iphone 13 lcd screen free sample
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Use our “Get an Estimate” tool to review potential costs if you get service directly from Apple. The prices shown here are only for screen repair. If your iPhone needs other service, you’ll pay additional costs.
Your country or region offers AppleCare+ for this product. Screen repair (front) is eligible for coverage with a fee by using an incident of accidental damage from handling that comes with your AppleCare+ plan.
The Apple Limited Warranty covers your iPhone and the Apple-branded accessories that come in the box with your product against manufacturing issues for one year from the date you bought them. Apple-branded accessories purchased separately are covered by the Apple Limited Warranty for Accessories. This includes adapters, spare cables, wireless chargers, or cases.

The iPhone 13 Pro display has rounded corners that follow a beautiful curved design, and these corners are within a standard rectangle. When measured as a standard rectangular shape, the screen is 6.06 inches diagonally (actual viewable area is less).
As part of our efforts to reach our environmental goals, iPhone 13 Pro do not include a power adapter or EarPods. Included in the box is a USB‑C to Lightning Cable that supports fast charging and is compatible with USB‑C power adapters and computer ports.
We encourage you to re‑use your current USB‑A to Lightning cables, power adapters, and headphones, which are compatible with these iPhone models. But if you need any new Apple power adapters or headphones, they are available for purchase.
* To identify your iPhone model number, see support.apple.com/kb/HT3939. For details on 5G and LTE support, contact your carrier and see apple.com/iphone/cellular. Cellular technology support is based on iPhone model number and configuration for either CDMA or GSM networks.
Available space is less and varies due to many factors. A standard configuration uses approximately 12GB to 17GB of space, including iOS 15 with its latest features and Apple apps that can be deleted. Apple apps that can be deleted use about 4.5GB of space, and you can download them back from the App Store. Storage capacity subject to change based on software version, settings, and iPhone model.
iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro Max are splash, water, and dust resistant and were tested under controlled laboratory conditions with a rating of IP68 under IEC standard 60529 (maximum depth of 6 meters up to 30 minutes). Splash, water, and dust resistance are not permanent conditions. Resistance might decrease as a result of normal wear. Do not attempt to charge a wet iPhone; refer to the user guide for cleaning and drying instructions. Liquid damage not covered under warranty.
Data plan required. 5G, Gigabit LTE, VoLTE, and Wi‑Fi calling are available in select markets and through select carriers. Speeds are based on theoretical throughput and vary based on site conditions and carrier. For details on 5G and LTE support, contact your carrier and see apple.com/iphone/cellular.
All battery claims depend on network configuration and many other factors; actual results will vary. Battery has limited recharge cycles and may eventually need to be replaced. Battery life and charge cycles vary by use and settings. See apple.com/batteries and apple.com/iphone/battery.html for more information.
Testing conducted by Apple in August 2021 using preproduction iPhone 13 mini, iPhone 13, iPhone 13 Pro, and iPhone 13 Pro Max units and software and accessory Apple USB-C Power Adapter (20W Model A2305). Fast-charge testing conducted with drained iPhone units. Charge time varies with settings and environmental factors; actual results will vary.
Use of eSIM requires a wireless service plan (which may include restrictions on switching service providers and roaming, even after contract expiration). Not all carriers support eSIM. Use of eSIM in iPhone may be disabled when purchased from some carriers. See your carrier for details. To learn more, visit support.apple.com/en-us/HT212780.

Apple has determined that some iPhone X displays may experience touch issues due to a component that might fail on the display module. An affected device may exhibit the following:
Choose one of the options below to have your iPhone X serviced. Your iPhone will be examined prior to any service to verify that it is eligible for this program.
If your iPhone X has any damage which impairs the ability to complete the repair, such as a cracked screen, that issue will need to be resolved prior to the service. In some cases, there may be a cost associated with the additional repair.

A layout guide defines a rectangular region that helps you position, align, and space your content on the screen. The system includes predefined layout guides that make it easy to apply standard margins around content and restrict the width of text for optimal readability. You can also define custom layout guides.
A safe area defines the area within a view that isn’t covered by a navigation bar, tab bar, toolbar, or other views a window or scene might provide. Safe areas are essential for avoiding a device’s interactive and display features, like the Dynamic Island on iPhone or the camera housing on some Mac models.
In iOS, iPadOS, and tvOS, the system defines a collection of traits that characterize variations in the device environment that can affect the way your app displays on the screen. Using SwiftUI or Auto Layout, you can ensure that your interface adapts dynamically to a wide range of traits and contexts, including:
Respect key display and system features in each platform. Safe areas help you accommodate features like the corner radius and sensor housings on various devices, and avoid interfering with interactive system elements like Dynamic Island on iPhone and the Home indicator and app switcher on iPhone and iPad. Safe areas also help you account for interactive components like bars, dynamically repositioning content if sizes change.
