
The iPhone 17 is on shelves. The iPhone 15 is gone from Apple’s store but everywhere on the refurbished market, and noticeably more affordable than anything newer. So the question isn’t whether the iPhone 15 is a good phone in 2026 — it is. The real question is whether it’s the right buy for you, right now, at this price.
Yes, the iPhone 15 is still a strong buy in 2026 if the price gap to a refurbished iPhone 16 is meaningful, and if you don’t need Apple Intelligence. Skip it if Apple Intelligence is essential to you, or if a refurbished iPhone 16 is sitting at a similar condition tier for only a little more.
Two and a half years after launch, the iPhone 15 still has all the hardware that defines a modern iPhone. It runs the current version of iOS, with years of Apple software support ahead. It has USB-C, the Dynamic Island, a 48MP main camera, 5G, MagSafe, and the same Ceramic Shield front used on every iPhone since.
Day to day, it feels current. The A16 chip still handles everything most people ask of a phone — apps, multitasking, demanding games, all of it. The camera takes excellent photos. The screen is bright and sharp.
On a refurbished unit, the variable to watch is battery health. That’s where buying from a professional refurbisher matters: every device should arrive with a tested, transparent battery health figure, backed by Swappie Warranty.
Before the buying decision, here’s the comparison most people are doing in their head. What actually changes, and what doesn’t, as you step up through the line-up.
| Spec | iPhone 15 | iPhone 16 | iPhone 17 |
| Released | Sep 2023 | Sep 2024 | Sep 2025 |
| Chip | A16 Bionic | A18 | A19 |
| Apple Intelligence | Not supported | Supported | Supported |
| Display | 6.1″, 60Hz OLED | 6.1″, 60Hz OLED | 6.3″, 120Hz OLED |
| Main camera | 48MP wide + 12MP ultrawide | 48MP wide + 12MP ultrawide | 48MP wide + 48MP ultrawide |
| Front camera | 12MP | 12MP | 18MP |
| Starting storage | 128GB | 128GB | 256GB |
| Video playback (Apple’s figure) | Up to 20 hrs | Up to 22 hrs | Up to 30 hrs |
| Wired charging | ~20W | ~20W | Up to 40W |
| Action button | No | Yes | Yes |
| Camera Control button | No | Yes | Yes |
The iPhone 15 holds its own on the things you touch every day. The iPhone 16 adds Apple Intelligence and the new physical buttons. The iPhone 17 is where the bigger jumps live — a larger, smoother 120Hz display, a much better second camera, faster charging — and it’s priced accordingly.
This is the single biggest reason to think twice about the iPhone 15. The base iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus don’t support Apple Intelligence. That line starts with the iPhone 15 Pro and the iPhone 16.
In practice, that means no Genmoji, no system-level writing tools, no smarter Siri, and no on-device image generation. It doesn’t mean a less capable phone for anything else — iOS updates still arrive, every third-party app still runs, and the day-to-day experience is unchanged.
So the question isn’t whether Apple Intelligence is good. It’s whether you’d actually use it. For a lot of people upgrading from an iPhone 11 or 12, the honest answer is: not really. If that’s you, the iPhone 15 trade-off is fine.
The rule of thumb: if a refurbished iPhone 16 at the same condition tier is only modestly more than the iPhone 15, the iPhone 16 is usually the smarter buy. You get Apple Intelligence and an extra year of software runway. If the gap is wider, the iPhone 15 is where the value sits.
A quick note on condition tiers. On refurbished, you’ll typically see grades like Excellent, Good, and Fair. The differences come down to cosmetic wear and battery health. Performance is the same across grades — a Fair-grade iPhone 15 runs exactly as fast as an Excellent one. The choice is really about how the phone looks in your hand and how long the battery lasts between charges.
Every Swappie Refurbished iPhone comes with Swappie Warranty, which means if something unexpected happens, there’s one accountable company on the other end. That’s the difference between buying refurbished from professionals and taking a chance on a marketplace listing.
The iPhone 15 makes sense if you’re:
Skip it if you’re:
The iPhone 15 in 2026 is exactly the kind of phone the refurbished market exists for. No longer Apple’s newest, still genuinely modern, sitting at a price point where the value is obvious once you know what to look for. And by giving a device that already exists another few years of life, you’re keeping great tech in use instead of producing something new.
The point isn’t to tell every reader to buy one. It’s to give you the framework to decide. See if the maths works for you.