When it comes to budget smartphones, many brands chase tiny spec bumps or add a camera you will never use. As evolved as phones have become, it gets a bit more difficult to make things interesting roughly once per year.
Infinix has taken a different route for 2025. With the Hot 60 Pro and Hot 60 Pro+, the company focuses on delivering a premium everyday experience that looks and feels far above the price.
These are two phones with the same DNA and two personalities. What they share is what makes them special. Where they differ lets you choose what matters most.
The Infinix Hot 60 Pro and Pro+ prove that premium doesn’t have to mean pricey. With sleek designs, vibrant 144 Hz displays, and battery life that outlasts the day, they deliver everyday polish that feels far above their budget class.
We’ve got both models here in the office and have spent a few weeks playing with each, comparing and contrasting them. Here’s what we’ve found as it relates to the two.

Design and Build
Both models follow a sleek, comfort-first design language that feels unexpectedly refined for the money. They are remarkably slim by any standard and both carry real ingress protection, which is not always a given at this price.
- Pro+: fiberglass or eco-leather back with an aluminum frame and a record-thin profile at just 5.95 millimeters. It feels almost impossibly sleek in hand.
- Pro: slightly thicker at 6.6 millimeters with a plastic back and frame that read more utilitarian but sturdy. The flatter front reduces accidental touches and can feel more secure to grip.
Each phone includes Gorilla Glass 7i on the front and an official IP rating. The Pro rates IP64 while the Pro+ steps to IP65. Either way, you get genuine dust protection and confidence against rain and splashes.

If you’ve been around the smartphone block for a while, you’ve seen how things have grown incrementally thinner. Still, if you think you know how either of these might feel in hand, you’d be surprised when it actually happens. It’s almost jarring when you first get your hands on the Pro+.
Display and Performance
This is the shared headline. Both phones lean hard into the screen and it shows.
- A 6.78-inch LTPS AMOLED panel with a sharp 1.5K-class resolution delivers crisp text, inky blacks, and punchy color.
- A 144 Hz refresh rate makes navigation, scrolling, and compatible games feel fluid and responsive. It also elevates the overall perception of speed and performance.
- Brightness is ample for outdoor use, with a high brightness mode that keeps things readable in sun, plus high-frequency PWM dimming for eye comfort.
Under the hood, both run the MediaTek Helio G200 with eight gigabytes of RAM and memory expansion. While neither is a gaming monster they hold their own in day-to-day duties.
Social, maps, messaging, photo editing, and casual gaming all feel smooth. The high refresh rate does a lot of heavy lifting to make everything feel fast.

Battery
Another shared strength: battery life and charge speed that punch above the price.
- A 5,160 mAh cell in each phone comfortably clears a full day, and lighter users can stretch into a second morning.
- 45 watt wired charging gets you from low to half in a bit over twenty minutes, with a full top-up in about an hour.
- Thoughtful extras show up on both: reverse wired charging for accessories and bypass charging to keep heat down while gaming.
Software
Software is often where budget phones stumble. It’s not the hardware that dates quickly any longer so much as a cluttered, laggy interface or lack of updates. This is the stuff that make a phone feel cheap six months in. The Hot 60 Pro and Pro+ manage to sidestep that trap almost entirely. XOS 15.1, layered over Android 15, feels mature, fast, and surprisingly cohesive.
Infinix’s interface has come a long way in recent generations. What used to feel like a heavy, over-designed skin now comes across as refined and functional. Animations are fluid, transitions are consistent, and most system apps share a unified design language. There’s an immediate sense that Infinix finally understands how to balance customization with restraint.
The UI is built to feel snappy, and on both models it really does. You can see Infinix taking full advantage of the 144 Hz display. Menus glide, swipes are crisp, and even subtle elements like the app drawer and notification shade have a polish that’s rare in this bracket. Icons are bold but simple, and there’s a light, modern aesthetic throughout that avoids feeling cartoonish or overdone.



