
OnePlus Pad 3 announced with Snapdragon 8 Elite and 12,140 mAh battery
OnePlus on Thursday (June 5, 2025) announced the OnePlus Pad 3 along with the launch of OnePlus 13s in India. However, the company did not reveal the price or availability of the OnePlus Pad 3.
OnePlus Pad 3 comes with a 13.2 inches display with a 3.4k resolution, 12-bit colour depth and pixel density of 315 PPI, and 7:5 aspect ratio. It has an all-metal unibody design.
OnePlus Pad 3 runs on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset, with either 12 GB of RAM and 256 GB of storage or 16 GB of RAM and 512 GB of storage. It operates on OxygenOS 15 based upon Android 15.
The OnePlus Pad 3 ships with a 12,140 mAh battery accompanied by an 80 W SUPERVOOC charging.
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OnePlus Pad 3 sports a 13 MP rear and an 8 MP front camera.
Pad 3 offers AI features like AI Writer and AI Summarize, Gemini and Circle to Search. It also comes with Open Canvas, featuring new upgrades like a system-level drag and drop function and split-screen working.
OnePlus Pad 3 also pairs with OnePlus Stylo 2 and a new tri-folding folio case.
OnePlus Pad 3 is likely to officially launch in India with pricing in days to come along with availability detail.

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Also read: How next-gen semiconductor chips will supercharge gadgets Now, you're obviously getting a smaller 6.32-inch 2640 x 1216-pixel AMOLED LTPO display, with a 120Hz refresh rate, Dolby Vision/HDR10+ support and a 800 nits display that's sufficiently bright but noticeably less bright than the flagship OnePlus 13. It's also a bit stubbier and less immersive as a display for gaming or watching content, but hey, you wanted a smaller phone, right? At least it's good to see the wet-finger-friendly Aqua Touch tech works on this screen, and the optical fingerprint sensor works well even as it is placed far too low on the display to be comfortable to use without adjusting your grip. Stereo speakers are loud and offer good stereo separation but get a bit tinny when loud. Under the hood Traditionally, smaller phones tend to scrimp on flagship hardware, citing thermal management issues due to the limited space available. Not on the 13s, which is powered by the same Snapdragon 8 Elite chip that powers most of today's Android flagships (not some underclocked variant) and you get 12GB of fast LPDDR5X memory and a choice of either 256GB or 512GB ( ₹ 59,999) of UFS 4.0 storage. Yet, the 13s is dealing with physics, and despite a massive 4,400mm² vapor chamber which does well to keep the chip cool and prevent throttling during games like Genshin Impact and Grid Legends, it does top out on performance quicker than the bigger 13 over longer gaming sessions. Real world performance is excellent, and there's never a situation where one found the phone even remotely lacking in performance. Like the rest of the OnePlus 13 family, the 13s runs OxygenOS 15 based on Android 15, and the aforementioned AI Plus Mind feature takes screenshots of any information you want to save, and saves it in the Mind Space app. Thereon, the app uses AI to extract information, which stays pretty much inside the same app, ready to be added to external apps when you open the Mind Space. It's a little limited in utility for now, but elsewhere you get AI transcription, translation and summarization across popular apps like YouTube, Instagram and WhatsApp, and an AI call assistant for real time call translation and summarization on phone calls. And as always, Google's Gemini features are there should you not want to dip your toes in OnePlus AI waters just yet. Battery wizardry Yet, it's the battery where OnePlus has pulled out some A-grade witchcraft. Not only has it packed in a whopping 5,850 mAh battery which is much larger than most larger flagship phones, but it's tuned for efficiency so well you regularly end up with 7 hours-plus on screen-on-time. Talk about shaming the competition—it's smaller YET manages to pack in a larger battery and lasts longer…and this is without employing the newer silicon-carbon tech batteries. And when you do run low, 80W charging gets you up and 75% running in 30 minutes, with a full charge taking a little under an hour. There's also a bypass charging feature which powers the phone directly during gaming, to lower battery strain and excess heating. No wireless charging though, likely a victim of the price point. Photo realistic It's with the camera that OnePlus has chosen a slightly unconventional approach—a dual camera system with a 50MP rear and a 50MP 2x telephoto, but no ultrawide that we see on many phones including the cheaper 13R. Given the 50MP main sensor would be perfectly capable of 2x-cropping into the image without any loss of detail, it's an odd decision to ship without an ultra-wide shooter…or to not pack in a higher zoom telephoto. Plus no optical image stabilization on the telephoto, or any macro capabilities either. The 32MP selfie camera does a bit to redeem the situation – it's the first selfie shooter with auto-focus for a OnePlus device. Images shot on the main shooter offer good details, rich colors and punchy contrast, while the telephoto matches the main camera, just a bit softer. It'll do well for social media and casual sharing, but it's when you compare it to its peers that the 13s' biggest compromise becomes evident. It can't match the 16e's consistency or the Pixel 9a's portrait mode, and then you compare it to the Xiaomi 15, which blows all other compact flagships out of the water. Verdict OnePlus has had to make some tough choices to make a compact flagship, and it has chosen well…almost. It's a solid looker that's easy to handle, the performance is top-shelf stuff, and the battery capacity and longevity are the sort of stuff others would do well to emulate. There are a few omissions linked to the less-than-flagship pricing – wireless charging, IP68 waterproofing and USB 3 speeds on the Type-C port, not to mention the odd exclusion of the ultrawide – which makes it a wee bit less feature complete than the true flagships. Just know this - this one won't stretch your pocket, in more ways than one. Also read: How to share your Kindle e-books with a reading buddy Topics You May Be Interested In