Smartphones can do just about everything these days, from hosting Zoom calls to on-the-go gaming, but nothing gets quite as much attention as the camera.
With rapid advances in both sensors and software, mobile photography has come so far in the last decade that it’s hard not to be impressed. It’s no wonder that our list of the best camera phones is constantly being refreshed as manufacturers find new ways to push the boundaries of what a pocket-sized device can do.
If your current handset is starting to show its age and you’re craving a seriously good camera (or two, or three), now is a great time to upgrade. Whether you’re looking for a versatile zoom or reliable point-and-shoot, there’s a camera setup for you; you just need to know where to look.
Just don’t get hung up on megapixel counts. A great camera phone is as much about clever computational processing as it is about raw hardware. Google’s Pixel range is a perfect example of this, regularly outpacing rivals on image quality and colour accuracy despite having specs that might look more modest on paper.
It’s the software behind the lens – the way the phone handles skin tones, HDR and low-light noise – that often makes the biggest difference to the final shot.
This is why we make sure to test every camera in real-world conditions for ourselves. We take these phones out into the wild to see how they behave in typical scenarios, from daytime portraits to tricky low-light cityscapes after the sun has gone down.
By focusing on how these cameras actually perform in your hand rather than just how they look on a spec sheet, we can help you make an informed decision on which handset is truly worth your next upgrade.
If you want to see dedicated camera samples for each phone that’s featured here, you can head over to their corresponding reviews to read a more detailed breakdown of how their cameras performed in the wild.
To see which phones rank based on price, our guides to the best mid-range phones and the best cheap phones have you covered. Otherwise, take a gander at the best smartphones list to see the full gamut.
Best camera phones at a glance
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Learn more about how we test mobile phones
We review a smartphone’s camera based on our experience with it, not a manufacturer’s claims or boasts. We shoot sample images and video in varying conditions to properly test its skills and we include sample images in our review wherever possible.
If a smartphone has a specific camera setting – a night mode, for example – we’ll test it thoroughly, while always comparing it to what else is on the market.
Pros
- Exceptional camera performance across the board
- Snapdragon 8 Elite power
- Pixel-packed 6.7-inch screen
- All-day battery life and rapid charging
Cons
- Curved display can lead to mispresses
- Only four OS upgrades promised
Pros
- Great battery life for the smaller Pro
- Finally, some fun colours
- Versatile camera system with welcome upgrades to zoom and the front camera
Cons
- Not the best looking iPhone
- Apple Intelligence is still a miss
Pros
- Redesigned chassis feels good in the hand
- Oodles of power under the hood
- Excellent camera performance
- Gorgeous display with super-slim bezels
Cons
- Much of the camera hardware remains unchanged
- Battery doesn’t last as long as 2025 rivals
- New Galaxy AI features are limited
Pros
- Brilliant large display with wonderful colours and contrast
- Consistent camera performance in any condition
- Fluid and playful software
- Strong suite of AI features
Cons
- It’s a bit of a brick
- Performance lags behind rivals in gaming/benchmarking tests
- Camera results often seemed over AI processed
Pros
- Great camera performance across the board
- Top-end performance is great for gaming
- Genuinely useful productivity tools
- Outstanding battery life
Cons
- Design is a little too minimalistic
- Can take a while to charge without SuperVOOC charger
- Quick Button placement still isn’t perfect
Pros
- Epic battery life
- Grippy, lightweight design
- Camera’s telephoto macro mode is brilliant
Cons
- It’s very expensive
- No US availability
- Zoom camera results can be a bit grainy
Pros
- Highest-resolution telephoto lens around
- Plenty of power under the hood
- Top-end display experience
Cons
- AI Super Zoom leaves much to be desired
- Smaller battery than its predecessor
- Quite similar to Honor Magic 6 Pro
Pros
- Sleek, grown-up looks
- Wonderfully efficient
- Gorgeous OLED screen
Cons
- AI camera features can leave images feeling quite synthetic
- MagicOS 9 may be a divisive distro of Android
Pros
- Best battery life of any Pixel
- Clean, more understated look
- Great camera performance
- Premium AI features
Cons
- Thick screen bezels look dated
- No dedicated zoom lens
- Tensor G4 not as powerful as other flagship chips
- Slow charging
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Exceptional camera performance across the board -
Snapdragon 8 Elite power -
Pixel-packed 6.7-inch screen -
All-day battery life and rapid charging
-
Curved display can lead to mispresses -
Only four OS upgrades promised
Few phones excel as much as the top-end Xiaomi 15 Ultra when it comes to smartphone camera photography – even if it has an ultra-premium price tag to match. The phone’s focus on camera tech should be evident not only from the sheer size of the camera housing on the rear, but also from the number of cameras on offer.