Use placement to convey relative importance. In general, place principal items in the upper half of the screen or window, near the leading side. People typically start in this area, whether they’re looking at the screen or using a screen reader like VoiceOver.
Elevate essential information by giving it sufficient space. People want to view the most important information instantly, so you don’t want to clutter the screen or window with nonessential details. People can easily access secondary information by scrolling.
Be mindful of aspect ratio. Different screen sizes may have different aspect ratios, causing artwork to appear cropped, letterboxed, or pillarboxed. When this is the case, don’t change the aspect ratio of the artwork; instead, scale it to fill the screen so that important visual content remains in view on all display sizes.
When possible, consider alluding to hidden content by partially displaying offscreen elements. In large collections where content doesn’t fit on a single screen, you might be able to hint at the additional content by showing portions of the offscreen items.
If your app runs on a specific device, make sure it runs on every screen size for that device. In other words, an iPhone-only app must run on every iPhone screen size and an iPad-only app must run on every iPad screen size. For guidance, see Device screen sizes and orientations.
Inset full-width buttons. Respect the standard system-defined margins on the sides of full-width buttons. A full-width button at the bottom of the screen generally looks best when it has rounded corners and it aligns with the bottom of the safe area — which also ensures that it doesn’t conflict with the Home indicator.
Extend visual content to fill the screen. Make sure backgrounds extend to the edges of the display, and that vertically scrollable layouts, like tables and collections, continue all the way to the bottom.
On iPad, consider placing controls on the sides of the screen in landscape orientation. When controls are on the left and right sides of the screen, people can reach them easily with both hands while they’re holding the device.
Avoid placing interactive controls at the bottom edge of the screen when possible. Regardless of orientation, people use system gestures at the bottom edge of the display to access features like the Home screen and app switcher, and these gestures may cancel custom gestures you implement in this area. Also avoid placing controls in the far corners of the screen because these areas can be difficult for people to reach comfortably. If your game needs to place controls in the lower portion of the screen — below the safe area — use matching insets when placing them at the top and bottom of the screen, and leave ample space around the Home indicator so people don’t accidentally target it when trying to interact with a control.
Hide the status bar only when it adds value or enhances your experience. The status bar displays information people find useful and it occupies an area of the screen most apps don’t fully use, so it’s generally a good idea to keep it visible.
Avoid placing controls or critical information at the bottom of a window. People often move windows so that the bottom edge is below the bottom of the screen.
TVs vary widely in size. On Apple TV, app layouts don’t automatically adapt to the size of the screen like they do on iPhone or iPad. Instead, apps show the same interface on every display. Take extra care in designing your layout so that it looks great in a variety of screen sizes.
Adhere to the screen’s safe zone. Inset primary content 60 pixels from the top and bottom of the screen, and 80 pixels from the sides. It can be difficult for people to see content that close to the edges, and unintended cropping can occur due to overscanning on older TVs. Allow only partially displayed offscreen content and elements that deliberately flow offscreen to appear outside this zone.
Apple TV templates deliver clean, consistent layouts that make content the center of attention. These templates — based on JavaScript and the Apple TV markup language (TVML) — dynamically load and populate with content when people open your app. Templates give you flexibility to create content-rich apps with predefined layouts that look good on the TV screen and are ideal for streaming media.
Keep alerts short and avoid making people scroll. Reading lots of text on a distant screen strains the eyes and isn’t much fun. Minimize the amount of text your app displays.
Keep menu items onscreen. When the menu bar is in focus, ensure that all of its items are visible. In general, include seven or fewer items with short labels, to avoid crowding content and causing items to scroll off the screen.
Make partially hidden content look symmetrical. To help direct attention to the fully visible content, keep partially hidden offscreen content the same width on each side of the screen.
Design your content to extend from one edge of the screen to the other. The Apple Watch bezel provides a natural visual padding around your content. To avoid wasting valuable space, consider minimizing the padding between elements.
Avoid placing more than two or three controls side by side in your interface. As a general rule, display no more than three buttons that contain glyphs — or two buttons that contain text — in a row. Although it’s usually better to let text buttons span the full width of the screen, two side-by-side buttons with short text labels can also work well, as long as the screen doesn’t scroll.

