POCO has spent years living as one of the “flagship killer” brands, which usually translates to top-tier speed paired with a few very obvious cost cuts. In short, it delivers high bang to buck ratio, particularly in the F series. The POCO F8 Ultra feels like the moment that formula changes. This is not a phone that exists purely to undercut Samsung or Apple on price. It is built to win on a few specific experiences, and it does so with surprising confidence.
The headline is simple: the F8 Ultra leans hard into media, endurance, and “daily driver” polish. The aluminum frame, IP68 sealing, silicon-carbon battery, and Bose-tuned audio are not filler specs. They reshape what a POCO phone feels like to own.
Setup and First-run Experience
The out-of-box experience varies by region. Some markets include a high-wattage charger in the box, while others, like the review sample we received, ship without one. This ultimately matters because the included fast-charging ecosystem is part of the phone’s identity. Without the right charger, the F8 Ultra still charges quickly, but it may not deliver the “zero to full during a coffee run” experience one might anticipate.

Initial setup is straightforward, with two things worth calling out:
- The ultrasonic fingerprint sensor setup is quick and forgiving, and it tends to work better than optical sensors when fingers are damp or slightly dirty.
- HyperOS puts audio forward early. That is intentional. This phone wants its speakers to be a core selling point, not a footnote. More on that in a moment.
Design and Build Quality
The F8 Ultra is a large phone that feels more premium flagship than performance bargain. The aluminum chassis is a meaningful upgrade over the plastic-era POCO devices, and the IP68 rating removes one of the biggest long-term ownership anxieties in this category.
From what I have gathered, the Denim Blue finish seems to be the more interesting option. It looks like fabric from a distance, but it behaves like a durable composite surface in hand. Reportedly, the texture improves grip and resists fingerprints better than most smooth glass backs. The black option, which is what we received, is more conventional, cleaner, and slightly slimmer.
Don’t get me wrong, I like it quite a bit, but there’s nothing visually here that asks for your attention. That said, most phones look the same once you tuck them into a case.

The camera island is huge, but it is not just a style flex. The extra internal volume supports the audio hardware, and that design decision makes sense once the speakers are heard.
Ergonomically, this is still a two-handed phone for most people. The weight is manageable for the class, but the size is the real commitment. Anyone already fatigued by big slabs should treat the Ultra name as literal.
Display
The F8 Ultra’s display hits the sweet spot POCO tends to like: sharp, bright, and smooth, without chasing spec-sheet bragging rights that hurt battery life. The 1.5K resolution looks crisp at normal viewing distance and helps keep power draw in check.

Brightness is a strength. Outdoor legibility is excellent, and HDR content has the punch people expect from a modern flagship-tier OLED. Dolby Vision and HDR support help it behave like a proper streaming screen, not just a bright panel.
The notable compromise, if you’re looking for one, is the backplane. This is not an LTPO panel, so it cannot drop refresh rate as low as the most power-efficient flagships when content is static. In practice, the battery capacity masks that decision. It is still a compromise, just one that is easier to live with than it sounds.
For people sensitive to flicker, POCO’s approach to dimming is one of the better implementations in this bracket. The phone is generally comfortable at low brightness, and the eye-protection certifications are not just decorative checkmarks.
Audio and Speakers: Bose Partnership That Actually Matters
Most “Sound by” partnerships are software seasoning, and many of them are hardly all that noticeable in the end. For nearly two decades we’ve seen various phone makers take a crack at something that is supposed to be an incredible sound. In the end they often tend to sound like slightly better versions of listening to music on a phone.
The F8 Ultra is different because the hardware is different. This is a genuine multi-driver approach with a dedicated low-frequency component inside the chassis.
The practical effect is simple: it sounds fuller. Dialogue stays clear, music carries more body, and games have more impact. It still cannot replace a dedicated speaker, but it reduces the urge to reach for one around the house. Coming from someone who turns his nose up whenever someone starts playing music on a phone in a group setting, that is a real win.

