Key Features
- Review Price: £699
- 4.7-inch HD True Tone display
- A11 Bionic
- 2GB RAM
- 12-megapixel f/1.8 camera with OIS
- 8-megapixel selfie camera
- iOS 11
- TouchID
- 64GB or 256GB storage
- Lightning EarPods
iPhone 8 long-term review: The silent competition
Released without any hint of hype, the iPhone 8 has settled itself into a comfortable position beneath the iPhone X. It isn’t groundbreaking, particularly unique or exciting, but it’s a solid phone that addresses many of the problems I had with the iPhone 7.
Battery life is good, if not great, but the addition of fast wireless charging means topping it up is easier than before. I’ve popped a wireless pad on my table, so the iPhone receives a charge whenever I’m sitting down. In addition, I haven’t noticed any battery degradation – which many an iPhone has suffered in the past.
Performance remains fantastic, and the steady stream of iOS 11 patches have fixed many bugs, while also with bringing some more to the fold. I feel iOS is more at home here than on the iPhone X, but that might change with the iOS 12.
While the glass back’s prime purpose is to enable wireless charging, it does make the phone far more delicate. I’d use a case with this device at all times – just to be on the safe side.
What is the iPhone 8?
It’s been 10 years since the original iPhone was released. Back then it offered the consumer an alternative to devices featuring tiny QWERTY keyboards, introducing multi-touch and classy designs instead. Now, Apple is celebrating the occasion with the biggest change in how the iPhone looks and works since its inception.
The iPhone 8 isn’t that phone, however; it’s the iPhone X, which will cost £/$999 when it’s released in November. Instead, the iPhone 8 plays it safe, offering an alternative to those who are happy with large bezels and comparatively small screens.
It’s a decent device, excellent in some areas even, but the lack of evolution in the design is hard to overlook.
iPhone 8 price
Prices for the iPhone 8 start at £699/$699 for 64GB and £849/$849 for 256GB. That’s cheaper than the iPhone X, but it’s a higher starting price than the iPhone 7 (£599, 32GB).
iPhone 8 release date
Apple’s latest smartphone is available now from various networks and the Apple Store. To get the best price, check out our iPhone 8 deals page.
iPhone 8 – Design
Visually, the iPhone 8 is almost exactly the same as the outgoing iPhone 7. It’s still your typical slab, with rounded corners and curved edges. The aluminium rear, which has been around since the iPhone 6, has been ditched for a glass panel here that feels very similar to the front.

My one slight annoyance with the glass design is that it doesn’t quite blend into the aluminium rim as it did in previous models. There’s a notable lip between the end of the glass and the start of the metal, and my fingernail often gets caught in it. It’s a minor design quirk, however.
The obvious downside with glass is its fragility. The worry here is that a drop that wouldn’t have left any lasting damage on the iPhone 7 will leave the iPhone 8 with a seriously cracked rear. For instance, even though the Samsung Galaxy S8 is supposed to benefit from tough Gorilla Glass 5, my device ended life as a glittering mess of glass shards after a 2ft drop onto a wooden floor. Apple clearly realises this is an issue, claiming the iPhone 8 has the ‘most durable glass ever in an iPhone’. My unit has been fine so far, but I haven’t put it through any rigorous drop-tests.
I applaud Apple for switching to glass, but my overall view of the iPhone 8’s design is that it feels dull, predictable and quite some way behind Android flagships such as the Galaxy S8, LG V30 and the Essential Phone. The 2017 trend to trim the bezel surrounding the display – which provides more screen in a smaller body – is coming to the iPhone X, but the iPhone 8 still sports a sizeable bezel and fairly small screen.

Apple’s handsets remain my favourite when it comes to the colour choices available. There are three colour options for the iPhone 8 – not the five of the the iPhone 7 – and the Gold is easily my favourite. This replaces the former Gold option and Rose Gold; it’s an amalgamation of both. The glass on the rear of the device gives it a soft, almost ‘creamy’ vibe, and the sides are a less vivid pink. It’s appealing, but not all in the Trusted Reviews’ office share this view. If Gold isn’t your thing then the iPhone 8 is available in Space Grey and Silver too.
It’s been a year since Apple killed the headphone jack, and to absolutely no-one’s surprise it hasn’t made a triumphant return here. Having lived with an iPhone 7 for many months now, I’ve become used to either picking up some wireless headphones or remembering to take the dongle – but it’s hardly ideal.
iPhone 8 – Screen
At 4.7-inches, with a barely over-720p resolution, the display on the iPhone 8 doesn’t whip up much excitement. However, there is actually plenty to like here, and the few changes Apple has made do make a noticeable difference in use.