Pricing for iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus includes a $30 connectivity discount that requires activation with AT&T, T‑Mobile, Sprint, or Verizon. Available to qualified customers and requires 24‑month installment loan when you select Citizens One or Apple Card Monthly Installments (ACMI) as payment type at checkout at Apple. iPhone activation required with AT&T, T‑Mobile, Sprint, or Verizon for purchases made with ACMI at an Apple Store. Subject to credit approval and credit limit. Taxes and shipping are not included in ACMI and are subject to your card’s variable APR. Additional Apple Card Monthly Installments terms are in the Apple Card Customer Agreement. Additional iPhone Payments terms are here. ACMI is not available for purchases made online at special storefronts. The last month’s payment for each product will be the product"s purchase price, less all other payments at the monthly payment amount.
The display has rounded corners that follow a beautiful curved design, and these corners are within a standard rectangle. When measured as a standard rectangular shape, the screen is 5.42 inches (iPhone 13 mini, iPhone 12 mini), 5.85 inches (iPhone 11 Pro, iPhone XS, iPhone X), 6.06 inches (iPhone 14, iPhone 13 Pro, iPhone 13, iPhone 12 Pro, iPhone 12, iPhone 11, iPhone XR), 6.12 inches (iPhone 14 Pro), 6.46 inches (iPhone 11 Pro Max, iPhone XS Max), 6.68 inches (iPhone 14 Plus, iPhone 13 Pro Max, iPhone 12 Pro Max), or 6.69 inches (iPhone 14 Pro Max) diagonally. Actual viewable area is less.
Service is included for free for two years with the activation of any iPhone 14 model. Connection and response times vary based on location, site conditions, and other factors. See apple.com/iphone-14 or apple.com/iphone-14-pro for more information.
All battery claims depend on network configuration and many other factors; actual results will vary. Battery has limited recharge cycles and may eventually need to be replaced. Battery life and charge cycles vary by use and settings. See apple.com/batteries and apple.com/iphone/battery.html for more information.
AT&T iPhone 14 Special Deal: Monthly price reflects net monthly payment, after application of AT&T trade‑in credit applied over 36 months with purchase of an iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 14 Pro Max, iPhone 14, or iPhone 14 Plus and trade‑in of eligible smartphone. Receive credit with purchase of an iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, iPhone 14 Pro, or iPhone 14 Pro Max of either $1000, $800, or $350 (based upon the model and condition of your trade‑in smartphone), max bill credits will not exceed the cost of the device. Requires upgrade of an existing line or activation of a new line and purchase of a new iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, iPhone 14 Pro, or iPhone 14 Pro Max on qualifying 36 month 0% APR installment plan, subject to carrier credit qualification. AT&T Installment Plan with Next Up is not eligible for this promotion. $0 down for well qualified customers only, or down payment may be required and depends on a variety of factors. Tax on full retail price due at sale. Requires activation on eligible unlimited plan. If you cancel eligible wireless service, credits will stop and you will owe the remaining device balance. Activation/Upgrade Fee: $35. Trade in device may not be on existing installment plan. Bill credits are applied as a monthly credit over the 36 month installment plan. Credits start within 3 bills. Will receive catchup credits once credits start. Wireless line must be on an installment agreement, active, and in good standing for 30 days to qualify. Installment agreement starts when device is shipped. To get all credits, device must remain on agreement for entire term and you must keep eligible service on device for entire installment term. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Limits: one trade‑in per qualifying purchase and one credit per line. May not be combinable with other offers, discounts, or credits. Purchase, financing, other limits, and restrictions apply. Price for iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus includes $30 AT&T connectivity discount. Activation required.
AT&T iPhone 13 Special Deal: Buy an iPhone 13 128 GB and get $370 in bill credits applied over 36 months. Buy an iPhone 13 256 GB and get $290 in bill credits applied over 36 months. Buy an iPhone 13 512 GB and get $310 in bill credits applied over 36 months. Requires upgrade of an existing line (or activation of a new line) and purchase on qualifying 36‑month 0% APR installment plan, subject to carrier credit qualification. $0 down for well‑qualified customers only, or down payment may be required and depends on a variety of factors. Tax on full retail price due at sale. If you cancel eligible wireless service, credits will stop and you will owe the remaining device balance. Activation/Upgrade Fee: $35. Bill credits are applied as a monthly credit over the 36‑month installment plan. Credits start within 3 bills. Will receive catch‑up credits once credits start. Wireless line must be on an installment agreement, active, and in good standing for 30 days to qualify. Installment agreement starts when device is shipped. To get all credits, device must remain on agreement for entire term and you must keep eligible service on device for entire installment term. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Limits: one credit per line. May not be combinable with other offers, discounts, or credits. Purchase, financing, other limits, and restrictions apply. Activation required.
