Reference · Updated July 5, 2026

iPhone & Android screen specs

The exact screen measurements we use to render device-accurate mockups — native resolution, logical points, pixel-density scale, screen corner radius and top-cutout style. Free to reference.

All 11 supported devices, portrait orientation.

DeviceResolutionLogical ptsScaleTop cutoutYear
iPhone 16 Pro1206×2622402×874Dynamic Island2024
iPhone 161179×2556393×852Dynamic Island2024
iPhone 15 Pro1179×2556393×852Dynamic Island2023
iPhone 151179×2556393×852Dynamic Island2023
iPhone 141170×2532390×844Notch2022
iPhone 131170×2532390×844Notch2021
iPhone SE (3rd gen)750×1334375×667Home button2022
Pixel 8 Pro1344×2992412×892Punch-hole2023
Pixel 81080×2400412×8702.625×Punch-hole2023
Galaxy S24 Ultra1440×3120384×8323.75×Punch-hole2024
Galaxy S241080×2340360×780Punch-hole2024

How to read this table

Building a mockup or checking whether a screenshot matches its claimed device? These are the numbers to verify — a resolution or cutout that doesn't match the device is a common fake-screenshot tell. Try the specs live in the iMessage generator.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between resolution and logical points?

Native resolution is the physical pixel count (e.g. 1206×2622). Logical points are the CSS/layout coordinate space (e.g. 402×874); multiply by the device scale (DPR) to get native pixels. Designers lay out in points; the device renders at the higher pixel count.

What is DPR / scale?

Device pixel ratio — how many physical pixels map to one logical point. An iPhone 16 Pro is 3×, so a 1-point line is 3 pixels wide. It determines how crisp assets need to be (@2x, @3x).

Why does the top cutout matter?

The Dynamic Island, notch or punch-hole changes the status-bar layout and safe area at the top of the screen — a common tell in fake screenshots that get the wrong cutout for the claimed device.