Huawei P60: everything you need to know

In many ways, Huawei is one of the most exciting and accomplished smartphone makers on Earth. As such, its new flagships are always worth paying attention to, with the Huawei P60 series just officially breaking cover in China on March 23.

The new flagship line consists of the standard Huawei P60, along with the Huawei P60 Pro and rather than an expected Huawei P60 Ultra or Huawei P60 Pro Plus, a top-tier model called the Huawei P60 Art. There might also be a more affordable Huawei P60E or P60 Lite coming down the pipeline, but no such device has yet materialized and we haven't heard anything about its existence.

All of these flagships look set to go on sale in China starting on March 30, and with the previous model – the Huawei P50 Pro – achieving four stars in our review, they’re likely to be accomplished, too.

Below, you’ll find everything we now know about the Huawei P60 series, including the line's likely release date, price, and specs, internationally.

Cut to the chase

  • What is it? Huawei’s next flagship phone series
  • When is it out? March 23, on sale starting March 30 (in China). Global launch April 7
  • How much does it cost? From CNY¥4,488 (approximately $660 / £535 / AU$980)

Huawei P60: release date and price

Huawei P60 Rococo Pearl camera closeup with water press image

The Huawei P60 family all support IP68-certified dust and water resistance. (Image credit: Huawei)

Huawei unveiled the P60 series to the Chinese market on March 23, with the P60 and P60 Pro available to buy in the region as of March 30, while the P60 Art is on sale a little later, on April 7.

As for pricing, the standard Huawei P60 starts at CNY¥4,488 (approximately $660 / £535 / AU$980), the Huawei P60 Pro starts at CNY¥6,988 (approximately $1,025 / £830 / AU$1,525) and the baseline Huawei P60 Art costs CNY¥8,988 (approximately $1,315 / £1,070 / AU$1,960).

Huawei P60

  • 128GB = CNY¥4,488 (approximately $660 / £535 / AU$980)
  • 256GB = CNY¥4,988 (approximately $730 / £595 / AU$1,090)
  • 512GB = CNY¥5,988 (approximately $880 / £715 / AU$1,305)

Huawei P60 Pro

  • 256GB = CNY¥6,988 (approximately $1,025 / £830 / AU$1,525)
  • 512GB = CNY¥7,988 (approximately $1,170 / £950 / AU$1,745)

Huawei P60 Art

  • 512GB = CNY¥8,988 (approximately $1,315 / £1,070 / AU$1,960)
  • 1TB = CNY¥10,988 (approximately $1,610 / £1,310 / AU$2,400)

Naturally, all these directly-converted prices will likely be much lower than actual retail value elsewhere, when the P60 series does release internationally. As to when that might be, Huawei told TechRadar, “overseas versions will be announced on 9th May in Munich, Germany” which is assumed to cover all three P60 devices and the company's new Mate X3 foldable, which was revealed alongside them.

Looking back, the Huawei P50 series debuted in China in August 2021 but took five months to release in other regions; not making its international debut until January 2022 (with some areas waiting even longer, until March 2022). Thankfully, it would appear that the P60's global rollout will be a little quicker, by comparison.

It should go without saying at this point that these phones won’t land in the US and there’s a high chance that they won't make it to Australia, either. However, availability in the UK, at least for some of the models in the P60 series, seems much more likely, based on past generations.

For context, the standard Huawei P50 didn't sell in the UK but landed in China with the same ¥4,488 starting price as the P60 now has, while the Huawei P50 Pro cost £1,099.99 (around $1,345 / AU$1,930) when it did eventually launch in the UK. With that all in mind, regional pricing for the P60 series could be comparable to its internationally-available predecessors.

Huawei P60: design and display

As it turns out, the leaks and interpretative renders that we saw in the lead-up to the P60 series' reveal look to have been right on the money.

All three phones share a near-identical design, centered around a 6.67-inch 1220 x 2700 LTPO OLED display with an adaptive refresh rate which can scale from 1Hz to 120Hz (with a 300Hz touch response rate and 1440Hz PWM dimming for reduced eye fatigue) and an in-display optical fingerprint sensor.

The most notable design element across all versions of the P60 is unquestionably its camera array, with a large central element playing host to the phone's primary 48MP sensor (true across all models), while an ultrawide and periscopic telephoto sensor lie offset on the camera bump above and below. It's not a sensor arrangement we've seen before and should make the P60 series instantly recognisable, even at a distance.

