- Apple Regulatory Information
The energy label is designed to provide consumers with metrics on energy efficiency, repairability, and durability Details on the methodology choices Apple made to arrive at its scores for iPhone and iPad are available in the white paper below
- Apple introduces official energy labels on iPhone and iPad in . . .
What the Energy Labels Include The new labels, prominently displayed with a small colored icon next to the device name, provide key information like overall energy efficiency, battery life per charge, repairability, impact resistance, dust and water certifications (IP rating), and the number of complete battery cycles guaranteed
- Apple Adds Energy and Battery Labels to iPhone and iPad Pages . . .
To comply with a new regulation that takes effect today, Apple has added an energy efficiency label to its iPhone and iPad pages in EU countries Apple is also required to start including a printed
- Apple Adds EU Energy Labels to iPhone, iPad Boxes and Website
The new EU energy labels now appear on product descriptions and buy pages for products like the iPhone 16, iPhone 16 Pro, 11″ iPad Air, and 11″ iPad Pro A quick tap on the energy tag symbol
- Apple Adds Energy and Battery Labels To iPhone and iPad Pages . . .
In a 44-page document (PDF) detailing its testing methodology for the labels, Apple said its current iPhone models qualified for the highest energy efficiency grade of A, but the company voluntarily downgraded these scores to a B as a cautionary measure The label also provides details about a given iPhone or iPad model's battery life per full
- iPhones and iPads now come with EU energy labels - 9to5Mac
Here are the tags for the 11″ iPad Air, the 11″ iPad Pro, the iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Pro: What the labels show, and how to find them The energy labels cover six main categories:
- Apple devices in EU getting repair scores battery life labels
Apple buyers in Europe will soon see repair scores, battery ratings, and energy labels on every new iPhone and iPad Starting June 20, 2025, the European Union will require smartphones and tablets
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