Study: iPhone 17 outperforms 16 in Wi-Fi, with Pixel 10 leading by this margin.

A recent study revealed that the iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone 17 Pro Max, and iPhone Air achieve significantly higher average Wi-Fi connection speeds compared to the iPhone 16 series. This is thanks to Apple's own N1 chip, which is a major improvement.

From PhoneIslam: Two smartphones, one black and the other orange, appear alongside a metal plate bearing the "Apple N1" logo on a gradient orange background, suggesting possible features for the iPhone 16 or iPhone 17 with improved Wi-Fi speeds.


The study was conducted by Ookla, the company behind the popular Speedtest website and app for measuring internet speed. The results were based on real data collected from users worldwide between September 19 and October 29 of this year.

Ookla explained that the N1 chip represents a significant upgrade, providing download and upload speeds up to 40% higher compared to the Broadcom chip used in the iPhone 16 series. The study also showed that speeds were better in all the countries analyzed, such as the United States, France, Italy, the United Kingdom, India, Japan, and others.

The study indicated that the N1 chip significantly improves underlying Wi-Fi performance, rather than focusing solely on maximum speeds. According to the findings, this chip provides more stable performance under challenging Wi-Fi connectivity conditions, such as congested networks or weak signals.

From PhoneIslam: A bar graph comparing the average wireless internet speeds of the iPhone 16 and iPhone 17 in seven countries, showing higher speeds for the iPhone 17, particularly in France and the United States.

In the United States specifically, the iPhone 17 and iPhone Air series achieved an average download speed of 409 Mbps, compared to 350 Mbps for the iPhone 16 series. This represents an increase of approximately 17%. You can visit [website/link]. Ookla website For more diagrams and details.


The truth about the "technical limitations" of the N1 chip

From Phone Islam website: A black square bearing the Apple logo and the text "N1" in white, with a black square in the middle on a black background, represents the Apple N1 chip.

We learned previously about a technical “limitation” in the N1 chip, which is that it only supports a bandwidth of up to 160 MHz for Wi-Fi 7 networks, while the standard can reach up to 320 MHz.

Theoretically, this means the device cannot reach the “maximum possible speed” of Wi-Fi 7. But does this really matter?

An Ookla study confirmed that this limitation doesn't actually affect real-world usage for most people. The speeds the chip currently provides far exceed what current apps and services require, so there's no need to worry about this technical aspect.


iPhone vs. Pixel

From PhoneIslam: A bar graph showing the average Wi-Fi download speeds for different phone families; the Pixel 10 Pro leads with a speed of 335.33 Mbps, followed by the iPhone 15 Pro with a speed of 329.56 Mbps, with download speeds among the devices ranked.

Globally, the iPhone 17 and iPhone Air series outperformed the iPhone 16 series in average Wi-Fi download speeds. To ensure greater transparency, the study compared the iPhone 17 with one of its main Android competitors, the Google Pixel 10 Pro. Surprisingly, the Google phone edged out the iPhone 17 by a very narrow margin in global speeds, achieving download speeds of 335 Mbps compared to the iPhone 17's 329 Mbps.

Although Google is ahead by a hair's breadth, the difference is almost negligible, placing the iPhone 17 among the world's fastest phones in terms of Wi-Fi connectivity.

This study proves that the N1 chip is a genuine improvement, not a step backward or just a name. If you're considering buying either the iPhone 17 or iPhone Air models, you can rest assured that Wi-Fi performance won't be a concern at all.

Do you own any iPhone 17 phones? And how is your Wi-Fi network? Let us know in the comments.

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Mohammed Jassim

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