It is also one of the few phone speaker systems that stays enjoyable at moderate volumes instead of sounding thin unless it is cranked. For video-heavy users, this is a real quality-of-life upgrade.
Performance and Thermals
The Snapdragon platform in the F8 Ultra delivers the kind of speed people expect at the top end of Android. Day-to-day use is effortless. Heavy multitasking feels natural, and demanding games run smoothly without needing constant compromise.
Thermals are managed aggressively. Under sustained stress, the phone will throttle to keep surface temperatures comfortable. In benchmark charts, that can look like a negative. In real use, it is usually the opposite. The phone prioritizes keeping performance consistent instead of chasing maximum clocks for a short burst and then cooking itself.
Gaming performance is strong, particularly in titles that benefit from high refresh-rate smoothness. The extra graphics and display processing also help maintain perceived fluidity without pushing the main GPU to its limits constantly.
Battery Life and Charging
This is the F8 Ultra’s other headline feature. The silicon-carbon battery chemistry enables a very large capacity without turning the phone into a brick. The result is endurance that feels effortless.
In mixed use, the F8 Ultra is the kind of phone that makes people stop thinking about battery percentage. It is built for long days, heavy media, navigation, gaming, and a lot of screen time. It’s always refreshing when you don’t have to look at numbers or do quick math to figure out if you’ll make it through the rest of your busy day or until you find a charger. Speaking of which…

Charging is also a major part of the experience. Wired fast charging is quick enough to treat charging as a short stop rather than an overnight plan. Wireless charging is present here too, which matters for people who have already built their routines around pads and stands.
Reverse charging support is a nice bonus, especially for topping up earbuds or rescuing another phone in a pinch.
Cameras: Strong Priorities, a Couple Deliberate Trade-offs
The F8 Ultra’s camera strategy is best boiled down to “main camera first, zoom that matters, ultra-wide that is good but not perfect.” In other words, what we’ve come to expect in most devices.
Main camera: The primary sensor is the star. It captures strong detail, handles dynamic range well, and produces attractive photos without feeling overprocessed. POCO’s color approach tends to be slightly bolder than ultra-neutral phones, which many people prefer for quick sharing.
Periscope zoom: The addition of a real periscope lens changes the phone’s versatility. The 5X optical zoom is useful in everyday life, not just for moon shots. Portraits, candid photos, architectural details, and travel shots benefit immediately. Low light is still harder at this focal length, but it is meaningfully better than digital cropping.

Ultra-wide: This is where the Ultra still shows some practical compromise. The lack of autofocus on the ultra-wide limits macro-style versatility and reduces flexibility in closer shots. For wide landscapes and casual group photos, it is still very usable, but it does not have the same “do everything” polish as the main camera.
Video: The F8 Ultra is capable, especially on the main camera. Lens switching can feel less seamless than on some pricier flagships, with shifts in color tuning and exposure behavior. It is not a deal breaker, but it keeps the phone from being a top-tier mobile videography pick.
Software and Long-term Ownership
The POCO F8 Ultra runs HyperOS on top of Android 16, and the experience is fast, flexible, and unmistakably POCO. This is not a minimalist take on Android, but it is lighter and more refined than older MIUI builds, especially on high-end hardware like this.
Day-to-day performance is a strong point. Apps launch quickly, multitasking is aggressive without feeling sloppy, and animations stay smooth even when jumping between heavy workloads. HyperOS works well with Qualcomm’s latest silicon, keeping the phones responsive without draining the battery unnecessarily.
Visually, HyperOS leans toward a highly customized look. The split notification and control center remains, and there are extensive options for themes, icons, lock screens, and always-on display styles. Users who enjoy tuning their phone will find plenty to adjust. Those who prefer a clean, hands-off setup may find the default presentation a bit busy. Moreover, they’ll want to spend a bit of time customizing things in the first days.




AI features are present, but mostly practical. Photo cleanup tools, real-time translation, and contextual search functions work well enough to be useful rather than gimmicky. They are integrated cleanly and do not get in the way if ignored.
The biggest drawback is still bloatware. Some preinstalled apps and system recommendations appear during setup, though most can be removed or disabled in a few minutes. Once cleaned up, the software feels significantly more premium and stays out of the way. Again, the first day or two with the phone should get users off and running with things where they want and how they want them.
Long-term support is solid. POCO now promises four major Android updates and six years of security patches, which makes both phones safer long-term buys than earlier generations.
The short version: HyperOS is fast, customizable, and capable. It takes a little setup to reach its best form, but once there, it complements the F8 series well and rarely becomes a distraction.

