Apple shipments of smartphones worldwide from 1st quarter 2010 to 1st quarter 2026
Apple does not sell the most smartphones in the world by unit count, but it sells the most valuable ones, and in recent years it has quietly become the single largest smartphone vendor on the planet. In 2025 Apple shipped a record of roughly 247 million iPhones, more than in any year before, and ended a fourteen-year reign by Samsung at the top of the annual rankings. This report tracks Apple iPhone shipments, quarter by quarter, from 2010 to 2026, charting the rise of the device that defined the modern smartphone era and still leads it today. The volume story and the value story have, in recent years, finally converged in Apple favour. The company now leads on units and on profit at the same time, a rare double. Sustaining both at once is the clearest sign of the iPhone enduring strength. That convergence of volume and value defines Apple position today.
The numbers tell a story of explosive early growth, a long plateau, and a late surge back to record highs. From under 50 million units in 2010, iPhone shipments climbed past 230 million by the middle of the decade, then settled into a mature rhythm before reaching new peaks in the 2020s. The shipment trend pairs naturally with the money it generates, explored in our iPhone 16 adoption by model analysis, where rising prices have lifted revenue even as unit volumes flattened.
One important detail shapes the data. Apple reported exact iPhone unit sales every quarter until late 2018, after which it stopped disclosing volumes and shifted investor attention to revenue. From that point onward, the figures here come from IDC and other industry trackers, which estimate shipments using supply-chain and channel data. The two sources align closely, but the later years are estimates rather than figures Apple itself confirms, a shift that says much about how Apple wants its business to be judged. Investors are now asked to watch dollars, not devices, a telling change in emphasis. The shift also conveniently masked the year-to-year swings in unit demand.
The quarterly view also reveals the iPhone pronounced seasonality. New models launch in September, so the fourth calendar quarter, covering October to December, is by far the biggest as holiday demand and fresh hardware combine. This pattern, repeated every year, drives the sawtooth shape of the shipment chart. Set against Apple total business in our Apple revenue analysis, iPhone shipments remain the single most important volume metric the company produces, even if it no longer reports it.
Apple iPhone Shipments, Growth and Market Share, 2010-2025
| Year | Shipments (M) | YoY growth | Global share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 47.5 | n/a | 15.6% |
| 2011 | 93.1 | +96.0% | 18.8% |
| 2012 | 135.8 | +45.9% | 18.7% |
| 2013 | 153.5 | +13.0% | 15.1% |
| 2014 | 192.7 | +25.5% | 14.8% |
| 2015 | 231.5 | +20.1% | 16.1% |
| 2016 | 215.4 | -7.0% | 14.6% |
| 2017 | 215.8 | +0.2% | 14.7% |
| 2018 | 208.8 | -3.2% | 14.9% |
| 2019 | 191.0 | -8.5% | 13.9% |
| 2020 | 206.1 | +7.9% | 15.9% |
| 2021 | 235.8 | +14.4% | 17.4% |
| 2022 | 226.4 | -4.0% | 18.8% |
| 2023 | 234.6 | +3.6% | 20.1% |
| 2024 | 233.2 | -0.6% | 18.8% |
| 2025 | 247.4 | +6.1% | 19.8% |
The table lists Apple annual iPhone shipments from 2010 to 2025, alongside year-over-year growth and Apple estimated share of the global smartphone market. The shipment column rises from under 50 million to nearly 250 million units, while the share column hovers between roughly 15 and 20 percent, reflecting how Apple captures a modest slice of global volume but a commanding share of industry profit. Sorting any column shows how Apple climbed from challenger to the largest smartphone vendor in the world. That climb took more than a decade of patient, premium-focused execution to achieve. Apple won the volume crown without ever chasing the low end of the market.
From Challenger to Number One
Viewed by year, the iPhone shipment story divides into clear phases. The first half of the 2010s was a period of rapid expansion, as the iPhone went global and shipments multiplied roughly fivefold between 2010 and 2015. That growth peaked around 2015, the year of the larger-screen iPhone 6, when Apple shipped over 230 million units, a figure it would not exceed for six years. The supercycle had pulled forward an enormous wave of upgrades.
The second half of the decade was a plateau. Shipments drifted between roughly 190 and 220 million units a year as the smartphone market matured and upgrade cycles lengthened. Yet Apple held its ground while many rivals faltered, and its position in the premium tier only strengthened. This stability mirrors the company broader resilience, visible across the product mix in our Apple revenue by segment analysis, where the iPhone remained the anchor throughout.