Apple is also now supporting the Dolby Vision and HDR10 formats, so you can play back HDR movies from iTunes and supported content from Netflix. Unlike the iPhone X, which Apple claims has a ‘True HDR’ screen, the iPhone 8 doesn’t. Still, watching Mad Max in HDR does look noticeably better than on the iPhone 7.
The rest of the display specs remain the same as before. It’s still an IPS LCD panel; if you want the perfect blacks and more vivid colours of OLED, you’ll have to plump for an iPhone X or an Android device.
The resolution can make photos look slightly grainy, but it remains one of my favourite displays for colour reproduction, and the support for the DCI-P3 wide colour gamut makes a huge difference in supported content. It also excels for use in super-sunny conditions – an area in which OLEDs often suffer.
iPhone 8 – Performance
The A11 Bionic running the iPhone 8 is Apple’s most impressive processor yet. It has an impact on everything that happens inside the iPhone, from the way iOS 11 handles AR apps, to how it offsets the smaller battery.
Both the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus run the same A11 Bionic chip, and so does the upcoming iPhone X. The difference is in the RAM offering: the iPhone 8 has only 2GB of RAM and the Plus has 3GB of RAM – we don’t yet know how much the iPhone X will include, although I’d take a guess at 3GB.
Is the lack of a gigabyte evident? Not that I’ve noticed. The iPhone 8 is just as competent at holding apps in memory as the 8 Plus, and it feels as though the extra memory is mainly present for the intensive camera modes.

I do wish that with all this power at their disposal, app developers would do more to make the most of it all. A big push with iPhone 8 and, specifically, iOS 11 is augmented reality (AR), which layers graphical elements over the real world. There are already a few apps that use this feature – the IKEA app lets you place furniture around home, for example – but they all appear to run just as well on an iPhone 6S as they do on the iPhone 8.
The same is true of games; I can’t find anything that performs notably better on the iPhone 8 than the iPhone 7. This isn’t really Apple’s fault, but it does mean that the performance boost is quite hard to utilise.
More noticeable are the improved front-facing stereo speakers. Apple says these are ‘25% louder than the iPhone 7’, and whether or not these numbers are accurate, they do sound very good indeed. Call quality, too, is excellent, as is cellular and Wi-Fi reception.
iPhone 8 – Software
The iPhone 8 comes running iOS 11, but considering every iPhone since the 5S has recently received that update, it’s hardly a reason to upgrade your phone. It does add plenty of nice features, though.
I’ll point you towards our in-depth iOS 11 review for the full overview, but in short there’s a big push towards a more cohesive design this time around. The Control Center has been completely rebuilt, native apps have been spruced up and, of course, there’s the AR support.

Siri has a more natural-sounding voice, although still struggles to properly understand my requests, and there’s a lot bold text in apps. I’d have liked to see a bigger change to the gridded homescreen layout, but maybe that will come in iOS 12.
iOS still lags behind Android in a few areas, however. Notifications, for one, are frustratingly archaic, requiring you to dig around and endlessly scroll if you have lots of messages.
In addition, split-screen multitasking on iOS 11 is still lacking, even though it’s become a staple feature of Android. I can sort of understand why you wouldn’t want two apps running concurrently on a 4.7-inch phone, but not so much on the iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone X.
iPhone 8 – Camera
The iPhone 8 arrives with numerous minor improvements; be it the screen, processor or battery life. But the one area where it feels like there’s been a dramatic step forward is the camera. You wouldn’t think this if you simply looked at the spec sheet, where the single 12-megapixel optically stabilised f/1.8 camera appears to be identical to the unit in the iPhone 7.

Apple says it has completely rebuilt the sensor this time around, adding in ‘deeper pixels’ and a brand-new image signal processor. This may sound like marketing fluff, but in reality I’ve been more impressed with the pictures on the iPhone 8 than any iPhone in recent years.
The now permanently on auto-HDR mode – it can be switched off, but you’ll have to dig in Settings to do so – does a fantastic job of levelling out exposure. This means photos taken on the iPhone 8 won’t be overblown in the lighter portions, instead displaying much better balance. Auto-HDR is particularly helpful for landscape photos, where the sky can tend to lose all colour if you’re not careful, but it removes the risk of pictures looking unnatural and artificial by using it only sparingly.
At a time when the majority of flagship phones come with excellent cameras, it’s becoming much harder to determine which is best. Some of the time I prefer the results from the iPhone 8; at other times it’s pictures taken with the Samsung Galaxy S8or the Google Pixel. More often than not, I’ve come to favour the iPhone 8 for daylight shots; the way it differentiates between shadows and picks up subtle details in skins tones is something the S8 lacks. However, I still feel the Pixel does a better job with tougher, low-light shots.
When the light isn’t great, the iPhone 8’s focusing slows down significantly, with noise more common than some of the competition. Again, it’s a close race and it is possible to achieve some excellent shots even when it’s dark – but the results are pretty similar to those of the iPhone 7. I’d have liked to see Apple widen the aperture, which would have enabled more light to reach the sensor, resulting in brighter shots.
Where the iPhone 8 seems to impress the most is in textures. The way it captures the tiny scrapes in metal, dust on bricks and individual hairs on a head is fantastic. The iPhone 8 is also the device that’s best at taking pics with the flash on – an odd claim to make, maybe, but the softer, more diffused flash used here means it doesn’t completely blow out faces.
There’s been a lot of improvement on the video side of things, too – an area that’s often overlooked in phones. Unless you’re LG, with its V30, that is. The iPhone 8 can shoot 4K video at 24fps, 30fps and 60fps – making it the only phone to do so – and the resulting footage is fantastic.
Being able to shoot more frames per second gives footage a smoother look and is especially great for shooting motion, such as sports. Dialling it back to 24fps achieves a more cinematic feel. Note that you do notice the lack of OIS on the secondary camera when recording at 60fps. I also still believe that the Google Pixel does a better job of stabilising video overall than the iPhone 8.
Another first, for a phone at least, is slow-motion recording at 240fps in 1080p. Previously, this was available at 720p, but now it looks sharper and there’s more scope for zooming.
The front-facing camera is still 8 megapixels and it’s actually one of the better ones around. Skin tones look natural and there’s plenty of detail. It’s biggest downside is the lens’ narrow field of view, meaning you have hold the phone much further away to cram in lots of faces.
iPhone 8 – Battery life
When Trusted Reviews reviewed the iPhone 7 last year, Evan Kypreos found the poor battery life the single biggest reason to avoid the device. He claimed it had ‘the shortest battery life he’d experienced on any mainstream phone over the past couple of years’ – and that he was often reaching for a Lightning cable before the end of the day.
Considering the iPhone 8 has a smaller battery than the iPhone 7, and the fact that Apple made no claims about stamina during its unveiling, I was hugely sceptical about the iPhone 8’s battery life.