The star of the show is the 50MP main camera and its massive 1-inch sensor, allowing it to capture more light and detail than the vast majority of the competition. We found it to be an absolute joy to use, capturing crisp, vibrant and well-focused shots with the tap of a button, offering more personality than those shot with the Galaxy S25 Ultra.
That’s paired with a 50MP 3x floating telephoto lens that, in addition to capturing excellent shots with a DSLR-like bokeh, can double up as a capable macro lens – though it’s the 200MP 4.3x periscope lens that’s most interesting. It boasts the largest sensor and largest resolution of any periscope lens on the market right now, delivering incredibly detailed results at way beyond the 30x mark, going up to 120x if you really need it.
That experience is rounded off by a 50MP ultrawide lens. Though not autofocus-enabled like some of the competition, that’s only really needed for macro shots – and the telephoto does an excellent job in that department. That’s paired with 8K video capture, Leica-branded filters and shooting modes and AI photo tools to boot.
It’s not just a great camera phone either; it offers the top-end Snapdragon 8 Elite, solid all-day battery life and rapid 90W charging to boot.
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Great battery life for the smaller Pro -
Finally, some fun colours -
Versatile camera system with welcome upgrades to zoom and the front camera
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Not the best looking iPhone -
Apple Intelligence is still a miss
If you’re looking for a smartphone that’ll deliver a top-notch camera experience, the iPhone 17 Pro (or its larger Pro Max sibling) is an easy recommendation to make.
Apple’s latest flagship is reliable in all conditions, captures the best video of any phone on this list, and boasts three distinct cameras for versatility, each capturing a different focal length.
The zoom skills on the Galaxy S25 Ultra still best those of the iPhone 17 Pro, offering a way better digital zoom, but the new 48MP 4x optical (up to 8x in-sensor zoom) camera helps close that gap considerably.
Compared to many of the other phones on this list, the iPhone’s shots are a little more realistic, and skin tones feel more natural. There’s a dedicated Night Mode for shooting in darker surroundings, and the effects are great, with plenty of detail retained and dark spots kept mostly free of noise.
The excellent results continue when we look at video capture. While it still doesn’t shoot video in the same 8K resolution as the S25 Ultra, the 4K capture we recorded was well-stabilised without looking fake, and packed the same great colour reproduction as the photos. The Cinematic Mode supports 4K, there’s an Action Mode for upping the stabilisation, and Apple’s audio editing features are second to none.
On top of the camera itself, you’ll also be treated to good battery life, a gorgeous display, a well-built titanium body and USB-C – a feature that allows you to plug in SSDs for higher-quality shooting.
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Redesigned chassis feels good in the hand -
Oodles of power under the hood -
Excellent camera performance -
Gorgeous display with super-slim bezels
-
Much of the camera hardware remains unchanged -
Battery doesn’t last as long as 2025 rivals -
New Galaxy AI features are limited
Samsung’s flagship smartphone has held this spot for quite a few years now, and with the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra now on the scene, that’s unlikely to change any time soon. There’s a case to be made that the S25 Ultra has the most versatile camera setup of any phone on the market, with a main 200MP lens, 10MP 3x and 50MP 5x sensors, alongside the new and improved 50MP ultrawide, but it’s in zoom photography where no other phone comes close.
When diving into 30x zoom on the 50MP 5x lens, it’s incredible to see just how much detail the S25 Ultra is able to capture. This isn’t just a great phone for trying to photograph something that’s slightly out of your way, but you also ascertain a better look at objects or subjects far off in the distance. Think of moments like trying to photograph a singer at a stadium gig or getting a specific framing on a vista found on holiday, and you’ll understand what we mean.