Awarded to products with an average rating of 3.75 stars or higher, the AndroidGuys Smart Pick recognizes a balance of quality, performance, and value.
Products with this distinction deserve to be on your short list of purchase candidates.
Value and Who the F8 Ultra is Really For
The F8 Ultra makes sense for people who want flagship-grade speed and screen quality, but care just as much about battery endurance and speaker quality as they do about camera prestige.
It is a strong fit for:
- heavy media consumers who watch a lot of video and want speakers that do not feel like an afterthought
- gamers who want consistent performance and a big screen
- power users who hate managing battery anxiety
- anyone who wants premium build and water resistance without paying top-shelf flagship prices
It is less ideal for:
- users who want compact phones
- people who prioritize the most refined ultra-wide camera experience
- buyers who want the cleanest possible software out of the box
Final Verdict

The POCO F8 Ultra is one of the clearest examples of POCO growing up without losing the original mission. It still delivers the specs-for-the-money appeal, but it now pairs that with material quality, water resistance, and a speaker system that feels legitimately special.
The compromises are visible, but they are chosen with intent. The F8 Ultra is built around battery, performance stability, and media enjoyment, and it largely nails all three. For the right buyer, it feels less like a bargain flagship and more like a flagship that happens to be a bargain. And that bargain starts as low as $729 for the 12GB/256GB model. Opt for more storage and memory at $800 and you’ll get 16GB/512GB for the money.
Also Available: POCO F8 Pro as an Alternative
The POCO F8 Pro makes more sense than the name implies. It is not a worse Ultra or even a “lesser-than” experience. Its own animal, it is a version of the F8 built for someone who wants the same core priorities, but in a more manageable package and at a lower cost.
The F8 Pro keeps the performance-first identity and the long-lasting battery approach, and it tends to feel just as fast in normal use. Where it pulls back is on convenience and imaging versatility.
Offered in Black and Titanium options, there’s a third Blue that is more of a subtle “baby” blue that looks like a future Pixel color. That is to say I love it.
POCO F8 Ultra vs. POCO F8 Pro — Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | POCO F8 Ultra | POCO F8 Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Display size | 6.9-inch AMOLED | 6.59-inch AMOLED |
| Resolution | 1.5K (2608 × 1200) | 1.5K (2510 × 1156) |
| Refresh rate | 120Hz (LTPS) | 120Hz (LTPS) |
| Peak brightness | Up to 3500 nits | Up to 3500 nits |
| Processor | Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 | Snapdragon 8 Elite |
| RAM | 12GB / 16GB LPDDR5X | 12GB LPDDR5X |
| Storage | 256GB / 512GB UFS 4.1 | 256GB / 512GB UFS 4.1 |
| Main camera | 50MP with OIS (larger sensor) | 50MP with OIS |
| Telephoto camera | 50MP periscope, 5× optical zoom with OIS | 50MP, 2.5× optical zoom, no OIS |
| Ultra-wide camera | 50MP (fixed focus) | 8MP |
| Front camera | 32MP | 20MP |
| Video | Up to 8K at 30fps, 4K at 60fps | Up to 8K at 30fps, 4K at 60fps |
| Battery capacity | 6500mAh (silicon-carbon) | 6210mAh (silicon-carbon) |
| Wired charging | 100W | 100W |
| Wireless charging | 50W | Not supported |
| Reverse charging | 22.5W wired | Not supported |
| Audio | Bose-tuned 2.1 speakers with dedicated low-frequency driver | Bose-tuned stereo speakers |
| USB connectivity | USB-C (USB 3.2 Gen 2) | USB-C (USB 2.0) |
| Biometrics | Ultrasonic in-display fingerprint sensor | Ultrasonic in-display fingerprint sensor |
| Water resistance | IP68 | IP68 |
| Operating system | HyperOS (Android 16) | HyperOS (Android 16) |
| Weight | Approximately 218–220 grams | Approximately 199 grams |




Key Differences that Matter in Real Life
Why someone would pick the F8 Pro instead
- Easier size and weight for daily handling
- Similar day-to-day speed and gaming capability
- Strong battery life that still lands near the top of the category
- Typically a much better value for buyers who do not care about wireless charging or periscope zoom
What someone gives up compared to the F8 Ultra
- No wireless charging convenience
- Weaker overall camera versatility, especially zoom stabilization and ultra-wide quality
- Less impressive speaker experience since the Pro lacks the Ultra’s fuller hardware audio approach
- Slower USB data connectivity, which matters for people who move large video files by cable
Which One is for Who?
- Choose the F8 Ultra if battery life, speakers, and a more complete camera toolbox are the point, and a big phone is not a deal breaker.
- Choose the F8 Pro if the goal is flagship-tier performance and long battery life in a more practical size, and the buyer is fine skipping wireless charging and some camera polish.
In other words, the Ultra is ultimately the better do-everything POCO, while the Pro is still the smarter pick for buyers who want the speed and stamina, but not the giant phone lifestyle. Pricing for the Pro comes in around $529 for the 12GB/256GB model.
