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

Apple missed a cute, fitting opportunity with the iPhone 16e’s name

Add as a preferred source on Google
A group of iPhone 16e phones arranged in a pattern.
Apple

The names of our smartphones matter. Too clunky and we forget, too wordy and we don’t remember, or too bizarre and we won’t say it. They don’t have to mean anything at all, but they need to fit. The new iPhone 16e’s name fits, far more so than the expected alternatives, and it was one of Apple’s best decisions with the phone. But there’s another name I would have preferred even more.

You’re family now

A press image of the iPhone 16e.
Apple

Since rumors began more than a year ago, it was assumed the iPhone 16e would be called the iPhone SE 4, or the iPhone SE (2025), which mostly followed the trend of previous devices in the range. The original iPhone SE was followed by the iPhone SE (2020), then the iPhone SE (2022), so either name was a logical path for Apple to take.

Recommended Videos

Except the SE name is, well, a bit silly. It’s not a Special Edition, as SE is supposed to stand for. It’s an iPhone, and all the SE suffix did was turn Apple’s entry phone into an outlier. It’s entirely separate to the brand’s top phones, and if you decide to buy one, you’re not really joining the club. It’s like making a $1 pledge on a Kickstarter project. Sure, you’ve contributed, but you’re hardly a member of the inner circle and you won’t be getting any of the benefits.

When Tim Cook teased the iPhone 16e’s launch, he used the phrase “meet the newest member of the family,” and with the new name, that’s what we’ve done. The iPhone 16e’s name brings it into the family, where it can sit at the big table with the iPhone 16, iPhone 16 Plus, and the two iPhone 16 Pro models too. Sure, the old SE models were all iPhones, but they didn’t have the right number attached, and it set them apart from the latest versions. When people buy an iPhone, they want the latest, and with the iPhone 16e, that’s what they’re getting.

Family forever

iPhone 16 Pro Max next to the 16 Plus, 16 Pro and regular iPhone 16
Nirave Gondhia / Digital Trends

The iPhone 16e has been embraced by the family, and this could make a difference in the future too, should Apple decide to shift away from the vague multi-year update schedule it has maintained with the SE series. It could, realistically, announce a new e-series iPhone every year, and ensure it remains a “current” iPhone by adopting the same number strategy. An iPhone 17e would follow the 16e in 2026, for example.

The SE series did show Apple doesn’t feel the need to update its entry-level phone very often though, but it’s the outlier in the industry. New entry-level phones come from practically every other manufacturer on an annual (and sometimes even sooner) basis, and giving the e-series an annual bump, however small, would keep it fresh and exciting for buyers who don’t want to pay for a number-series phone.

While the iPhone 16e’s name fits in with my personal love of logic and order, the continued existence of the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus in Apple’s range makes it less neat than it could be, but I can forgive it because the pricing structure makes up for it. The iPhone 16e starts at $599, the iPhone 15 at $699, the iPhone 16 at $799, and the 16 Pro at $999. The iPhone 14 has gone, which will frustrate some due to some less than ideal spec differences, but it couldn’t exist alongside the 16e.

E is good, but C is better

apple iphone 5c rear wide
iPhone 5c Digital Trends

During discussions with colleagues after the iPhone 16e was announced, I stood more or less alone as someone who liked the new name. Detractors compared it to how Motorola has named some of its lowliest budget phones, and also recalled how Samsung used an e suffix on the budget Galaxy S10e. Others are questioning what the E stands for. Entry-level? Economy? Essential?

It’s an odd one, and ultimately doesn’t need to stand for anything at all, but it’s not a letter tied to Apple’s mobile division. Using S, as it has done in the past for some new models, doesn’t seem right either, as those phones were attached to fairly major annual updates. What’s interesting is the S suffix was easy to tie into new features on the device itself, standing for things like Speed and Siri, and this is where Apple may have missed a trick with the iPhone 16e.

It’s a surprise (and perhaps a missed opportunity for the marketing team) Apple didn’t resurrect the letter C. Calling it the iPhone 16c would have fitted right in as a lower cost, but still premium iPhone, just as the old iPhone 5c did in 2013. Plus, it would have connected (no pun intended) the phone with the introduction of the new C1 modem — which is a bigger deal than Apple made it seem — for some cute, geeky brand synergy.

Names do matter, and I like them to fit. I won’t miss the old SE name, but will remember it fondly for other reasons, and love that with a simple rename the iPhone 16e has become a true member of the family. However, for the ultimate in nerdy satisfaction, I’d have really liked to connect the dots between the new phone and the new C1 modem, if Apple had decided to call it the iPhone 16c instead.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
The Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide could fix the Fold’s biggest problem, if these leaks are right
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide just leaked again, and this time the biggest takeaway isn't the cameras or the color — it's the shape. Two fresh leaks are painting a clearer picture of Samsung's next book-style foldable, suggesting the company may finally be addressing one of the Galaxy Z Fold lineup's longest-running complaints.

Sometimes wider really is better

Read more
The Razr Fold now gets along better with iPhones thanks to AirDrop
Motorola's first foldable learns a new trick, and I guess I'm ready to daily drive it now
Electronics, Speaker, Electrical Device

I already had more reasons than expected to keep the Motorola Razr Fold around. While reviewing it, the company's first foldable genuinely surprised me with its level of polish. A practical outer display, great cameras, strong battery life, and a gorgeous folding screen. All of this made me want to switch to this device as my primary phone.

Now Motorola has added one more reason, and it's just sweetening the deal for me. The Motorola Razr Fold now supports AirDrop-style sharing through Android’s Quick Share, making it the first Motorola phone to get the feature. That means Razr Fold users can share files directly with Apple devices such as iPhones, iPads, and Macs without relying on cloud links, messaging apps, USB cables, or the usual cross-platform nonsense.

Read more
iPhone 18 Pro Max leak claims a battery capacity eclipsing the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
Apple could finally cross 5,400mAh with its next Pro Max iPhone
iPhone 18 Pro cameras

Apple can’t seem to catch a break with leaks this cycle. We are still a couple of months away from the expected iPhone 18 launch window, but we already know a lot. Images, factory test details, possible colors, and camera upgrades have already surfaced. Now, battery capacity has also leaked.

According to a new leak on Weibo by 朵哥互联科技, the iPhone 18 Pro Max could ship with different battery capacities depending on the market. The version with a physical SIM slot is said to pack a 5,235mAh battery, while the eSIM-only version may go up to 5,425mAh.

Read more