After those zoomed-in shots are taken, you have plenty of options to play around with your findings courtesy of Galaxy AI. Features like generative fill are available, giving you a more robust AI toolset than most phones which can make it easy to sharpen and reframe pictures before they’re shared.
It’s also worth mentioning that the S25 Ultra’s video chops have been given a boost as you can now shoot footage in LOG format, opening up compatibility with LUTS for filmmakers to get the exact cinematic style they want to achieve.
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Brilliant large display with wonderful colours and contrast -
Consistent camera performance in any condition -
Fluid and playful software -
Strong suite of AI features
-
It’s a bit of a brick -
Performance lags behind rivals in gaming/benchmarking tests -
Camera results often seemed over AI processed
Google is already known for having some of the best camera chops on the market, and that dominance only continues with the excellent Pixel 10 Pro XL. While not a major overhaul over the Pixel 9 Pro XL, this newer model doubles down on what makes Pixel phones so great by adding in a handful of new features designed to make the experience of owning a Google device more user-friendly than ever.
Starting with the camera, the Pixel 10 Pro XL retains Google’s excellent computational processing which does so much heavy lifting that it’s almost impossible to take a bad picture with this phone. Even if there’s not a lot of natural light around, the 10 Pro XL can still transform an image right in front of you so that it immediately becomes the best possible version of itself before you even enter the editing suite.
Google’s expertise in this area also extends to portrait shots which, as far as we’re concerned, are almost unparalleled. Regardless of skin tone, the 10 Pro XL is able to churn out natural looking shots that’ll probably have you updating your profile pics instantly. It’s a great experience overall, but one that’s made infinitely better by Google’s ever-growing offering of AI-infused editing features.
The big new feature on this front is ‘Conversational Editing’, wherein you can converse with Google Gemini to ask for precisely what you want to change. For example, you can ask Gemini to up the brightness, remove an object from the foreground or even edit the sky, so there’s plenty of room for experimentation here. Of course, all of this sits on top of tried and tested features like Magic Eraser and Best Take, all of which give you tons of freedom to get the exact shot you’re looking for.
The new PixelSnap feature, which is Google’s answer to Apple MagSafe, also opens up tons of possibilities when it comes to camera accessories. We’ve seen plenty of options over the years from companies like ShiftCam which manufactures camera grips for smartphones, so it isn’t too hard to imagine using a tripod that works with PixelSnap, or an attachable ring light to brighten up your videos.
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Great camera performance across the board -
Top-end performance is great for gaming -
Genuinely useful productivity tools -
Outstanding battery life
-
Design is a little too minimalistic -
Can take a while to charge without SuperVOOC charger -
Quick Button placement still isn’t perfect
On paper, Oppo dropping a lens on the Find X9 Pro compared to the X8 Pro sounds like a downgrade, but in practice, Oppo’s image processing is so well-judged that you don’t miss it.
The combination of the new 50MP main sensor, 50MP ultrawide and 200MP 3x periscope delivers some of the most consistent, natural-looking results of any flagship right now. Detail is outstanding, and colours strike that rare balance of being vibrant without tipping into cartoonish oversaturation.
That tuning holds up across lighting conditions. In daylight, shorts look crisp and true-to-life, with strong dynamic range that doesn’t scream ‘overprocessed’, while low-light images pull in plenty of detail without blowing out highlights or turning every scene into fake-looking daylight.
The ultrawide and selfie cameras stay impressively consistent with the main lens, and when you crop into the 200MP periscope for 6x and beyond, Oppo’s blend of optical data and in-sensor zoom avoids the smeary, AI-heavy look that plagues many zoom shots – until you get into extreme zoom territory, anyway.
Crucially, the Find X9 Pro backs that camera system up with proper flagship credentials elsewhere. The flat 6.78-inch AMOLED display is bright, sharp and wonderfully smooth at 120Hz, the Dimensity 9500 chipset keeps everything flying along without getting overly hot, and the huge 7500mAh battery comfortably delivers all-day life, with the potential for two days for lighter users.
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Epic battery life -
Grippy, lightweight design -
Camera’s telephoto macro mode is brilliant
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It’s very expensive -
No US availability -
Zoom camera results can be a bit grainy
It wouldn’t be a camera phone chart without an Xperia present, and the Sony Xperia 1 VI is an easy winner for professional photographers.