AirPower
My usual request for battery life is that it lasts the whole day. 2017 hasn’t been a particularly good year for phones offering great battery life – aside from the ones that have completely sold themselves on it – and even devices that I’d have thought would have gone for more than a day, such as the Samsung Galaxy Note 8, have failed to deliver on those expectations.
The iPhone 8 manages to last the day, although I say that with some caveats. I’ve felt as though I’ve had to ‘babysit’ the battery to a greater extent than I have with the iPhone 8 Plus. I switch off Bluetooth and Wi-Fi when I’m not using it and I lower the brightness far more; my eyes are constantly drawn to the dropping percentage indicator. It isn’t the battery life that will impress folk, but it also isn’t quite as frustrating as last year.
I ran a few basic side-by-sides tests with an iPhone 7 and iPhone 6S, and the iPhone 8 came out on top in all them. An hour of Netflix (Wi-Fi, 60% brightness, sound 50%) consumed 11% on the 8, 14% on the 7 and 13% on the 6S. Thirty minutes of Real Racing 3 ate through 12% on the 8, 16% on the 7 and 15% on the 6S. Obviously, batteries get worse over time and the 6S used here has been constantly worn down over more than 12 months, so that will affect its score.
The iPhone 8 still charges via a Lightning cable and you get the same 5W plug in the box. Unlike pretty much every Android out there, there’s no out-of-the-box fast-charging here. Apple claims the iPhone 8 supports faster charging, but it’s still one of slower phones to charge.
iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus
The included wall plug will get you from 0-80% in about 60 minutes, and you can shave 10 minutes off that by using an iPad charger. I also tried charging it with the USB-C plug that comes with the MacBook Pro plus a USB-C-to-Lightning cable – this got me from 0-80% in 45 minutes. It then took a further 35 minutes to reach 100%. Considering this phone retails for £/$699, it seems terribly stingy that there isn’t a ‘fast’ charger included.
If you want to ditch the Lightning cable completely, the iPhone 8 supports Qi wireless charging through the Qi standard. This is the same method that Android phones have used to charge wirelessly for years. Wireless charging is about as slow as using the included wall plug, but there will be an update later in the year that will unlock slightly faster 7.5W wireless charging in supported pads.
Related: What is AirPower?
I’ve been using Belkin’s Boost Up Wireless Charging Pad, but Apple is also pushing one from Mophie. There are cheaper ones available on Amazon – the Anker one gets good reviews – plus lots of IKEA lamps now have Qi charging built in. Apple’s very own charging pad, named AirPower, will be able to charge two phones simultaneously, alongside an Apple Watch and AirPods. However, it isn’t out until 2018 and I can’t imagine it will come cheap.
Should I buy the iPhone 8?
The iPhone 8 is a good phone – very good in certain respects – but it also feels like it was the forgotten child. The iPhone X, with its edge-to-edge OLED display, shouldn’t be an exclusive £1000 device; it should be the phone that Apple puts head-to-head against the Samsung Galaxy S8 and the upcoming Google Pixel 2.
Can I honestly recommend you plump for an iPhone 8 over a Galaxy S8? Not really, no. Samsung’s effort feels like a step forward; the iPhone’s old design just can’t compete.
Where I can recommend the iPhone 8 is if you’re thoroughly tied into Apple’s services, rock an Apple Watch and you’re currently on an iPhone 6S or older. In this instance you’ll see a huge upgrade in pretty much every area.
The iPhone 8 is also great if you’re after a safe bet, and aren’t ready for the changes that will come with the iPhone X. The iPhone 8 has that familiar Touch ID home button, meaning you won’t have to go all in with Face ID just yet.
Verdict
Great camera, lots of power and a nice screen – only a shame that it’s all packed inside an ageing shell.
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