As a staunch supporter of all three previous iPhone SE models, I found the iPhone 16e somewhat disappointing. In my iPhone 16e review, I noted that at its $599 price point, the trade-offs make it difficult to recommend over the next model up — which was the iPhone 16 at the time and is now the iPhone 17.

My sentiments about this best cheap phone contender remain unchanged after a year of use. However, with the iPhone 17e launch rumored for next month, there are key upgrades the forthcoming budget phone needs to stay relevant. Here’s what I want to see.

200-photo shootout between the Pixel 9a and iPhone 16e — it lacks the utility I crave. Quite frankly, a single rear camera limits my creativity.

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iPhone 17e (which rumors indicate will recycle the previous hardware), doing so would certainly make it more appealing and provide the creative flexibility users want.

The logical move would be pairing the rumored 48MP main sensor with an ultra-wide lens. While a telephoto would be equally compelling, adding an ultra-wide camera has the advantage of potentially allowing the iPhone 17e to support spatial photos and videos, while also improving portrait depth data.

iPhone 16 and iPhone 17.

Honestly, it’s becoming inexcusable for any new iPhone to ship without at least a 120Hz refresh rate.

Many budget phones now feature 120Hz panels, including entry-level models like the $200 Moto G (2026). The benefits include smoother UI animations and a much more responsive feel. Furthermore, a high refresh rate would make gaming significantly more enjoyable with fluid motion.

Honestly, it’s becoming inexcusable for any new iPhone to ship without at least a 120Hz refresh rate. It is a straightforward upgrade with tremendous benefits that would instantly increase the iPhone 17e’s value.

iPhone 17 and iPhone 17 Pro offer seamless video output.

Even if the feature simply mirrors the iPhone’s screen, it would still provide a major boost to the iPhone 17e’s utility. It would allow users to view content on larger screens, run presentations, or even use a monitor as a secondary display for the camera. I’m calling this out specifically because the old Pixel 8a offered screen mirroring when connected to a monitor.

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Furthermore, with long-standing rumors that Apple is working on a desktop mode for the iPhone, adding DisplayPort support to the 17e would future-proof the device for whenever that feature finally launches.

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