Rather than packing in the most pixel-packed sensor or the largest sensor around, Sony has taken a different approach with its Xperia 1 VI rear camera offering. Much like its predecessor, the main 52MP Exmor T sensor has a unique two-layer transistor within the CMOS that allows for a big improvement to low-light capabilities while still retaining a fairly slimline camera bump.
That’s flanked by a 12MP ultrawide and an upgraded 12MP telephoto lens with an impressive 5.2x optical zoom – ideal for close-ups and portrait photography. The latter also produces impressive macro photos with pro-level elements like an adjustable focus and focus overlays to help you really nail the close-up focus. It’s hands-down the best macro camera you’ll find on any smartphone right now.
Macro photography aside, our reviewer was impressed with the quality of the main lens both in well-lit and low-light environments, with decent colour and detail on offer. While previous Xperia smartphones had a bevvy of Pro-level camera and audio apps, that has been rolled (for the most part) into the main Camera app, providing all the tools you need without switching between apps. It’s certainly more user-friendly than it used to be.
Camera chops aside, the Xperia 1 VI is very much a top-end Sony smartphone with its blocky, angular design, a new shorter, squatter FHD+ display and Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 performance. It’s also pretty solid on the battery front, with our reviewer squeezing an incredible three days out of the phone with light usage.
The catch? All that tech comes at a cost, with the Xperia 1 VI starting at £1,299, making it one of the most expensive phones around right now.
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Highest-resolution telephoto lens around -
Plenty of power under the hood -
Top-end display experience
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AI Super Zoom leaves much to be desired -
Smaller battery than its predecessor -
Quite similar to Honor Magic 6 Pro
From Galaxy AI to Apple Intelligence, there’s now no shortage of AI tricks to be found on smartphones nowadays, and we anticipate that the competition is only going to become more fierce in this area over the next few years. For now however, it’s the Honor Magic 7 Pro that’s leading the pack at the point where AI and photography converge.
One of the phone’s big new features is AI Super Zoom, which can be impressive or misguided depending on how you use it. The feature is supposed to use AI to overhaul the quality of a zoomed in shot where clarity has been lost, but in actuality, the mode uses AI to create an entirely new image based on the picture you’ve taken.
By the company’s own admission, the feature is designed to be used for landscape photography and in this regard, it performs its task quite well. When testing the camera at a mountain range in Slovenia, AI Super Zoom turned a blurry shot into one that was sharp, in focus and far more picturesque. However, when shooting a collection of trees, the AI would add flowers and fauna that simply weren’t there before, taking away from the original intent of the shot. There’s definitely some promise here, but the feature’s efficacy depends entirely on how you use it.
Luckily, there are areas where the implementation of AI is far more seamless, including the Magic 7 Pro’s AI-enhanced portraits, which uses the technology to make sure that either you, or your subject, look incredible.
All of the usual AI editing features are here too, with an AI-powered eraser that can remove unwanted objects, alongside ‘AI Outpainting’ which can add generative fill around your photo to expand its borders.
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Sleek, grown-up looks -
Wonderfully efficient -
Gorgeous OLED screen
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AI camera features can leave images feeling quite synthetic -
MagicOS 9 may be a divisive distro of Android
The Honor 400 Pro impresses with its versatile triple camera system, led by a huge 200MP main sensor, a 50MP telephoto with 3x optical zoom and a 12MP ultrawide.
In good lighting, both the main and ultrawide cameras deliver detailed, natural-looking images, while the telephoto lens maintains colour and clarity for everyday and social media-worthy shots. There’s even a macro mode available for close-up detail.
The standout feature of the Honor 400 Pro has to be Honor’s exclusive collaboration with Parisian portrait studio Studio Harcourt, which began with the 200 series last year and continues here.
The phone offers three Studio Harcourt portrait effects to choose from: the striking black-and-white Harcourt Classic, the warm and inviting Harcourt Colour and the more natural Harcourt Vibrant. These modes bring a studio-quality, artistic touch to portrait photography that helps the Honor 400 Pro stand out from rivals.
AI features are prominent, providing upscaling and editing tools, though they can sometimes make images look a bit synthetic – especially at higher levels of zoom or with aggressive background blur.
Overall, the Honor 400 Pro is a strong all-rounder for photography, but especially if you value creative portrait options.
