Hidden Two-Way Wireless Charging Components Found in iPhone 11 Pro
Credit: Bro.King / Instagram
Evidence of Bilateral Charging
There are conflicting reports on whether or not the new iPhone 11 Pro models actually have the hardware for two-way wireless charging. But iFixit’s teardown suggests that it does.
Most notably, the iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro Max appear to have two battery connectors — which is a first for any iPhone.
With a bit more digging, iFixit found that one of the connectors is a “direct line” to the wireless charging coil.
That, of course, would likely be an important mechanism for two-way, or bilateral, wireless charging. But the teardown site found some other interesting details that could be related to the unimplemented feature.

When the site connected the cable, their iPhone unit displayed a temperature warning for a moment before returning to normal.
“We suspect it lost contact with an important battery temperature sensor and shut itself down; this sounds a lot like a reverse wireless charging heat management feature to us,” iFixit wrote.
The iFixit team also found a “mysterious” new board sitting directly beneath the battery which could also be related to two-way wireless charging.
Additional Reports
It’s important to note that even if the aforementioned components are related to it, two-way wireless charging is not a feature you can currently use on the iPhone 11 Pro models.
Whether or not you’ll be able to take advantage of the feature in the future is unclear since, as we mentioned, there are competing theories on whether or not the new iPhones have the necessary hardware.
Earlier this month, tech leaker Sonny Dickson reported that the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro actually do have the hardware for two-way wireless charging but that the feature itself is software disabled. Dickson, citing “reliable sources,” also said that it’s unclear whether it was removed prior to final production.
Reliable sources are saying iPhone 11 and 11 Pro do include the hardware for bilateral charging, but that it is software disabled. Uncertain whether this was removed prior to final production run.
— Sonny Dickson (@SonnyDickson) September 13, 2019
On the other hand, iMore’s Rene Ritchie said that it is his understanding that two-way wireless charging wasn’t pulled from the new iPhones — instead, it was “never slated for production and there isn’t anything (inside the new devices) that could be enabled later).”
Update: It’s my understanding bilateral inductive charging wasn’t pulled from the iPhones 11.
It was never slated for production and there isn’t anything in there that could be enabled later.
(It would also be dumb to ship it without Watch support…) https://t.co/vXQxM4T3Yf
— Rene Ritchie (@reneritchie) September 21, 2019
In any case, well-connected Apple analyst said that bilateral wireless charging was ultimately pulled from announcement “because the charging efficiency may not match Apple’s requirements.”
All of this is to say that it’s unclear whether Apple could “turn on” the feature in a later software update, or if the iPhone 11 devices even have the required hardware for the feature.
The only thing that is clear is that Apple didn’t announce the feature — and that it was probably because it didn’t meet its stringent requirements.