The new launches came as Apple geared for a high-profile court battle with the US government on encryption and data protection, with chief executive Tim Cook claiming that protecting privacy is an obligation for the tech giant.
The new iPhone SE will debut at $399 for US customers without a contract subsidy, a significant cut from the price of its larger iPhones.
Apple vice president Greg Joswiak said many consumers prefer smaller handsets, which accounted for 30 million iPhones sold in 2015.
"In some countries like China, for a majority of these customers it is their first iPhone."
The iPhone SE will be aimed at first-time Apple buyers and those who want to upgrade from the iPhone 5S and 5C, which have not been updated in over two years. The iPhone 6S, the lowest-cost handset in the large-screen family, starts at $649.
Also unveiled at the event was a new iPad Pro that also moves smaller -- a 9.7 inch display compared with the 12.9 inch model on the original business-geared tablet.
The smaller, new iPad starts at $599 for US customers, down from around $800 for the original.
Apple will be taking orders Thursday for the new phone and tablet, with deliveries set for March 31, in the United States, Britain, Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, New Zealand and Singapore, with more markets to come online in April.
Apple is seeking "to kickstart the upgrade cycles for both iPhones and iPads," said Jan Dawson at Jackdaw Research.
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