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Best battery life of any Pixel -
Clean, more understated look -
Great camera performance -
Premium AI features
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Thick screen bezels look dated -
No dedicated zoom lens -
Tensor G4 not as powerful as other flagship chips -
Slow charging
Google’s Pixel line has always impressed with its camera prowess, and the mid-range Pixel 9a continues that legacy.
This year’s model brings a fresh design that sets it apart from the flagship Pixel 9, ditching the iconic camera bar for a more understated, near-flush dual camera housing. While the look is simpler, it’s practical and comfortable in hand, and the improved IP68 water and dust resistance is a nice touch.
The main star of the show is, of course, the cameras. It features a new 48MP main camera that, despite a lower megapixel count than the 8a, offers better results with a larger sensor and wider aperture. Google’s image processing remains top-tier, producing photos with accurate colours and skin tones, even in challenging conditions.
The lack of a dedicated zoom lens is a minor letdown, especially as some rivals now offer telephoto options, but Google’s digital zoom is still among the best in its class.
Video capture maxes out at 4K@60fps, and the pleasing, natural colours seen in stills carry over to video as well.
Other key features include the use of the same Tensor G4 chipset as the Pixel 9, as well as Google’s clean, AI-infused approach to Android. It’s also a great performer in the battery department with a larger 5100mAh cell that easily lasts a full day and often well into the next.
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FAQs
Optical zoom is a camera phone feature that allows you to take images of your subject from afar without allowing the quality to suffer as you might see with digital zoom.
Having a telephoto lens on your phone lets you get very close to your subject without compromising image quality.
OIS – or optical image stabilisation – uses a gyroscope to compensate for shake, keeping your videos stable and your images crisp even in low light.
Test Data
| Xiaomi 15 Ultra | Apple iPhone 17 Pro | Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra | Google Pixel 10 Pro XL | Oppo Find X9 Pro | Sony Xperia 1 VI | Honor Magic 7 Pro | Honor 400 Pro | Google Pixel 9a | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geekbench 6 single core | 2891 | 3870 | 2886 | 2293 | 3317 | 2140 | 2981 | 2116 | 1652 |
| Geekbench 6 multi core | 8764 | 9994 | 9515 | 5856 | 9989 | 6372 | 8318 | 6519 | 3801 |
| 1 hour video playback (Netflix, HDR) | 5 % | 5 % | – | 6 % | 5 % | 5 % | 7 % | 4 % | 1 % |
| 30 minute gaming (light) | 6 % | 7 % | 7 % | 6 % | 3 % | 5 % | 6 % | 7 % | 6 % |
| Time from 0-100% charge | 91 min | 80 min | 62 min | 91 min | 78 min | 82 min | 89 min | 47 min | 108 min |
| Time from 0-50% charge | 29 Min | 21 Min | 20 Min | 31 Min | 27 Min | 29 Min | 36 Min | 17 Min | 40 Min |
| 30-min recharge (included charger) | – | – | – | 49 % | 54 % | – | – | – | – |
| 15-min recharge (included charger) | – | – | – | 28 % | 32 % | – | – | – | – |
| 30-min recharge (no charger included) | 52 % | 67 % | 70 % | – | – | 51 % | 43 % | 77 % | 40 % |
| 15-min recharge (no charger included) | 30 % | 40 % | 35 % | – | – | 25 % | 24 % | 44 % | 22 % |
| 3D Mark – Wild Life | – | 5400 | 6680 | – | 6874 | 4580 | 6574 | 4614 | 2597 |
| GFXBench – Aztec Ruins | – | 59 fps | 78 fps | 49 fps | 90 fps | 98 fps | 106 fps | 61 fps | 66 fps |
| GFXBench – Car Chase | – | 60 fps | 77 fps | 51 fps | 91 fps | 108 fps | 118 fps | 61 fps | 79 fps |
Full Specs
