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New 13-inch iPad Air will eat into iPad Pro sales

A new report predicts that sales of the new iPad Pro will be affected both by its higher price than before, and by the appeal for consumers of the lower-cost 13-inch iPad Air.

Trendforce has previously and rather obviously predicted that if Apple releases iPad Pro models with OLED screens, it would drop the previous versions that had mini LED displays. Now that Apple has done exactly this, Trendforce has released a report estimating the potential sales of the new iPad range.

The report from market research firm Trendforce is really focused on AMOLED (Active Matrix Organic Light Emitting Diode) screens. This is the slight but significant variant of OLED that lets the iPad Pro control every individual pixel, and also do so while consuming less power.

Trendforce's focus, then, is on how it estimates that the total number of AMOLED screens shipped in any company's devices in 2025 will be approximately 9 million. It says that this represents around 7% of the total tablet market.

For Apple in particular, though, Trendforce estimates that the company will ship between 4.5 million and 5 million of the iPad Pro in 2024. That's a combined total for the 11-inch and 13-inch models of the iPad Pro together.

Trendforce does not appear to have published any previous estimates for Apple's sales, but says its new prediction is reduced to between 4.5 million and 5 million figure is a reduction. Its analysts say they are predicting this lower figure in part because of the new iPad Air.

For the first time, there is a 13-inch version of the iPad Air and Trendforce believes this could dilute consumer interest in the iPad Pro. In their base specifications, Apple sells the 13-inch iPad Pro from $1,299, while the 13-inch iPad Air starts at $799.

As Trendforce notes, that iPad Pro price is $200 more than the previous model. It ascribes that increase entirely to the screen, and in particular how Apple has used what it's calling tandem OLED technology to avoid the burn-in and shorter life previously associated with AMOLED.

So the combination of a higher-price iPad Pro and a new 13-inch iPad Air will be responsible for lowering the sales of the Pro model. Again, though, Trendforce does not say by how much, just that it will be "only" 4.5 million to 5 million in 2024.

However, a previous estimate claimed to be from supply chain sources said that Apple has ordered 8.5 million OLED display panels for 2024.



18 Comments

Kierkegaarden 1 Year · 244 comments

It depends somewhat on what Apple has in store for iPadOS at WWDC.  Aside from that, maybe the ratio of pro to non-pro will be similar but more 11 Air buyers will buy a 13 instead?

hmlongco 9 Years · 586 comments

Apple has probably figured this out, don't you think?

Regardless, and as I've said many times, Apple is one of the few companies that understands that if you don't cannibalize your own sales, someone else is likely to do it for you.

DAalseth 6 Years · 3067 comments

Honestly while I have no plans to upgrade my iPad Pro yet (the M1 is doing everything I need) when I do upgrade it would be to the Air. I got the M1 for the screen size and Apple Pencil. Now that I can get that in the Air there’s no reason to spend the extra.

BuffyzDead 17 Years · 358 comments

I estimate that Trendforce will be wrong!   

The different iPads cater to different end-users.

But whatever, ...Apple will sell boatloads of each, and time will reveal all.

entropys 13 Years · 4316 comments

I think an M2 iPad Air will eat into iPad Pro sales, but not because of the 12.9 inch model. Well ok that will be a bit. The main reason is price. The difference in the 11 inch models is the Air is about 25% less for pretty much the same capability.

btw, does anyone see the discontinuity in the iPad Air being heavier than the iPad Pro?