to cost $329, but has been discontinued. At the same time, the company has reduced the 10th-gen iPad’s starting price by $100, which means it’s now priced at $349. As a result, getting the cheapest iPad means you’ll now spend $20 more than before.

The 9th-gen Apple iPad was launched in 2021 with the A13 chipset and Apple’s Center Stage featur,e but retained the same old design with the already-old Lightning port and home button. With Apple moving to a USB-C port on all devices to comply with EU laws, it was inevitable that Apple would discontinue the 9th-gen iPad this year. The iPhone SE remains the only Apple product with a home button and a Lightning port that’s still available in the company’s lineup.

Recommended Videos

The 10th-gen iPad replaces the 9th-gen iPad as the entry point into Apple’s tablets. It was always weird for the company to continue selling the older model when it announced the 2022 10th-gen iPad with an all-new design, more colors, a better processor, and a USB-C port. At $449, it was an expensive deal and an awkward price between the $599 iPad Air and the $329 iPad 9th gen. However, with a $100 price cut, it’s finally got to the “right” price for a base iPad.

Someone holding the yellow iPad (2022) in front of trees with orange, yellow leaves.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

While this means the cheapest iPad is now $20 more expensive than before, the $349 price tag for the 10th-gen iPad is pretty incredible.

As a refresher, the 10th gen iPad features a 10.9-inch LCD panel, which is great for media consumption, browsing, and other basic tasks. You can choose from 64GB and 256GB storage variants on both Wi-Fi and Cellular models. The tablet is powered by the now-old but, still capable A14 Bionic chipset. There’s also a 12MP camera for your scanning and photo needs, as well as landscape stereo speakers.

While this is an overall positive change for the iPad family, it’s still worth pouring one out for the recently deceased 9th-gen iPad. It was the go-to cheap iPad choice for many years and the top recommendation for cheap tablets in general. We won’t complain about the 10th-gen iPad taking its spot, but we also won’t forget the role the 9th -gen model played for so many years.

So long, 9th-gen iPad. May you rest easy.

Prakhar Khanna
Prakhar Khanna is an independent consumer tech journalist. He contributes to Digital Trends' Mobile section with features and…
Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro review: I swapped my trusty iPad for this and didn’t miss it at all
A rare Android tablet that will make you stick around with it for the long game.
Person using the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro Android tablet.

For years, I've kept a default disclaimer ready whenever I am asked to recommend Android tablets. "It's good/meh, for an Android tablet." That little clarity did a lot of heavy lifting. It excused the issues with laggy apps stretched haphazardly across an oversized screen, the ho-hum firepower, and software that always felt like a phone wearing a costume two sizes too big. So when the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro landed on my desk, I had my disclaimer loaded and ready to unload indiscriminately.

I'll save you the suspense and tell you it never came out. This slate is a genuine powerhouse, the kind of tablet that goes after the iPad Air and the Galaxy Tab S-series without flinching, and then upturns the value debate with its attractive asking price. It runs Qualcomm's top-tier Snapdragon 8 Elite, which means it can chew through all kinds of mobile tasks with ease.

Read more
Android might finally have an answer to the iPad mini, and with an OLED screen on top
A leaked OnePlus tablet could fill Android’s compact flagship gap
Oppo Pad mini launched in China.

Compact Android tablets usually come with a compromise. You can find smaller models easily, but most sit in the mid-range or budget category. The moment you want serious performance in a smaller body, the choices usually shift toward gaming-focused tablets from brands like Lenovo and Red Magic.

That is why the latest OnePlus leak is interesting. Tipster Abhishek Yadav claims OnePlus is working on a compact tablet for global markets with an 8.8-inch OLED display with a 144Hz refresh rate, and a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 chipset. The tablet is also tipped to use LPDDR5X RAM, UFS 4.1 storage, an 8,000mAh battery, and 67W charging.

Read more
Walmart’s new ONN tablets are light on the wallet and big on the value you get
These new Android tablets are built for bargain hunters
Furniture, Table, Accessories

Walmart’s Onn brand has added two new Android tablets for shoppers who want a capable device without spending iPad-level money. The latest lineup includes a compact 8.1-inch Core Tablet and a larger 13-inch Pro Tablet. Both tablets are built for everyday use, like video streaming, browsing, online classes, and light work.

What does the smaller Onn tablet offer?

Read more