| Xiaomi 15 Ultra Review | Apple iPhone 17 Pro Review | Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Review | Google Pixel 10 Pro XL Review | Oppo Find X9 Pro Review | Sony Xperia 1 VI Review | Honor Magic 7 Pro Review | Honor 400 Pro Review | Google Pixel 9a Review | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK RRP | £1299 | £1099 | £1249 | – | £1099 | £1299 | £1099 | £699.99 | £499 |
| USA RRP | – | $1099 | $1299 | – | Unavailable | Unavailable | Unavailable | – | $499 |
| EU RRP | – | – | – | – | €1299 | – | €1299 | – | – |
| Manufacturer | Xiaomi | Apple | Samsung | Oppo | – | Honor | Honor | ||
| Screen Size | 6.7 inches | 6.3 inches | 6.9 inches | 6.8 inches | 6.78 inches | 6.5 inches | 6.8 inches | 6.7 inches | 6.3 inches |
| Storage Capacity | 512GB, 1TB | 256GB, 512GB, 1TB | 256GB, 512GB, 1TB | 256GB, 512GB, 1TB | 512GB | 256GB, 512GB | 512GB | 512GB | 128GB, 256GB |
| Rear Camera | 50MP + 50MP + 200MP + 50MP | 48MP + 48MP + 48MP | 200MP + 50MP + 50MP + 10MP | 50MP + 48MP + 48MP | 50MP + 200MP + 50MP | 48MP + 12MP + 12MP | 50MP + 50MP + 200MP | 200MP wide, 50MP telephoto, 12MP ultrawide | 48MP + 13MP |
| Front Camera | 32MP | 18MP | 12MP | 42MP | 50MP | 12MP | 50MP | 50MP main, 2MP depth | 13MP |
| Video Recording | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| IP rating | IP68 | IP68 | IP68 | IP68 | IP69 | IP68 | IP69 | IP68 | IP68 |
| Battery | 5410 mAh | 3998 mAh | 5000 mAh | 5200 mAh | 7500 mAh | 5000 mAh | 5270 mAh | 5300 mAh | 5100 mAh |
| Wireless charging | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Fast Charging | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | – |
| Size (Dimensions) | 75.3 x 9.4 x 161.3 MM | 71.9 x 8.8 x 150 MM | 77.6 x 8.2 x 162.8 MM | 76.6 x 8.5 x 162.8 MM | 76.5 x 8.3 x 161.3 MM | 74 x 8.2 x 162 MM | 77.1 x 8.8 x 162.7 MM | x x 8.1 MM | 73.3 x 8.9 x 154.7 MM |
| Weight | 226 G | 206 G | 218 G | 232 G | 224 G | 192 G | 223 G | 203 G | 186 G |
| ASIN | – | – | B0DPR5MYZ9 | – | – | B0D235TYYX | B0DQ5JLVJP | – | B0DSWFHTL2 |
| Operating System | HyperOS 2 (Android 15) | iOS 26 | OneUI 7 (Android 15) | Android 16 | ColorOS 16 (Android 16) | Android 14 | MagicOS 9 (Android 15) | Android 15 | Android 15 |
| Release Date | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2024 | 2024 | 2025 | 2025 |
| First Reviewed Date | 02/03/2025 | 18/12/2025 | 30/01/2025 | 27/08/2025 | 30/10/2025 | 28/06/2024 | 17/01/2025 | 21/05/2025 | 10/04/2025 |
| Resolution | 3200 x 1440 | 1206 x 2622 | 1440 x 3120 | 1344 x 2992 | 1272 x 2772 | 1080 x 2340 | 1280 x 2800 | 2800 x 1280 | 1080 x 2424 |
| HDR | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Refresh Rate | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz |
| Ports | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C, 3.5mm headphone port | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C |
| Chipset | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite | Apple A19 Pro | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy | Google Tensor G5 | MediaTek Dimensity 9500 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite | Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 | Google Tensor G4 |
| RAM | 16GB | 12GB | 12GB, 16GB | 16GB | 16GB | 12GB | 12GB | 16GB | 8GB |
| Colours | Black, White, Silver Chrome | Silver, Cosmic Orange, Deep Blue | Titanium Silver Blue, Titanium Black, Titanium White Silver, Titanium Gray | Moonstone, Jade, Porcelain, Obsidian | Silk White, Titanium Charcoal | Black, Platinum Silver, Khaki Green | Lunar Shadow Grey, Breeze Blue, Black | Grey, Black | Obsidian, Porcelain, Iris, Peony |
| Stated Power | 90 W | – | – | – | 80 W | 30 W | – | – | 23 W |