AT&T iPhone SE Special Deal: Buy an iPhone SE 64 GB and get $250 in bill credits applied over 36 months. Buy an iPhone SE 128 GB and get $120 in bill credits applied over 36 months. Buy an iPhone SE 256 GB and get $40 in bill credits applied over 36 months. Requires upgrade of an existing line (or activation of a new line) and purchase on qualifying 36‑month 0% APR installment plan, subject to carrier credit qualification. $0 down for well‑qualified customers only, or down payment may be required and depends on a variety of factors. Tax on full retail price due at sale. If you cancel eligible wireless service, credits will stop and you will owe the remaining device balance. Activation/Upgrade Fee: $35. Bill credits are applied as a monthly credit over the 36‑month installment plan. Credits start within 3 bills. Will receive catch‑up credits once credits start. Wireless line must be on an installment agreement, active, and in good standing for 30 days to qualify. Installment agreement starts when device is shipped. To get all credits, device must remain on agreement for entire term and you must keep eligible service on device for entire installment term. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Limits: one credit per line. May not be combinable with other offers, discounts, or credits. Purchase, financing, other limits, and restrictions apply. Activation required.
Sprint Special Deal: Sprint trade‑in credit in the form of a rebate with virtual prepaid card when you trade in a qualifying device. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Requires activation on any Sprint data plan and submission of a promo code at promotions.t-mobile.com. $200 rebate via virtual prepaid Mastercard® Card, which you can use online or in‑store via accepted mobile payment apps; no cash access & expires in 6 months from issuance. Card is issued by Sunrise Banks N.A., Member FDIC, pursuant to a license from Mastercard International Incorporated. Mastercard is a registered trademark of Mastercard International Incorporated. Use of this card constitutes acceptance of the terms and conditions stated in the Cardholder Agreement. Lines must be active and in good standing when card is issued. Allow up to 2 billing cycles after fulfillment of offer requirements. Max 4 per account offer/discounted devices/account. May not be combined with some offers or discounts. Sales tax may be assessed on full value of new iPhone. Requires trade‑in of an iPhone XR or newer in good condition, including iPhone SE (2nd generation). Must be at least 18 to trade in. Apple or its trade‑in partners reserve the right to refuse or limit any trade‑in transaction for any reason. In‑store trade‑in requires presentation of a valid, government‑issued photo ID (local law may require saving this information). In‑store promotion availability subject to local law; speak to a Specialist to learn more. Additional terms from Apple, Sprint, and Apple’s trade‑in partners may apply.
T‑Mobile iPhone 14 Special Deal: Monthly price reflects net monthly payment, after application of T‑Mobile trade‑in credit applied over 24 months with purchase of an iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 14 Pro Max, iPhone 14, or iPhone 14 Plus and trade‑in of eligible smartphone. Receive credit with purchase of an iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, iPhone 14 Pro, or iPhone 14 Pro Max of $400 or $200 (based upon the model and condition of your trade‑in smartphone) for customers on any eligible rate plan. Max bill credits will not exceed the cost of the device. Credit comprised of (i) Apple instant trade‑in credit at checkout and (ii) T‑Mobile monthly bill credits applied over 24 months. Customer must remain in the T‑Mobile Equipment Installment Program and on eligible rate plan for 24 months and remain in good standing to receive the full benefit of the bill credits; allow 2 bill cycles from valid submission and validation of trade‑in. Tax on pre‑credit price due at sale. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Qualifying credit, data plan, and trade‑in in good condition required. Max 4 promotional offers on any iPhone per account. May not be combinable with some offers or discounts. Price for iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus includes $30 T‑Mobile connectivity discount. Activation required.
T‑Mobile iPhone 13 Special Deal: Monthly price reflects net monthly payment, after application of T‑Mobile trade‑in credit applied over 24 months with purchase of an iPhone 13 or iPhone 13 mini and trade‑in of eligible smartphone. Receive credit with purchase of an iPhone 13 or iPhone 13 mini of $400 or $200 (based upon the model and condition of your trade‑in smartphone) for customers on any eligible rate plan. Max bill credits will not exceed the cost of the device. Credit comprised of (i) Apple connectivity trade‑in credit at checkout and (ii) T‑Mobile monthly bill credits applied over 24 months. Customer must remain in the T‑Mobile Equipment Installment Program and on eligible rate plan for 24 months and remain in good standing to receive the full benefit of the bill credits; allow 2 bill cycles from valid submission and validation of trade in. Tax on pre‑credit price due at sale. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Qualifying credit, data plan, and trade‑in in good condition required. Max 4 promotional offers on any iPhone per account. May not be combinable with some offers or discounts. Price for iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 mini includes $30 T‑Mobile connectivity discount. Activation required.