The 2020s brought renewed growth. A 5G-driven upgrade wave pushed shipments to a then-record near 236 million units in 2021, and after a dip, Apple reached an all-time high of about 247 million in 2025 on the strength of the iPhone 17. Crucially, in 2023 Apple became the largest smartphone vendor for a full calendar year for the first time, a milestone it repeated in 2024 and 2025, cementing its place at the top. For a company that ships a minority of the world phones, reaching number one was a milestone. It proved that a premium strategy could win on units as well as on margin. The milestone reframed how analysts judge Apple competitive position.
Boom, Plateau and Renewal
The year-over-year growth chart captures both the iPhone explosive youth and its mature swings. The early 2010s saw enormous percentage gains as shipments scaled from a small base, with growth often exceeding fifty percent a year. That pace was impossible to sustain, and as the installed base grew the growth rate fell sharply, settling into a pattern of low single-digit gains punctuated by occasional declines as upgrade cycles ebbed and flowed. The maturing of the market turned a growth story into a story of scale and endurance. Holding a market is, in its own way, harder than capturing one.
The down years are instructive. Shipments fell in 2016 as the iPhone 6 supercycle unwound, and again in 2018 and 2019 amid longer upgrade cycles and weakness in China. Each decline was followed by recovery, however, and none threatened Apple leadership of the premium segment. These swings track the broader smartphone industry rhythm captured in our global smartphone shipments analysis, where the whole market has cooled from its mid-decade peak.
What the growth pattern shows is a product that has matured without declining. The iPhone no longer doubles its shipments, but it has avoided the steep falls that hit many rivals, and it has repeatedly returned to growth when new technologies, larger screens, 5G, and now artificial intelligence features, sparked fresh upgrade waves. Modest, durable growth from an enormous base is the signature of the modern iPhone shipment story.
Few Units, Most of the Profit
Apple share of the global smartphone market by units tells a counterintuitive story. Despite the iPhone fame and profitability, Apple has never shipped the most phones in any single year by a wide margin; its share of global volume has typically sat between fifteen and twenty percent, well behind the combined output of the many Android makers. Apple plays in the premium tier, not the volume game. The phones it does ship command prices far above the industry average. That focus is the engine behind Apple outsized share of industry profit. It earns most of the money while shipping a minority of the phones.
Yet that modest volume share has climbed steadily, and in the 2020s Apple pushed past twenty percent of global shipments in some quarters, even reaching the top of the annual rankings. The contrast between Apple unit share and its share of industry revenue and profit is stark, a gap explored in our smartphone market share by vendor analysis, where Apple commands far more value than its unit count alone would suggest.
This is the defining feature of Apple smartphone strategy: capture a minority of units but a majority of profits. By focusing on the high end, Apple earns a disproportionate share of the money in the smartphone industry while shipping far fewer phones than the Android ecosystem as a whole. Its rising unit share in recent years simply adds volume leadership to a profit leadership it has held for over a decade. Volume was always the one crown Apple lacked, and now it wears that too. Profit leadership came first; volume leadership followed more than a decade later.
The All-Important Fourth Quarter
The fourth calendar quarter, covering October to December, is the iPhone showcase. New models launch in September, holiday demand surges, and the result is by far the biggest shipment quarter of every year. The holiday-quarter chart shows these peaks climbing from around 16 million units in 2010 to more than 80 million in recent years, a staggering concentration of demand into a single three-month window. No other quarter in the smartphone calendar concentrates so much demand so sharply. Apple effectively compresses a year of anticipation into a single launch window.
These holiday quarters are when the success of each new iPhone is first judged and when Apple ships the bulk of its annual volume. A strong fourth quarter can define Apple entire year, and the record holiday quarters, such as the iPhone 12 surge in late 2020, rank among the largest shipment quarters for any single phone model in history. The intensity of this peak is closely tied to the launch cadence detailed in our smartphone market revenue analysis.
The steady growth of the holiday peak over time, even as overall shipments plateaued, reflects Apple success in concentrating demand around its launches and in selling ever more expensive models. Each year the holiday quarter pulls in a larger share of buyers choosing premium Pro and Max versions, so even when annual unit growth is modest, the fourth-quarter shipment figure keeps reaching impressive new heights. The holiday quarter has become a barometer for the health of the entire iPhone franchise. A strong fourth quarter reassures investors more than any other single data point. It has become the quarter the whole industry watches most closely.
Around Three Billion iPhones
Adding up every quarter since 2010 produces an extraordinary total: Apple has shipped on the order of three billion iPhones over the period, one of the largest cumulative runs for any single product line in history. The cumulative line climbs steadily, steepening as annual volumes grew, and it underlines the sheer scale of the device that reshaped personal computing and communication worldwide. Few products have ever been manufactured and sold at such a staggering scale. The logistics of moving hundreds of millions of devices a year are formidable.