Huawei P60 series colors press image

The P60 and P60 Pro come in four colors (left), while the P60 Art is available in two distinct finishes (right) (Image credit: Huawei)

As for the rest of the hardware, the IP68-certified bodywork consists of a four-way curved-edge front, covered in the same toughened KunLun glass that Huawei introduced on the Mate 50 Pro, last year (at least on the P60 Pro and Art). Meanwhile, a polished, color-matched metal frame and a glass back.

Speaking of color, the P60 and P60 Pro come in a choice of four: Rococo Pearl, violet, black and green, with the white finish being particularly eye-catching, resembling the white nacre on the inside of an oyster's shell. The P60 Art boasts a bespoke finish all its own, in either Azure Blue or Seashore Gold, with a more organic-looking camera bump to boot.

Huawei P60: camera and battery

Huawei P60 Art Azure Blue camera closeup angled back press image

The Huawei P60 Art in Azure Blue (Image credit: Huawei)

The Dual Matrix camera design of the P50 series is gone and in its place is that new discreet triple rear sensor setup. Across all three models of P60, you get the same 48MP primary RYYB-arrangement sensor (a favorite of Huawei's, that this time promises increased light sensitivity), supported by OIS (optical image stabilization). Like the Mate 50 Pro, it also boasts a physical ten-speed variable aperture, which can step up to f/4.0 and all the way down to an impressive f/1.4.

In the case of the P60, the XMAGE camera system also includes a 13MP f/2.2 ultrawide and a 12MP f/3.4 5x optical zoom periscope telephoto lens that tops out at 50x magnification. Meanwhile, the P60 Pro and P60 Art both trade up to a superior 48MP optically-stabilized 'night vision' periscope telephoto camera, with a significantly wider f/2.1 aperture that should enable far better telephoto zoomed shots in low light than practically any other phone out there, while also delivering a maximum 100x zoom range.

On the processing side, the company's XD Fusion Pro system has reportedly been gifted a new 'texture engine' to help restore lost detail in images, with examples like the facets of a light-backed crystal, the texture of a plant stems and the dark lines naturally set into materials like leather and metal.

Video capture tops out at 4K resolution, with up to 960fps Full HD slow motion recording (using AI interpolation), while a 13MP f/2.4 punch-hole front-facing camera persists across all versions of the P60 too.

Huawei P60 Pro charging press image

(Image credit: Huawei)

The P60 and P60 Pro possess 4,815mAh lithium-polymer batteries, while the P60 Art boasts a larger a more energy-dense 5,100mAh silicon-oxide power source (a technology former bedfellow Honor introduced to the mobile market first with the Chinese launch of the Honor Magic 5 Pro, claiming 12.8% higher energy density compared to lithium-based alternatives). In essence, even if all three models packed in the same capacity battery, the P60 Art's cell should still last longer thanks to the newer, more advanced technology at play.

As for charging, while all three P60s make room for 50W wireless charging, it's the P60 Pro and P60 Art that again stand apart, with their 88W wired charging speeds (Huawei claims the P60 Pro can reach 50% charge after just ten minutes), while the standard P60 still delivers unquestionably-rapid 66W wired fast charging.

Huawei P60: specs and features

What's nice about the P60 series is that there isn't a huge amount of variation between the three tiers of devices in the lineup (they all share the same dimensions, display and chipset, for example), meaning you still get some of Huawei's best work to date, even if you opt for the base Huawei P60.

All three phones run on a 4G-only variant of Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 chipset from 2022 (no sign of a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2-powered Huawei phone just yet), just like the Mate 50 Pro and implying comparable performance to devices like the 5G-toting 8 Plus Gen 1-powered Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 or the latest Realme GT 3.

Here's the full spec breakdown across models:

Interestingly, HongMeng OS 3.1 is the the software experience users in China will encounter, but rather than HarmonyOS, Huawei's global website lists the international version of the P60 line as running on EMUI 13.1 (likely based on Android 13 but without the Google Play Store).

We reported back in September last year that Huawei actually managed to beat Apple to the punch with regards to bringing satellite connectivity to the Mate 50 series and that technology persists on the P60 line too, at least in China – with the system relying on the Chinese Beidou satellite network – to support what is now two-way satellite messaging. This feature's availability internationally, however, seems unlikely.

As for the rest of what the P60 series brings to the table – including regional pricing and availability, as well as user experience differences – it looks like we'll have to wait until April 7. But even with the wait, based on what Huawei's shown us so far, there's little doubt that all three of these phones would find a place on our run of the best Huawei phones out there.

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