T‑Mobile iPhone SE 3 Special Deal: Monthly price reflects net monthly payment, after application of T‑Mobile trade‑in credit applied over 24 months with purchase of an iPhone SE 3 and trade‑in of eligible smartphone. Receive credit with purchase of an iPhone SE 3 of $400 or $200 (based upon the model and condition of your trade‑in smartphone) for customers on any eligible rate plan. Max bill credits will not exceed the cost of the device. Credit comprised of (i) Apple connectivity trade‑in credit at checkout and (ii) T‑Mobile monthly bill credits applied over 24 months. Customer must remain in the T‑Mobile Equipment Installment Program and on eligible rate plan for 24 months and remain in good standing to receive the full benefit of the bill credits; allow 2 bill cycles from valid submission and validation of trade in. Tax on pre‑credit price due at sale. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Qualifying credit, data plan, and trade‑in in good condition required. Max 4 promotional offers on any iPhone per account. May not be combinable with some offers or discounts. Price for iPhone SE 3 includes $30 T‑Mobile connectivity discount. Activation required.
Verizon iPhone 14 Special Deal: Monthly price reflects net monthly payment, after application of Verizon trade‑in credit applied over 36 months with purchase of an iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 14 Pro Max, iPhone 14, or iPhone 14 Plus with credit of $800 or $400 for customers on a Get More or One Unlimited plan (based upon the model and condition of your trade‑in smartphone); or $440 or $220 for customers on a Do More or Play More plan (based upon the model and condition of your trade‑in smartphone). Credit comprised of (i) Apple instant trade‑in credit at checkout and (ii) Verizon monthly bill credits applied over 36 months. Customer must remain in the Verizon Device Payment Program for 36 months to receive the full benefit of the Verizon bill credits. Bill credits may take 1‑2 bill cycles to appear. If it takes two cycles for bill credits to appear, you’ll see the credit for the first cycle on your second bill in addition to that month’s credit. Requires purchase and activation of a new iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, iPhone 14 Pro, or iPhone 14 Pro Max with the Verizon Device Payment Program at 0% APR for 36 months, subject to carrier credit qualification, and iPhone availability and limits. Taxes and shipping not included in monthly price. Sales tax may be assessed on full value of new iPhone. Requires eligible unlimited service plan. Requires trade‑in of eligible device in eligible condition. Must be at least 18 to trade‑in. Apple or its trade‑in partners reserve the right to refuse or limit any trade‑in transaction for any reason. In‑store trade‑in requires presentation of a valid, government‑issued photo ID (local law may require saving this information). In‑store promotion availability subject to local law; speak to a Specialist to learn more. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Additional terms from Apple, Verizon, and Apple’s trade‑in partners may apply. Price for iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus includes $30 Verizon connectivity discount. Activation required.
Verizon iPhone 13 Special Deal: Monthly price reflects net monthly payment, after application of Verizon trade‑in credit applied over 36 months with purchase of an iPhone 13 or iPhone 13 mini with credit of $600 or $300 for customers on a Do More, Play More, Get More, or One Unlimited plan (based upon the model and condition of your trade‑in smartphone). Credit comprised of (i) Apple connectivity trade‑in credit at checkout and (ii) Verizon monthly bill credits applied over 36 months. Customer must remain in the Verizon Device Payment Program for 36 months to receive the full benefit of the Verizon bill credits. Bill credits may take 1‑2 bill cycles to appear. If it takes two cycles for bill credits to appear, you’ll see the credit for the first cycle on your second bill in addition to that month’s credit. Requires purchase and activation of a new iPhone 13 mini or iPhone 13 with the Verizon Device Payment Program at 0% APR for 36 months, subject to carrier credit qualification, and iPhone availability and limits. Taxes and shipping not included in monthly price. Sales tax may be assessed on full value of new iPhone. Requires eligible unlimited service plan. Requires trade‑in of eligible device in eligible condition. Must be at least 18 to trade‑in. Apple or its trade‑in partners reserve the right to refuse or limit any trade‑in transaction for any reason. In‑store trade‑in requires presentation of a valid, government‑issued photo ID (local law may require saving this information). In‑store promotion availability subject to local law; speak to a Specialist to learn more. Limited‑time offer; subject to change. Additional terms from Apple, Verizon, and Apple’s trade‑in partners may apply. Price for iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 mini includes $30 Verizon connectivity discount. Activation required.
Apple Fitness+ requires iPhone 8 or later, or Apple Watch Series 3 or later paired with iPhone 6s or later. New subscribers only. $9.99/month after trial. Plan automatically renews until cancelled. Terms apply.

The iPhone 13 is a big change over the iPhone 11. It sports a completely new look, but you also get a number of improvements under the hood. The iPhone 13 gets an OLED screen, a big upgrade over the LCD screen on the iPhone 11, it has a faster processor, upgraded cameras and longer battery life. The iPhone 13 is also considerably lighter and we"d say prettier.