Customization is a big focus, and XOS lets you tweak nearly everything: icon shapes, accent colors, grid layouts, and system themes. There’s an always-on display with several clock styles, and you can even personalize the “Active Halo” light (on supported models) to glow for notifications, charging, or music playback. It’s thoughtful, fun, and doesn’t feel tacked on. Moreover, it aligns with the user base that Infinix tends to target.
The standout addition in this version is Dynamic Bar, Infinix’s take on Apple’s Dynamic Island. It’s a small visual element around the selfie camera that expands contextually, showing charging progress, call status, timers, and app alerts. It’s subtle and genuinely useful, adding a bit of flagship flair without feeling gimmicky.
Other small but clever touches include a Smart Panel (a slide-in shortcut tray for favorite apps or tools), XClone for running two instances of the same social app, and XArena for managing games and blocking distractions. Mixing and matching, customizing things here feels tuned to how real users live on their phones rather than chasing trends.
AI Integration
Both Hot 60 models ship with Google’s Gemini assistant out of the box, but Infinix also bundles its own Folax voice assistant. It can handle offline voice commands, device control, and even interact with on-screen content, a handy alternative when you don’t want to rely on cloud-based tools.




Beyond that, Infinix’s AI suite includes live call translation, automatic meeting summaries, and quick “Circle to Search” integration, blending Google’s intelligence with Infinix’s system-level hooks.
The AI layer doesn’t feel overbearing. It’s there when you need it, and it stays out of the way otherwise. This is a rare balance for a brand still carving out its software identity. Given that, if you’re comfortable with the more barebones approach to Google and its apps or services, you might feel like there’s a bit of unneeded fluff.
Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the software story is Infinix’s commitment to three major Android version upgrades and five years of security patches. This is a pledge that’s virtually unheard of in this price class and one that means the Hot 60 Pro and Pro+ should stay current and secure well into the late 2020s. For buyers who tend to hold onto their phones for several years, this makes a huge difference in long-term value.
Everyday Feel
In day-to-day use, the Hot 60 series just feels good. It’s responsive, modern, and devoid of the small irritations that usually plague budget Android skins. Some preloaded apps are still present (Palm Store, Aha Games, etc.) but most can be easily disabled or uninstalled. Once you spend ten minutes tidying things up, what remains is a clean, capable interface that doesn’t fight you.

And because the Helio G200 keeps temperatures in check, the two phones stay consistently smooth even after long sessions of multitasking, gaming, or streaming. I suspect many users will forget they’re using a sub-$200 device.
Cameras and Audio
The approach is honest and effective. Both phones center on a single, competent 50-megapixel main camera and a 13-megapixel selfie camera. Daylight photos are sharp with natural color. Low light softens, as you would expect at this price, and video tops out at 1440p thirty frames per second. It is tuned for reliable point-and-shoot results rather than creator-grade footage.
It’s hard to ask for more from a camera at this price range, and honestly, I’ve seen pricier devices struggle to produce better pictures.
Audio is where their personalities start to split. The Pro+ includes dual stereo speakers tuned by JBL for a fuller soundstage. The Pro’s single speaker is serviceable, however, and it counters with something many still want: a headphone jack.
Connectivity: 4G by Design
Both the Hot 60 Pro and Hot 60 Pro+ are strictly 4G LTE devices. There’s no 5G modem here, and that omission is one of the clearest reasons Infinix can offer this level of hardware and design for under two hundred dollars. The choice isn’t an oversight. It’s actually more of a deliberate decision to prioritize features that impact everyday use right now, at least as it pertains to many of the brand’s key markets.
Infinix’s target regions across Asia, Africa, and parts of Europe still rely heavily on 4G infrastructure, where speeds are perfectly fine for streaming, gaming, and general browsing. By skipping 5G hardware, Infinix saves on both component cost and power consumption, allowing for a slimmer chassis, a larger battery, and better thermal performance.

The phones still cover the essentials: dual-band Wi-Fi 5, Bluetooth 5.4, GPS, NFC (region-dependent), and even an infrared blaster for controlling TVs or air conditioners. In practice, you aren’t missing much unless you live somewhere where 5G coverage is robust and noticeably faster. For most users in Infinix’s current markets, this was the right choice/compromise. It keeps the phones affordable without cutting into real-world usability.
Who These Are For
Hot 60 Pro+
The Hot 60 Pro and Pro+ exist in that sweet spot where practicality meets aspiration. They’re not meant to compete with flagship phones, nor are they stripped-down entry models built purely to hit a price point. Instead, they’re designed for people who care about the way their phone looks and feels, but who still value long battery life, reliability, and everyday convenience over benchmark scores or spec-sheet bragging rights.




