Here are all the similarities and differences between the iPad 2018 and the older iPad from 2017. All the images in the main part of this article are of the 2018 iPad.
Price and availability
The iPad 2018 starts at £319/$329 – the cheapest a regular sized 9.7in iPad has ever been. That gets you a Wi-Fi only 32GB model. It’s also available from John Lewis, Argos, Currys PC World in the UK and Best Buy and Walmart in the US. Prices for the 2018 iPad go up to £539/$559 if you want 128GB storage and a SIM slot for cellular connections. You can apply for discount if you’re in full time education or bulk buying for a school. The older 2017 iPad 32GB version was £339, but is no longer available from Apple and most resellers. You might find one on eBay, though.
Design and build
Aside from the new gold colour, the iPad 2018 is physically and visually identical to the iPad 2017. There is no difference. There’s a new colour though. Following the new hue of the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus, the iPad 2018 has a slightly different gold tone – and there’s no rose gold version. Check out the differences between these: The 2018 iPad continues the altered design of the 2017 iPad. Back in 2014 Apple released the thinner iPad Air 2, which also had a laminated screen. The 2018 and 2017 iPads don’t have laminated screens, so there is ever so slightly a, air gap between the display and the screen that you actually touch. It’s barely noticeable, but there is some flex in the screen, and means the unit itself is thicker. It’s actually a very similar design to the iPad Air 1 from 2013. Despite all this, it’s a good design. It’s the most iPad-looking iPad ever, with an iconic front-on look – bezels containing the Touch ID home button and the bottom and FaceTime camera up top. The cellular iPad 2018 is the same save for a black (or white, depending on the colour you pick) bar on the rear at the top which is the cellular receiver. The 2018 iPad is the same dimensions and weight as the 2017 model, measuring 240 x 169.5 x 7.5mm and weighing in at 469g for the Wi-Fi model and 478g for the cellular. It’s an aging design, but on a tablet this good, it doesn’t matter. 9.7in is still the sweet spot for screen size for most people, and it’s great that – relatively speaking – the iPad is increasingly affordable. And don’t worry, both the 2017 and 2018 iPads have headphone jacks.
Features and specs
The good news is that there are changes on the inside. Where the 2017 iPad used the A9 chip, the 2018 iPad has the newer A10 Fusion chip also found in the iPhone 7. Most users won’t notice the difference, but it’s a necessary upgrade as the iPad now supports Apple Pencil. This is the biggest upgrade, and a somewhat unexpected one on the entry-level iPad. At an event, Apple geared its messaging towards education and school use, in part due to the strong market competition from Chromebooks. Support for Apple Pencil, until now only compatible with iPad Pro, brings a useful feature at a cheaper price. The Pencil is still sold separately for £89/$99. This new compatibility coincides with Apple Pencil support in Apple’s free iWork apps. So Numbers and Keynote can register stylus input, while Pages has a whole new feature called Smart Annotation. You annotate documents, and then that note or annotation is anchored to the correct part of the document, even if you edit later. Here are the full specs of the 2018 iPad:
A10 Fusion chip with 64bit architecture; embedded M10 coprocessor2GB RAM32GB or 128GB storage (plus 200GB free iCloud storage offer for schools)9.7in screen (2048 x 1536 at 264ppi)8Mp rear-facing camera, f/2.4, Live Photos, no flash, no OIS, Panorama mode up to 43Mp, 1080p HD video, slo-mo video at 720p and 120 fps1.2Mp front-facing camera, Live Photos, Retina Flash, 720p HD videoBattery life up to 10 hours (video, music or web browsing via Wi-Fi) or 9 hours (web browsing over cellular)Stereo speakers802.11a/b/g/n/ac Wi-FiBluetooth 4.2Touch IDDigital compassAccelerometerBarometer240mm x 169.5mm x 7.5mm; 469g/478g
Aside from the A10 Fusion, everything else is the same as in 2017 iPad. You only get 200GB free iCloud storage through schools, so it’s a paltry 5GB for everyone else. Apple also never officially states how much RAM is in its iPads, but teardowns show that both models likely have 2GB. This is a high level collection of specs for an entry level tablet though, and the sort of product that is going to last you several years if you look after it. The new chip will also make the 2018 iPad better at the AR capabilities Apple is bringing to the classroom.
Software
The 2018 iPad ships with iOS 11 and will receive upgrades for likely at least three years, as per Apple’s software update patterns. And with basically the same hardware, the 2017 iPad is likely going to receive those same updates for nearly as long. iOS brings new productivity focusses to the way you use an iPad, with a dock at the bottom of the home screen like you’d find on an iPhone, for example. But the experience is identical whether you go for the 2018 iPad or the one from 2017. Henry is Tech Advisor’s Phones Editor, ensuring he and the team covers and reviews every smartphone worth knowing about for readers and viewers all over the world. He spends a lot of time moving between different handsets and shouting at WhatsApp to support multiple devices at once.