Apple’s iPhone 17 Lineup Might Support The Latest Qi 2.2 Wireless Standard, Bringing In 50W Of Charging, With New MagSafe Models Pictured In The Latest Leak

A few decisions might make future customers disgruntled about the iPhone 17 series, particularly the base model that will seemingly stick with the older A18 chipset and 8GB RAM. Fortunately, in return, Apple may give the entire lineup a major wireless charging upgrade, assuming the latest leak is true. Two MagSafe chargers have been pictured, with both of them supporting the newer Qi 2.2 standard, bringing some improvements over the older Qi 2.1. Assuming the iPhone 17 models support the aforementioned accessories, they could be topped up wirelessly by up to 50W, negating the need to plug them in using a wire.
MagSafe wireless chargers, seemingly supporting the Qi 2.2 standard for the iPhone 17, bear an older design with the circular puck, along with a white braided cable
The leak was covered by 91mobiles, with MacRumors reporting that the MagSafe wireless charger models A3503 and A3502 that were spotted in Taiwan’s regulatory database support the newer Qi 2.2 standard. These accessories do not have a strikingly different appearance from the previous-generation models, and buyers could easily be fooled into thinking that they are picking up an older version. However, the most notable upgrade arriving to these chargers is up to 50W wireless charging.
The older Qi 2 standard could only deliver a measly 15W, with iPhone 16 models supporting upgraded MagSafe wireless charging up to 30W. The Wireless Power Consortium (WPC) has introduced the Qi 2.1 standard, but no official Apple devices support it. In addition to delivering a higher wattage, the Qi 2.2 standard offers better magnetic alignment and charging efficiency, not to mention being backward-compatible with older Qi chargers.
It is not surprising that Apple has yet to announce these MagSafe wireless chargers, as it would ruin the surprise that could be accompanied by the iPhone 17 launch later this year. However, you should know that just because the Qi 2.2 standard tops out at 50W does not mean that Apple will offer the full wattage support. We should learn more about these accessories in the near future, so stay tuned for more updates.