This cumulative total helps explain Apple vast and loyal installed base, which now numbers well over a billion active iPhones. That base is the foundation of Apple services, accessories and ecosystem revenue, and it gives the company a recurring advantage few rivals can match. The scale of it underpins Apple position among the most valuable companies on earth, tracked in our most valuable companies analysis.
A note of caution belongs with the cumulative figure. Shipment estimates measure units sent into the channel, which can run somewhat ahead of final sales, so the cumulative total is best read as an approximate scale rather than an exact count of phones in use. Even so, the order of magnitude, billions of iPhones shipped in fifteen years, captures the device unmatched reach. Even read conservatively, the figure places the iPhone among the most shipped products ever made. Billions of units in fifteen years is a scale almost no product can claim. The iPhone sits in a category of its own when measured by lifetime volume.
The Holiday Spike
Averaging shipments by calendar quarter lays the seasonality bare. The fourth quarter towers over the rest, reflecting the September launch and holiday demand, while the third quarter is lifted by the arrival of new models late in the period. The first quarter holds up on holiday momentum carrying into the new year, and the second quarter is consistently the quietest, as buyers wait for the next generation. The rhythm is so reliable that the industry plans its entire year around it. Suppliers, carriers and retailers all gear up for the autumn surge. The entire supply chain bends around Apple September cadence.
This pronounced seasonal shape is a direct consequence of Apple annual launch cadence, and it is far sharper than for many rivals who refresh their lineups throughout the year. The concentration of demand into the autumn and winter shapes Apple manufacturing, logistics and marketing, and it stands out even against the broader device makers compared in our Apple workforce analysis, whose seasonal hiring follows a similar rhythm.
The seasonality means any single quarter must be read in context. A quiet second quarter is not a sign of weakness, and a towering fourth quarter is the norm rather than a surprise. Year-over-year comparisons matter far more than sequential ones, and understanding the iPhone seasonal pattern is essential to interpreting Apple shipment data without being misled by the natural swings within each year. The seasonality is a feature of the calendar, not a signal about underlying demand. Reading a quiet quarter as decline is the most common mistake in Apple analysis.
Each Era at a Glance
Grouping shipments into multi-year blocks shows how each era compared. The first block, covering the early 2010s, captured the explosive ramp from launch to mass-market dominance. The blocks that followed were larger in absolute terms but grew more slowly, reflecting a maturing market in which Apple shipped huge and steady volumes rather than the rapid year-on-year leaps of its youth. Maturity traded breakneck growth for dependable, enormous volume. Apple chose to defend its base rather than dilute its brand chasing units.
Each block marks a different chapter. The first was about global expansion; the second about defending a leadership position through a plateau; and the most recent about returning to record volumes while becoming the largest vendor outright. The steady scale of iPhone shipments across every block has funded Apple expansion into new categories and the enormous profits charted in our Apple net income analysis.
The block view confirms that the iPhone has not faded in volume even as the smartphone market overall has shrunk from its peak. Apple has held its enormous shipment base remarkably steady, and in the most recent block it pushed to new highs, a durability that few consumer products of any kind have ever achieved over such a long span and at such a vast scale. The iPhone has aged into a steady giant rather than a fading star. Its largest shipment quarters have come long after most products would have peaked.
The Shipment Ascent
Indexing shipments to 2010 equals 100 turns the iPhone growth into a single soaring then steadying line. By the mid-2010s the index had multiplied roughly fivefold, reflecting the rapid early expansion, before flattening into a plateau and then edging to new highs in the 2020s. The shape captures both the explosive youth and the mature stability of the iPhone shipment trajectory in one view. The curve rises steeply, then levels into a high and durable plateau. The plateau is not decline but the natural ceiling of a saturated premium market.
The indexed line highlights how front-loaded the iPhone growth was. Most of the multiple was achieved in the first five years, after which shipments grew slowly in percentage terms even as they remained enormous in absolute numbers. This is the classic pattern of a product that conquered its market early and then defended its position, a contrast with newer and more volatile categories such as the one in our VR headset market analysis.
The indexed view is, in effect, the shipment biography of the smartphone era told through Apple lens. It shows the moment a single device went from niche to ubiquitous, and then how it held that ubiquity for a decade and more. The flattening of the line is not stagnation but saturation: there are only so many premium buyers, and Apple already reaches most of them. Saturation, not weakness, is what flattens the line in its later years. There are only so many premium buyers, and Apple already reaches most of them.