The Hot 60 Pro+ is tailor-made for users who love the feeling of premium hardware but don’t want to pay flagship prices. These are people who notice the way a phone sits in the hand, who appreciate thin bezels and curved glass, and who value craftsmanship as much as performance. For this audience, the 5.95-millimeter design is less about being a technical achievement and more of a quiet statement or assumption. That is to say it’s the kind of phone you pull out and people assume costs much more than it does.
This user might be a student, a young professional, or anyone who likes a bit of tech polish in their everyday carry. They’re the ones who lean into Bluetooth audio, keep their workspace minimal, and enjoy a bit of luxury on a budget. The Pro+ is a gateway to that flagship feel without the financial sting.
Hot 60 Pro
The standard Hot 60 Pro, on the other hand, speaks directly to the pragmatist. These are people who value dependability over showmanship. They still want a great screen, long battery life, and modern performance, sure, but they also want flexibility. The 3.5mm headphone jack and dedicated microSD slot aren’t nostalgic holdovers for them. They’re everyday essentials, even in 2025.




This model appeals to parents buying a phone for a teenager, travelers who like local media storage, or anyone who wants the freedom to use wired headphones without adapters. It’s the kind of phone you can rely on day after day, delivering where it counts without feeling compromised.
Shared Audience
Both models also reflect how Infinix understands its broader audience. Budget buyers today are far more discerning than they were five years ago. They’ve seen what premium phones can do and expect more, even when they’re spending less than two hundred dollars for one. Infinix meets those expectations with design finesse, display quality, and long-term software support, historically reserved for higher tiers.
For first-time smartphone owners in emerging markets, these devices provide a real taste of premium hardware. On the other hand, for budget-conscious consumers in mature markets, they’re a reminder that value doesn’t have to mean compromise. For tech enthusiasts who enjoy trying new brands, they may come across as thoughtful engineering.
The Hot 60 Pro and Pro+ are not niche experiments. They’re well-calculated answers to two very different types of needs with one being aesthetic and the other one practical.
Key Differences


If you only remember one section, make it this.
- Ports and expandability
- Hot 60 Pro: includes a dedicated microSD slot and a 3.5 mm headphone jack.
- Hot 60 Pro+: drops both in favor of the ultra-slim build.
- Materials and feel
- Hot 60 Pro: plastic back and frame, flatter display, slightly heavier and thicker.
- Hot 60 Pro+: fiberglass or eco-leather back with aluminum frame, 3D-curved display, remarkably thin and light.
- Audio
- Hot 60 Pro: single bottom-firing speaker, wired audio flexibility via the jack.
- Hot 60 Pro+: dual stereo speakers tuned by JBL, no headphone jack.
- Protection rating
- Hot 60 Pro: IP64.
- Hot 60 Pro+: IP65.
- Weight and thickness
- Hot 60 Pro: about 170 grams and 6.6 millimeters.
- Hot 60 Pro+: about 155 grams and 5.95 millimeters.
Final Thoughts
What stands out most about the Hot 60 series is how deliberate they feel. Even with incredibly thin profiles, these aren’t phones that rely on gimmicks to get attention. They come across as products designed with a real understanding of how people actually use their devices. In other words, how they text, stream, scroll, and charge through long days.
The Hot 60 Pro and Pro+ prove that affordable doesn’t have to mean compromised. Both deliver the kind of display, endurance, and polish that used to be exclusive to midrange phones, and they do it while maintaining distinct personalities. The Pro+ is the style piece: thin, elegant, and bold enough to turn heads. The Pro is the grounded everyday tool: practical, reliable, and quietly excellent at everything it does.

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.
Neither phone feels like a stopgap or a temporary purchase. Thanks to solid performance, great screens, and a long-term software promise, they feel like devices built to stay in your pocket for years.
If you’re the type who measures value by how well something fits into your life rather than by what it costs, both of these Infinix models deserve a spot on your shortlist. The Hot 60 Pro and Pro+ don’t so much challenge what a budget phone can be but attempt to redefine them.
Infinix still isn’t an officially established brand in the United States, which is why you won’t find the Hot 60 series at major carriers or retailers. Its primary markets remain in Asia, Africa, and parts of Europe. In other words, regions where value-driven innovation has made the company one of the fastest-growing smartphone brands in the world.
Infinix’s international presence is expanding quickly, and phones like the Hot 60 Pro and Pro+ show the kind of polish and consistency that could easily translate to broader markets if and when the brand makes that leap.