Thanks to smaller bezels and a new design, the iPhone 13 is more compact while still featuring the same 6.1" screen size as the iPhone 11. See, the iPhone 11 is extra wide because of the thicker borders around the screen, which add width and make it hard to grasp with one hand.
Notice how the 11 is wider, thicker, and actually weighs quite a bit more too. Despite that, many of us find the flat edges on the iPhone 13 actually make it harder to grip firmly, while the older design with rounded sides is more ergonomic.
Both the iPhone 13 and iPhone 11 have a glossy back and use aluminum for the mid-frame. The colors are different though: you have a new pink option on the iPhone 13, in addition to the other 4 more standard color versions that are Midnight (black-ish), Starlight (silver-ish), Blue and Product RED.
While the two phones differ in their looks, they are about the same in terms of practicality with an IP68 water protection on both (iPhone 13 can be submerged up to 6 meters deep compared to 2 meters for the iPhone 11), so no need to worry about them getting wet in the rain.
While both phones have the same 6.1-inch screen size, the iPhone 13 uses an OLED display with deeper blacks and superior contrast compared to the older LCD type screen on the iPhone 11, where blacks appear washed out and colors don"t look quite as lively, plus you get a ghosting effect while scrolling. In addition to that, the iPhone 13 also has a higher resolution at 1170p compared to just 828p on the iPhone 11, another visible difference.
Last but not least, the display on the newer iPhone also supports HDR, which really makes videos you record or Netflix movies come to life, while you don’t have that on the iPhone 11.
One modern feature that is missing on both, however, is a fast refresh rate. Unfortunately, the newer iPhone 13 still runs at 60Hz, just like the iPhone 11. Apple has reserved the super smooth 120Hz ProMotion screens for its iPhone Pro series that cost quite a bit more.
The camera system looks different on the iPhone 13 with the lenses arranged diagonally rather than a straight line, but the cameras remain two, a wide and an ultra-wide one.
Despite the similarities, Apple is using a larger sensor for the main camera (the cameras are offset like that to accommodate for the larger sensor), and both cameras on the 13 are able to capture more light and do better in low light conditions. The iPhone 13 also gets sensor shift stabilization for the main camera, a more advanced solution compared to the lens-based OIS on the iPhone 11. In reality, though, there is hardly any difference and video stabilization is about the same, which is to say great.
We should also mention that the iPhone 11 was among the first to receive the Night Mode feature, but it only works with the main camera, while on the iPhone 13 it works with both cameras.
In terms of new camera features, the 13 brings Photographic Styles, which is basically photo filers on steroids. You can do local edits in real time and you can see the results right in the camera viewfinder. You can also create a favorite look, be it with more vibrant colors, or subdued tonalities... just select your personal style, and you can have the iPhone remember that personal preference and later use it across all your photos.
While both the iPhone 13 and iPhone 11 lack a headphone jack, there is a notable difference in the way the two sound when you are using the built-in loudspeakers.
The iPhone 13 is boomy and surprises with an ample sound that you don"t expect out of a phone speaker. The iPhone 11, on the other hand, is just decent, and doesn"t quite have the same punch and clarity. If you like to listen to music straight out of your phone, or just watch a lot of videos or play games without headphones, the iPhone 13 is a noticeable upgrade in terms of sound quality.
Apple"s custom made silicon has led the market in terms of performance over the past few years, and this lead only continues with the new Apple A15 Bionic processor in the iPhone 13. You get improvements on all fronts: CPU, GPU, AI and even the camera ISP.
We can see that Apple has only made very slight improvements to the performance, but compared to the 2-year old iPhone 11, it"s a noticeable difference.
What was a bit unexpected, but great is that the iPhone 13 now starts at 128GB of storage on board, double the storage on the iPhone 11. You also have 256GB and 512GB iPhone 13 versions.
One area where the iPhone 13 brings a notable improvement over the iPhone 11 is connectivity. First, because the iPhone 13 supports 5G while the iPhone 11 does not, and second because of the sheer amount of bands and bandwidth supports. We still don"t think 5G should influence your decision on buying either one as even with 4G LTE on the iPhone 11 we are still solid download and upload speeds, but it is becoming more and more a factor.
The iPhone 13 has a slightly larger, 3227mAh battery cell compared to 3110mAh battery on the iPhone 11. That"s a modest improvement of about 4%, in case you were wondering.
In real life, both phones last us about a day of full use, but the iPhone 13 can be pushed with more gaming and video recording and still last that long, while the iPhone 11 would last a bit less. The important thing is that you get those battery improvements all across the board, in all three of our different tests.
