Apple is poised to reclaim the title of world's largest smartphone maker in 2025 for the first time in 14 years, driven by a powerful feedback loop that Samsung can't easily replicate: hundreds of millions of used iPhones creating new iPhone buyers.
Why it matters: This isn't just about one company overtaking another in quarterly shipments. Apple's projected return to the top spot reveals a structural shift in how smartphone ecosystems perpetuate themselves—where the secondary market becomes the primary growth engine.
By the numbers:
- 19.4% projected Apple global market share in 2025
- 10% iPhone shipment growth expected vs. 4.6% for Samsung
- 358 million secondhand iPhones sold between 2023 and mid-2025
- 3.3% overall smartphone market expansion in 2025
- $140 billion potential holiday quarter revenue for Apple
The big picture: According to Counterpoint Research projections released Tuesday, Apple Inc. will overtake Samsung Electronics Co. as the world's top smartphone manufacturer—a position Samsung has held since Apple's brief stint at number one in 2011.
What's driving it: The surge stems from strong iPhone 17 series sales in the United States and China, but the underlying force is more fundamental: the smartphone replacement cycle is reaching an inflection point as pandemic-era devices age out.
The ecosystem advantage: Counterpoint analyst Yang Wang highlighted the critical role of the secondhand market—358 million used iPhones changing hands in roughly two years represents a massive pool of first-time iOS users and upgrade candidates. Each secondhand iPhone sold creates ecosystem lock-in: App Store purchases, iCloud subscriptions, AirPods, Apple Watches, and eventually, a new iPhone purchase.
Between the lines: Samsung faces a structural disadvantage. Android's fragmented ecosystem means used Galaxy phones don't create the same gravitational pull toward new Samsung devices. A buyer of a used Galaxy S22 might upgrade to a Pixel, OnePlus, or back to iPhone. A buyer of a used iPhone 12 overwhelmingly upgrades to a newer iPhone.
What's next: Apple's market position is expected to strengthen further with upcoming product launches:
- 2026: Foldable iPhone and budget-friendly iPhone 17e
- 2027: Major iPhone design revamp
- Through 2029: Counterpoint forecasts Apple will maintain market leadership
The geopolitical tailwind: Projections are supported by improved U.S.-China trade relations and a depreciating dollar, both factors that could boost iPhone sales in key markets.
The bottom line: Apple's return to the top isn't just about making better phones than Samsung—it's about having built a self-reinforcing ecosystem where every device sold, new or used, increases the likelihood of the next purchase being an iPhone. That's a competitive moat Samsung's hardware excellence alone can't bridge.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Market projections and financial estimates are based on third-party research and are subject to change. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Readers should conduct their own research and consult with financial advisors before making investment decisions.

