iPhone 5C review

It's a cheaper iPhone, not a cheap iPhone

iPhone 5C review
Some of the glitz, less of the glam

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The iPhone 5C leaves me feeling a little puzzled. On the one hand it's a great smartphone, and being a carbon copy of the iPhone 5 in terms of performance was certainly no bad thing - although it's terribly old now and barely worth the money.

If you're looking for a cheap as chips iPhone, this MAY still be the one to go for, but you'll really have to not care about apps or anything intensive to really get on board with it.

Now that the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are a year old, the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus are here and the 5S has dropped in price, the iPhone 5C looks to be an even tougher sell. Apple's decision to only offer the 8GB version is bizarre. I'm not convinced 16GB is always enough for a modern smartphone, so 8GB definitely isn't.

Of course there's also the spate of users transitioning over from BlackBerry, Windows Phone and Android to consider, plus those entering the smartphone game for the first time.

We liked

While many hoped to see the 'budget iPhone', it's good to see the iPhone 5C not comprising on specs and bar the lack of a metal chassis it matched the iPhone 5 every step of the way - but that was a long time ago.

The inclusion of the latest iOS version is a massive boon for the iPhone range in general. The operating system was in dire need of a reboot and iOS 7 has managed to do that with aplomb, bringing a couple of handy new features such as Control Centre to the relative simplicity and solid, fluid interface Apple has offered since its inception.

iOS 9 has refined the experience further and fixed some of the major iOS gripes previously, but it doesn't run as slickly on this ageing phone any longer.

Support for a wide range of 4G bands will be music to the ears of consumers in various countries around the world including the UK where the iPhone 5 was only supported by one network.

Superfast network speeds go hand in hand with web browsing and the iPhone 5C makes mincemeat of most desktop websites, even over Wi-Fi and 3G.

We disliked

People will be split over the polycarbonate body of the iPhone 5C. To be fair to Apple it is a solid build and seems like it could take a few knocks, but it certainly lacks that premium feeling I've become accustomed to from iPhones.

When you're shelling out as much as Apple is asking for the iPhone 5C you have to ask yourself does it feel like it's worth the money you're paying? In all honesty, no - although it's more acceptable now the price is lower.

Thanks to its bright colours the iPhone 5C looks a little like a toy phone (even if it doesn't perhaps feel it in the hand) too - and there are better choices out there for a lower cost.

I did have some other niggles with the iPhone 5C, including poor contact integration and still too much dependence on the main settings menu which just feels unintuitive - but these are problems that have dogged the iPhone range for years, and many users have comfortably negotiated around in the end.

If you're set on buying an iPhone, these minor problems are surmountable - they're just less noticeable on the competition.

Verdict

In summary the iPhone 5C is a great phone, it's just a shame it's 2012's great phone wrapped in a less appealing shiny plastic body and slapped with a still-premium price tag - and in 2015, that's getting old.

Now that the iPhone 6S and the iPhone 6S Plus have arrived prompting a price drop for the iPhone 5S, there's little reason to look at the iPhone 5C. Even the lowest-ever price tag makes it about as close as Apple will get to a budget offering, but 8GB is not enough storage.

Pricing has always been less of an issue for Apple products as people are prepared to pay a premium for what are generally excellent devices, thoughtfully put together and cleverly engineered.

The iPhone 5C is still all these things, but Apple hasn't pushed the boundaries and thus there's no real incentive for consumers to make the leap - unless they are dead set on owning an iPhone but really can't stretch that extra bit to the iPhone 5S.

If you're agnostic in the market, there are plenty of other options available for the money, and even if you want an iPhone for the first time, I'd still suggest making doubly sure that this is the phone for you, and only on a pay as you go deal.

This phone is simply too old to recommend now - it's only for the very, very few that want the Apple experience but without any plans to use it for media or more than a couple of apps.

First reviewed: September 2013

John McCann
Global Managing Editor

John joined TechRadar over a decade ago as Staff Writer for Phones, and over the years has built up a vast knowledge of the tech industry. He's interviewed CEOs from some of the world's biggest tech firms, visited their HQs and has appeared on live TV and radio, including Sky News, BBC News, BBC World News, Al Jazeera, LBC and BBC Radio 4. Originally specializing in phones, tablets and wearables, John is now TechRadar's resident automotive expert, reviewing the latest and greatest EVs and PHEVs on the market. John also looks after the day-to-day running of the site.