There’s no escaping the fact Vertu’s Agent Q smartphone costs more than what many people spend on all their tech combined. Hell, you could almost buy five phones from our list of the best. So why spend $5,000 on one of these?
Vertu pitches the Agent Q as the world’s first AI agent phone “for entrepreneurs”, promising it’ll help you spend less time scrolling through apps and more time getting things done. There’s also the brand’s famous 24/7 concierge, which can handle requests of any nature. Luxury materials like then push some variants north of $100,000. Yes, really.
You’ll admittedly find some fairly impressive specs inside, including a triple lens camera system and Snapdragon 8 Elite processor (though not the newest one). There’s also stitching. Lots of stitching. But how does it actually stack up in the real world?
A decadent design



If the Agent Q does one thing well, it’s first impressions. You’re dropped into Vertu’s world of excess right away: the box has individual drawers that open to reveal the phone itself, a leather folio and an authenticity card. It’s enough packaging to make you feel like you’ve just purchased a top-rated mechanical watch.
This phone screams “look at me” from every angle, with Vertu really leaning into its V-shaped motif: the display edges curve into it, the bezels taper to it, the back dips along it, and even the screen-off animation glides into a V-shaped fade. It’s bizarrely cohesive. If you want your phone to look like no other, the Agent Q delivers.
Exposed screws around the stainless steel frame give an industrial aesthetic you’ll either love or hate. The frame has also been polished to a mirror sheen, which attracts fingerprints like mad.
My review unit came dressed in wine-red calfskin that even smelled authentic, stitched all the way around in an unapologetically bold style. The charging port has been relocated to the top edge for a seamless wrap. Other materials to pick from include walnut wood and even alligator leather.
It results in a hefty handset that clocks in around 262g and is thicker than most modern flagships. The “Swiss engineered” falcon wing SIM trays either side of the camera, which flip open with satisfying resistance and no tools required, are partly to blame. They could also be why there’s no official water resistance rating, though you really shouldn’t be dunking expensive leather on the regular anyway.
The screen is premium-ish




It might’ve been flagship-grade at one point, but the Agent Q’s 6.02in AMOLED display is pretty average in 2026. At 6.02in it’s no palm-stretcher, and though the 1080p resolution is serviceable for most tasks, you start to feel the pixel crunch when watching high-res content or reading small text.
While the smooth 120Hz refresh rate is nice, those bezels are… significant. The rounded corners take up a surprising amount of screen space, and look a bit dated. This isn’t the crisp, expansive panel you’d find on a premium device – more like a luxury-skinned version of what you’d find in a decent mid-range Android handset.
The dual front-facing stereo speakers could’ve been a saving grace, but they sound oddly hollow and underpowered. A lack of bass presence feels at odds with the rest of the phone’s premium aspirations. You’ll definitely want to use headphones if you care about audio.
Confusing camera claims




A 50MP main sensor, 50MP ultrawide and 64MP telephoto sound promising, but phone photographers shouldn’t get too excited about the Agent Q’s triple rear camera setup. The lead lens actually uses the same mid-tier Sony IMX906 image sensor as the Samsung Galaxy A55 and Honor 200 – phones that are 4% of the price – and the “world’s first true mechanical zoom lens” claim is a head-scratcher.
Both the main and zoom lenses have fixed focal lengths, suggesting there aren’t any moving lens elements like Sony pioneered with the Xperia 1 IV. It’s not doing anything clever with single sensor/multi-lens arrangements like the Huawei Pura 80 Ultra either. Vertu also mentions its lead lens having an f/1.59-4.0 variable aperture, but I couldn’t see any evidence of DSLR-like lens blades; these are clearly visible on other phones with this sensor/lens combo, like the Nubia Z70 Ultra. The Aperture control function in the camera app seems to mainly adjust the strength of bokeh blur in the portrait mode to dramatic levels.
Actual photo quality is passable. The main sensor captures solid images in good light, though dynamic range is a bit lacking. The ultrawide is useful but suffers from soft edges and colour inconsistency. The telephoto lens does okay at 2x or 3x zoom, but anything further turns into a blurry mess. And every photo comes with a Vertu watermark slapped in the bottom corner by default, which is the kind of decision that feels more tacky than tasteful. At least it will dynamically change to black or white depending on your photo.
You do get some fun features, like extensive film filters and dramatic portrait lighting effects, but most of it feels like style over substance. For $5000, I expect something to at least approach the iPhone, Pixel, or Galaxy in terms of camera performance – not something that gets shown up by a $200 budget handset.
Charmingly inconsistent software






