Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Features

I’ve used Apple gear for years, and right now is the best time to buy from the used shelf

With iPhone prices about to climb, buying from the used market makes more sense now than ever.

Add as a preferred source on Google
The iPhone 14 Pro held in a mans hand showing the screen.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Apple is preparing to raise iPhone prices in the coming months. CEO Tim Cook told The Wall Street Journal this week that climbing memory costs, driven by AI’s demand for the same chips, have made the move necessary. For years, Apple managed to keep sticker prices steady, likely by absorbing some of the rising component costs on its own, but that cushion now appears to be gone. Having bought and used Apple products for years myself, I think this is the right moment to stop holding out for the newest release and start browsing the used shelf instead.

The savings add up fast

A new iPhone wasn’t cheap even before this newly announced increase, and the gap between new and used has only grown wider. Counterpoint Research analyst Emily Herbert told the Journal that the secondary market is attracting a wider mix of shoppers than it used to, including parents who don’t want to spend close to $2,000 on a phone for a young teenager.

That same calculation works for plenty of adults too. Skipping the latest chip in favor of a refurbished or certified pre-owned model still gets you a phone capable of handling daily use, just at a much lower price, and the appetite for that tradeoff is growing.

Picking a place to buy

Apple runs its own refurbished storefront, and a handful of third-party marketplaces have built reputations worth trusting. Back Market, for instance, only works with professional sellers who go through inventory audits, and it backs purchases with a 30-day return window. Reebelo vets its merchants with background checks and offers 12-month warranties covering hardware and software issues.

Swappa requires sellers to verify listings with photos and serial numbers before they go live. However, founder Ben Edwards has been candid about scammers finding new ways in, including through AI-generated images. Buying through Amazon, Facebook Marketplace, or eBay carries more risk, but sellers with a long track record of strong ratings are generally safe, provided you also understand what separates a safe refurbished purchase from a risky one.

What to check before you commit

Before you pull the trigger on a used iPhone, make sure it’s unlocked and compatible with your carrier, and check how much software support it has left. Newer AI features, including the overhauled Siri experience Apple recently unveiled, will only run on iPhone 15 Pro and later models, so an older phone may keep getting security patches without ever gaining those tools.

Recommended Videos

You should also check the battery health and examine the phone for any physical damage. Running Apple’s diagnostics mode is another reliable way to spot faulty hardware, since it tests the display, camera, speakers, and other components in just a few minutes.

With iPhone prices unlikely to drop anytime soon as the memory shortage drags on, I’ve stopped thinking of buying used as a fallback. At this point, it’s just the smarter way to shop.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
Apple has a stacked product lineup slated for later this year
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Apple has spent much of the past year playing catch-up in the AI conversation, but if a new report is accurate, the company is preparing to remind everyone that it still knows how to ship hardware. According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple has an unusually ambitious product roadmap stretching across late 2026 and 2027. While annual iPhone refreshes are nothing new, the list of devices in development reads like a company trying to reinvent multiple product categories at once. And honestly? It’s about time.

For years, Apple’s launches have largely followed a predictable formula: faster chips, slightly better cameras, and incremental refinements to products that already dominate their respective categories. That’s not necessarily a criticism — those products continue to sell incredibly well — but it hasn’t exactly been an exciting era for people hoping to see Apple take bigger swings.

Read more
iOS 27’s Liquid Glass slider looks simple, but it’s more useful than I expected
Text, Document, Business Card

Let's be honest: few iOS design changes have sparked as much debate as Liquid Glass. When Apple first introduced it with iOS 26, the internet immediately split into two camps. Some people loved the fresh, translucent look, while others couldn't stand it and felt it made parts of the interface harder to read. I happened to be firmly in the first camp. At the time, I was using an iPhone 14 Pro Max, and installing the update was one of the first things I did. I loved how the new design made iOS feel more modern and dynamic. The transparency effects gave the interface a sense of depth, making the entire experience feel fresh again.

That said, it's easy to understand why not everyone felt the same way. After months of feedback, screenshots, hot takes, and endless debates online, Apple eventually responded by giving users more control. Instead of forcing everyone into the same look, it introduced options that let people choose between a clearer glass effect and a more tinted appearance. With iOS 27, Apple is putting the Liquid Glass debate completely in your hands. A new slider lets you customize the effect exactly the way you want it, whether you prefer a crystal-clear look or something easier on the eyes. Here's what it does and how to make the most of it on your iPhone.

Read more
Apple users are being targeted by a familiar tech support scam
Apple users face a new wave of fake iPhone and iCloud security warnings
iPhone user

AI has made online scams harder to spot by making deepfakes, voice cloning, and fake messages more realistic. Even so, the old tech support scam is still catching victims. For years, fraudsters often posed as Microsoft support workers. Now, reports suggest many are shifting their attention to Apple users.

Consumers are reporting a rise in fake “Apple High Alert” messages that claim an iPhone, iCloud account, or Apple ID has been compromised. These messages are designed to make people panic and react quickly before they can stop to check whether the warning is real.

Read more