As for charging speeds, the iPhone 13 max charging rate is set at 20W compared to 18W on the iPhone 11, so no big difference. Both phones also support wireless charging and any Qi charger will work, but the newer iPhone 13 has MagSafe with magnets inside, so it snaps neatly to compatible chargers to get optimal speeds. Also, in terms of wireless charging speeds, you get up to 15W on the iPhone 13, and only up to 7.5W on the iPhone 11.

When troubleshooting any mobile electronic device you must always start at the common points of failure and work your way up. For example, if your iPhone 13 is not displaying, first check to see if the battery is dead by connecting it to a power outlet.
1.Make sure the Apple smartphone is completely charged. Ensure the Apple lightning charging cable is not bent, frayed or broken to rule out a bad cable and to make sure that your iPhone 13 is charging. If the Apple iPhone 13 is completely dead, it will take a few seconds or even minutes of charging before displaying these icons:
2. If the iPhone 13 still doesn’t come on after charging it, you may need a screen or display assembly. If the iPhone 13 powers on but you see lines running up and down the display you will need a screen replacement.
3. If the iPhone 13 powers on but doesn’t have any damage and doesn’t respond to touch, you most likely still need a screen replacement. The digitizer is a component of the screen that controls the touch functionality of your screen, it can be easily damaged even if your screen isn’t cracked and will most likely need a display assembly replacement to fix.
Dropping the device on rocky surfaces, tile, hardwood floor or just dropping it in general is the biggest culprit of damaged iPhone screens. The Apple iPhone 13 display is one of the thinnest models to date and the display is even thinner than ever. The actual OLED panel underneath the iPhone 13 screen is about the size of an egg shell.
The Apple iPhone 13 screen requires specialized equipment to even complete the repair. Failure to use Apple’s heated display removal tool and the corresponding Apple iPhone 13 hot pocket can easily result in additional damage. The iPhone 13 screen replacement isn’t hard to do, but it’s very easy to mess up. A botched screen replacement often results in Face ID damage or FPC damage on the board which costs even more to fix.
If you have the necessary tools and equipment to complete the repair yourself… go for it! Just remember if damage occurs to any of the components that you have to remove or come into contact with during the screen replacement process, you will have to fix those or certain features such as face ID may not function as intended. Recently Apple launched aself-repair programwhere customers can rent the tools themselves, but after factoring in the $1,200 hold they put on your credit card and the rental fees they charge for the tools and equipment, most customers might as well just use an XiRepair service location to repair their Apple iPhone.
Replacing the screen is ABSOLUTELY worth it! The replacement cost of the iPhone 13 is at minimum $800 for just the base model, however after factoring in a 10% tax rate, plus activation fees. The realreplacement costof the iPhone 13 is between $900 and $930!
Our affordable iPhone screen replacement services replace your faulty screen with a brand new screen. This process turns a seemingly non-functional apple iPhone into a practically new Apple iPhone.
Replacing the screen on an iPhone 13 is an easy decision! It’s way more affordable than replacing it, plus repairing your device is much better for the environment.

iFixit’s Taylor Dixon digs into the process of removing the iPhone 13’s Face-ID-saving screen chip, including an interview with The Art of Repair’s Justin Ashford.
five days after this post was widely cited in news reports, that it would issue a software update to prevent Face ID’s disabling after screen replacements.
Apple has been chipping away at iPhone repair work outside their control for years now. With new changes to the iPhone 13, they may be aiming to shatter the market completely.
The new iPhone 13 completely disables its flagship Face ID functionality when you replace its screen. We have confirmed this repeatedly in our lab, testing with many different phones on iOS 15 and 15.1, and our results have been replicated by numerous repair professionals.
This is a dark day for fixers, both DIY and professional. One of the most common phone repairs that could once be done with hand tools now requires a microscope. This means you won’t be able to fix your iPhone screen yourself without sacrificing major functionality. It also has huge implications for the professional repair industry, for which Apple is the dominant brand to service. Small shops could be shuttered, forced to choose between spending thousands on new equipment or losing a major source of income.
For shops that want to survive, their only options will be to join Apple’s onerous IRP network—not an option for shops that value their customers’ privacy—or work past the iPhone’s locks with microsoldering tools and training. This unprecedented lockdown is unique to Apple. It’s totally new in the iPhone 13, and hard to understand as a security measure, given that the Face ID illuminator is entirely separate from the screen. It is likely the strongest case yet for right to repair laws. And it’s all because of a chip about the size of a Tic-Tac, tucked into the bottom of a screen.