The Agent Q’s interface is every bit as extra as the hardware, Vertu’s custom VIOS skin has black and gold everything – icons, notifications, menus – with liberal use of animations and glossy textures. The default clock widget looks like a Rolex dial, which admittedly is rather nice to look at.
There’s an awful lot of clutter though. The volume slider takes over the entire screen, there’s a persistent news feed on the lock screen that I couldn’t disable, and the UI generally feels a bit bloated. The settings menus are an odd hybrid of stock Android and Vertu’s own design. It all seems obsessed with themes of “vitality,” “victory,” and other vaguely motivational words that show up in folders, notifications, and concierge suggestions.
The AI concierge is Vertu’s big pitch: over 200 proactive AI agents that can handle your entire life, from booking flights and reserving tables at restaurants to giving lifestyle advice, accessed by voice with a press of the dedicated ruby key on the phone’s left side. There’s no additional subscription to pay – the concierge is a free, unlimited service that’s supposed to function as a 24/7 butler. It’s similar to the Amex concierge you get with the American Express Platinum card.
I tested it on a few fronts: asking for hotels near Westfield London ahead of a visit to see Tesla’s Optimus robot, trying to buy specific clothing items, and requesting product availability. The responses were fast, accurate-ish, and often helpful – but they never wowed me. A quick check on Booking.com or a retailer’s site often surfaced better (and cheaper) results, and the assistants couldn’t always deliver what I asked for. Each chat also appears in the same conversation thread, which can be useful for referencing previous requests, but gets easily cluttered.






Vertu says a dedicated human concierge will step in “when artificial intelligence reaches its limit”, but this happened for every single request I made during testing. Using the service to buy a T-shirt, I was asked to transfer money to a Vertu-owned bank account in Hong Kong or send funds via PayPal, along with my name and address. There’s no payment portal or order tracker – just trust. I’m not saying the agent would do anything malicious, but they certainly could. For a company built on luxury and exclusivity, the payment experience felt more “Wizard of Oz” than high-end concierge.
Still, there’s potential here. The assistant did try. He searched multiple store sites for stock, followed up with alternatives, and offered to notify me when my preferred item came back in. But this sort of service only becomes indispensable when it’s flawless. Right now, you’ll probably use it once to show off at a dinner party before defaulting back to your usual shopping routine. For what it’s worth, every time I’ve used the Amex concierge it’s been about just as useful.
On par performance




For all its eccentricities, the Agent Q is a decent performer – even if the bespoke “Snapdragon 8 Elite Supreme” stated on the Vertu website reports itself as a regular Snapdragon 8 Elite chip within Android. There’s literally zero mention of this variant anywhere else online; did AI have a hand in writing the product page too?
Qualcomm’s previous-gen silicon may not be as nippy as the newer Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, but here it loads apps instantly, plays games at smooth frame rates, and handles multitasking with ease. Being paired with 16GB of RAM and a generous 1TB of on-board storage certainly helps.
The phone also runs cool for the most part, though extended gaming sessions did cause it to heat up slightly around the metal edges. I suspect its leather coating doesn’t exactly help with cooling.
Battery life is fine rather than groundbreaking, the 5565mAh cell seeming rather tame compared to 2026 flagships that use silicon-carbon chemistry. I consistently made it through full days of moderate use – social media, navigation, messaging, a bit of camera work – but never felt confident pushing into a second day.
The 65W charging is quick enough to top you up in under an hour, but the lack of wireless charging stings at this price.
A wild mix of luxury ambition and functional weirdness


The Agent Q is, if nothing else, an experience. One wrapped in polished steel, stitched calfskin, and just enough absurdity to be memorable. But as a phone? It’s flawed. The software’s odd, the camera’s oversold, the audio underwhelms, and the concierge won’t actually change your life.
But then you don’t buy a Vertu phone because it has the latest, most powerful hardware; one finds its way into your pocket because it looks like nothing else and the idea of having a digital butler on call 24/7 appeals. And, as John Goodman so eloquently puts it in The Gambler, you have F-You amounts of money.
It’s too expensive for most and too inconsistent to be essential to the “entrepreneurs” Vertu is hoping to attract, but the Agent Q is too unique to ignore.
Vertu Agent Q technical specifications
| Screen | 6.02in, 2340×1080 AMOLED w/ 120Hz |
| CPU | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite |
| Memory | 16GB RAM |
| Cameras | 50MP, f/1.59-4.0 w/ OIS, 35mm equivalent + 50MP, f/2.0 ultrawide w/ 2.5cm macro + 64MP, f/2.6 telephoto, 70mm rear
32MP front |
| Storage | 1TB |
| Operating system | Android 15 w Vertu VIOS |
| Battery | 5565mAh w/ 65W charging |
| Dimensions | 165×75×11.5mm, 262g |
