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Apple quietly bumped up how much it will give you for many older iPhones, iPads, Macs and Watches on its US trade-in page. No fanfare. No press release. Just higher numbers that could change the math on your next upgrade.
Why now? Device prices are drifting upward, and the used market is following suit. In short: your old hardware is holding value better than it did a year ago. That’s obvious from the recent adjustments — some modest, some notable — across almost every Apple category.
For iPhone owners, the increases are uneven but meaningful. The 15 Pro saw one of the biggest jumps, gaining about $35 in trade-in value. The iPhone 16 and several 14/15 models also moved up, typically by $10–$25. A handful of legacy models stayed flat. Tiny changes. Real impact. If you were sitting on a 15 Pro and waiting for the right moment to trade, that moment just moved a little closer.
iPads and Macs weren’t ignored. Apple raised iPad Pro offers by roughly $20 and bumped the Air and mini by mid-teens amounts. On the Mac side, Mac Studio received one of the largest uplifts — about $70 — while MacBook Air values climbed roughly $35. There are losers too: the Mac Pro and a few older iMac Pro listings nudged downward. Markets move in all directions.

Apple Watch trade-in offers saw modest tweaks. The Series 9 and Ultra 2 increased by about $10, while some older models held steady. Overall, the pattern favors newer hardware: the more recent the model, the bigger the upside in trade-in credit.
And what about Android? Apple still accepts many non-Apple phones, but the company reduced valuations on several big-name models. Samsung’s Galaxy S23 Ultra dropped roughly $30 from its prior listing. Curiously, the Galaxy S24 series is no longer listed at all; Apple now tops out acceptances at the S23 family. Pixels and OnePlus models largely held steady or slipped slightly.
Numbers tell the story but they don’t tell everything. Condition, carrier status and configuration still determine what you’ll actually receive at checkout. Apple’s online estimator gives you a headline figure for a device in good condition; the final amount can change once a technician inspects your hardware.
So, where does this leave someone thinking of upgrading? If you’re negotiating the upgrade timing, two truths matter: resale values for used devices are higher than they were recently, and Apple’s trade-in program tends to move in step with retail pricing and demand. That means now could be a better time to trade than last month — especially if you own a relatively new iPhone, iPad, or a Mac Studio.
Want to check specifics? Apple’s trade-in page lists the current maximum offers, and archival snapshots make it easy to compare against recent values. Little shifts add up. A $10 or $35 bump won’t buy you the new flagship alone, but it can close accessory gaps, cover part of a subscription, or make an upgrade more palatable.
Prices will swing again. They always do. But for a brief window, your aging phone or laptop might be worth a touch more than you expected — and that’s worth checking before you throw your old device into a drawer.
Source: gsmarena
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