South Korea's two major display makers, Samsung Display and LG Display (034220.KS), began mass production of OLED panels for Apple's entire second-half 2026 device lineup in June, securing a combined order that effectively shuts China's BOE Technology out of the premium segment for the first time in three years.
The shift consolidates what analysts estimate at more than 228 million panel units under Korean supply contracts — a milestone that directly lifts both companies' revenue visibility heading into the crucial back-to-school and holiday quarters.
Product-by-Product Breakdown
iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max — Both Samsung Display and LG Display are jointly supplying OLED panels featuring next-generation LTPO+ technology. Samsung Display is allocated the larger share, with LG Display handling the remainder. BOE, which supplied panels for the iPhone 17 Pro tier, was dropped from the Pro lineup after failing to meet Apple's LTPO+ quality and yield benchmarks at its Mianyang B11 facility.
Foldable iPhone — Samsung Display holds a three-year exclusive supply deal covering Apple's first foldable handset. The initial order is estimated at 6 to 8 million units. Panel production began in June, targeting a late-2026 launch.
MacBook Pro (OLED) — Samsung Display began ramping the world's first 8.6th-generation OLED production line in May exclusively for Apple's debut OLED MacBook Pro. The company is expected to ship approximately 2 million displays by year-end, with device availability targeted for Q4 2026.
iPad Mini — Samsung Display is the sole panel supplier for the latest iPad Mini.
Apple Watch Series 12 — LG Display is providing all OLED displays for Apple's flagship smartwatch refresh.
BOE Loses Ground at the Premium Tier
BOE retains roughly 35 million Apple panel allocations in 2026, but these are concentrated in legacy or entry-level models — iPhone 14, 16e, 17e, and older iterations of the standard lineup. The Chinese manufacturer's exclusion from the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max marks a significant reversal; it had broken into iPhone Pro supply in prior cycles as an alternative to reduce Apple's dependence on Korean vendors.
Industry analysts trace BOE's setback to yield problems that emerged at its Mianyang production hub in late 2025, compounded by its inability to qualify LTPO+ panels — the variable refresh-rate technology Apple requires for its high-end tiers.
Volume and Revenue Context
UBI Research projects Samsung Display will ship approximately 146 million Apple OLED panels in 2026, with LG Display contributing 82.24 million units. Samsung Display's U.S. segment revenue — the primary channel for Apple proceeds — accounts for 45.6% of total. For LG Display, Apple-derived sales represent an estimated 58.4% of group revenue, making the iPhone supply relationship the single largest swing factor in quarterly results.
Apple's advance procurement volumes in early 2026 rose materially as the company sought to buffer against semiconductor and display glass price increases, lifting Samsung Display's first-half output by an estimated 10% to 15% year-over-year.
Strategic Implications
The consolidation of Apple's OLED supply in Korean hands reflects a broader industrial advantage the country has accumulated in large-area thin-film encapsulation and low-power panel engineering. Samsung Display's 8.6G IT line — co-funded in part by Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) — represents the only facility globally capable of producing the sizes required for MacBook-class OLED at commercial volumes in 2026.
For LG Display, the volume uplift arrives as the company works to reduce losses tied to its legacy LCD assets. A sustained Apple ramp through the second half could help LG Display narrow its operating deficit considerably from the KRW 1.4 trillion loss posted in FY2024.
Sources
- ETNews, "삼성D·LGD, 애플 OLED 양산 돌입…전량 韓 디스플레이 탑재," June 22, 2026
- The Elec, "Samsung Display, LG Display to Supply OLED Panels for Apple iPhone 18 Pro Models," 2026
- UBI Research, "iPhone Panel Supply Forecast 2026," 2026
- Apple Insider / MacRumors, multiple reports on foldable iPhone and MacBook OLED supply chain, April-June 2026
- OLED-Info, "Samsung to Start Mass Producing OLEDs at its 8.6-Gen IT Line by Q3 2026," 2026