The iPhone 13 is paired to its screen using this small microcontroller, in a condition repair techs often call “serialization.” Apple has not provided a way for owners or independent shops to pair a new screen. Authorized technicians with access to proprietary software, Apple Services Toolkit 2, can make new screens work by logging the repairto Apple’s cloud servers and syncing the serial numbers of the phone and screen. This gives Apple the ability to approve or deny each individual repair.
The most sophisticated repair shops have found a workaround, but it’s not a quick, clever hack—it’s physically moving a soldered chip from the original screen onto the replacement. We’ll go into more detail on that process below, but it’s important to note how completely unprecedented this is. Screen replacement is incredibly common. Tens of thousands of repair shops around the world support their communities by replacing screens for customers at competitive prices. And Apple is, with one fell swoop, seemingly cutting the industry off at the knees.
Justin Drake Carroll, CEO and founder of Fruit Fixed, a regional repair chain in Virginia, said that screen replacements were about 35 percent of revenue. “At one point it was 60 percent, a few years ago. We worked really hard to push that figure down, so that one revenue stream wasn’t such a huge part of what we do. Obviously, it’s still an incredibly important part of our business model.”
Let’s dive into the technical details. We’ve tested it on iOS 15.1, the latest official iPhone software release. Replacing an iPhone 13’s screen with the same exact screen from an identical brand new iPhone gives this error: “Unable to activate Face ID on this iPhone.”
It’s hard to believe, after years of repair-blocking issues with Touch ID, batteries, and cameras, that Apple’s latest iPhone part lock-out is accidental. As far as our engineers can tell, keeping Face ID working on the iPhone 13 after a screen swap should be easier than ever, since its scanner is wholly separate from the display. Technically, yes: Face ID failure could be a very specific hardware bug for one of the most commonly replaced components, one that somehow made it through testing, didn’t get fixed in a major software update, and just happens to lock out the kind of independent repair from which the company doesn’t profit.
More likely, though, is that this is a strategy, not an oversight. This situation makes AppleCare all but required for newer iPhones, unless you happen to know that your local repair shop is ready for the challenge. Or you simply plan to never drop your phone.
“This industry was built on iPhone screens, but it won’t be much longer,” Ashford, the repair instructor, said. “This kind of thing has been creeping up on us for a while. Anyone who takes repair seriously knows what they have to do now.”
One experienced repair shop told me they’ve been swapping screen chips since the iPhone X to avoid touch calibration issues and “genuine” part warnings; they’ve got the process down to about 15 minutes. They’ve been slowly building an inventory of refurbished and third-party replacement screens with their chip slots empty, using CNC machines and screen-holding jigs to carve them out.
Even when a shop has the equipment and experience to de-solder a BGA chip and move it to a new screen, they’re competing at a disadvantage with Apple’s repair network and protection plan, AppleCare. An authorized Apple technician can make an iPhone 13 accept a new screen with a few clicks inside their secret software—no heating, desoldering, or resoldering required. Apple’s techs can also keep True Tone working, something that independent repair techs have not yet achieved with third-party programmers on newer iPhone 12 and 13 models.
In other words, for those who can access Apple’s network, replacing a screen on the iPhone 13 is no different than before. For independent shops, everything is different.
“[This] is an intentional move to thwart a customer’s ability to repair,” said Carroll, of the Fruit Fixed chain. “Honestly, if every screen repair involved that much work, I would hang it up and we wouldn’t be able to help the thousands of people we do each month.”
For customers who want to fix their iPhone 13 themselves, the options are grim. You could live without any kind of biometric login, like you might have in 2012. Or you could try to move the chip, after buying yourself a microscope or high-resolution webcam, a hot air rework station, a fine-tip soldering iron, and the necessary BGA stencils, flux, and other supplies. We’ve posted a series of videos explaining how to do precisely that, and we sell most of these items. But even with those tools (and lots of heat-resistant tape), it’s a challenge. It’s easy to damage the fragile OLED screen just beyond the cable the chip sits on. One of our engineers learned this the hard way, killing two screens while attempting to remove the chip for photos and verification.
There is a chance that, as with the iPhone 12 camera, Apple could change the iPhone 13’s Face ID from non-functional to an “Unable to verify” warning with a future software update. Such an iOS update arrived in late January, about three months after the iPhone 12 shipped. If that happens, the company will need to explain whether it was intentionally testing the waters for further serializing parts, or just blithely neglecting the needs of its customers and independent fixers.
Apple’s repair software is exclusive to those techs bound by the company’s tightly controlled repair program. Other companies could follow; Samsung, which is expanding its own repair network, made this screen for Apple. Without fair access to companies’ gatekeeping software, the small businesses may feel forced to get good under a microscope, or give in.

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Ms.Josey
Ms.Josey