The Biggest Shipment Quarters
Ranking individual quarters by shipment volume confirms how concentrated the biggest quarters are in the recent holiday seasons. The top of the list is dominated by fourth quarters from the 2020s, each shipping well over 80 million iPhones in a single three-month span, with the iPhone 12 surge in late 2020 among the very largest. Earlier quarters, even strong ones, fall short of these recent peaks. The iPhone, by volume, has saved its biggest quarters for its later years.
This ranking shows that, by raw volume, the iPhone is shipping at or near its highest level ever right now, not in some distant golden age. The combination of a vast installed base upgrading on cycle, premium model demand, and Apple recent share gains has pushed recent holiday quarters to record heights, a trajectory that mirrors the device enduring revenue strength in our iPhone revenue analysis.
The clustering of record quarters in the present is the clearest answer to anyone who assumes the iPhone is past its prime. Its biggest shipment quarters are its most recent ones, achieved fifteen years and more after the device launched. Far from a fading product, the iPhone is, by the measure of quarterly shipments, operating at the peak of its powers and leading the market it created. By the measure of shipments, the iPhone has never been bigger than it is today.
Across fifteen years, Apple iPhone shipments have grown from under 50 million units a year into a record near 250 million, and the company has climbed from challenger to the single largest smartphone vendor in the world. The quarterly data, with its towering holiday peaks and steady plateau, captures a product that conquered its market early and has defended that position with remarkable durability, even as it stopped reporting the very unit numbers that once defined how it was judged. It is, by almost any measure, the defining device of its age.
The question now is how long the iPhone can keep shipping at these record volumes. The smartphone market has matured, upgrade cycles have lengthened, and growth increasingly depends on premium pricing and new features rather than reaching new users. Yet with a vast loyal base, rising share, and fresh demand from artificial intelligence and new models, the iPhone shows little sign of surrendering its lead. Its shipment story remains one of the defining achievements of the smartphone age. Whatever comes next, the iPhone has already rewritten what a single device can sell.
Frequently Asked Questions: Apple iPhone Shipments
In 2025 Apple shipped a record of roughly 247 million iPhones, according to IDC. Annual shipments have ranged between about 190 and 247 million units in recent years, making Apple either the largest or second-largest smartphone vendor in the world depending on the year.
As of 2023, 2024 and 2025, yes, by full-year unit shipments. In 2023 Apple overtook Samsung to become the largest smartphone vendor in the world for a full calendar year for the first time, and it held that position in 2024 and 2025. For most of the prior decade Samsung shipped more units.
Apple stopped disclosing iPhone unit sales after the fourth quarter of calendar 2018, shifting investor focus to revenue instead. From that point onward, iPhone shipment figures come from third-party trackers such as IDC, which estimate volumes from supply-chain and channel data rather than from Apple direct disclosures.
Apple ships the most iPhones in the fourth calendar quarter, covering October to December. New models launch in September, and holiday demand peaks shortly after, so this quarter is by far the largest each year, often exceeding 80 million units, more than double a typical quieter quarter.
2025 was Apple best year on record, with roughly 247 million iPhones shipped, driven by strong demand for the iPhone 17 series. This surpassed the previous record of about 236 million units set in 2021, which had been powered by the 5G upgrade cycle around the iPhone 12 and 13.
Apple holds roughly 15 to 20 percent of global smartphone shipments by unit volume, a figure that has climbed in recent years. While this is a minority of total units, Apple captures a far larger share of the industry revenue and profit by concentrating on premium, higher-priced models.
Since 2010, Apple has shipped on the order of three billion iPhones, one of the largest cumulative totals for any single product line. Shipment estimates measure units sent into the channel, so the figure is best read as an approximate scale rather than an exact count of devices currently in use.
For 2010 through 2018, the figures are Apple reported iPhone unit sales and are exact. From late 2018 onward, Apple no longer discloses unit volumes, so the figures are IDC and third-party shipment estimates. The two sources align closely, and annual totals are well established, but recent quarterly splits are estimates.
iPhone unit shipments have plateaued because the smartphone market is mature and most premium buyers already own an iPhone. Revenue keeps rising because Apple sells more expensive models, with higher average prices offsetting flat volumes. The result is record revenue even in years when unit shipments barely grow.
According to IDC, the iPhone 17 series drove Apple to a record of roughly 247 million shipments in 2025, with especially strong demand in China. This helped Apple finish as the largest smartphone vendor in the world for the year, and IDC noted it was a record period for Apple in both units and value.
Apple Inc. - Investor Relations - Source for Apple reported iPhone unit sales through 2018.
IDC Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker and other industry trackers - Used for shipment estimates from late 2018 onward and global market share.
