
Honor 400 and Honor 400 Pro are now officially listed on Honor's website
The Honor 400 and Honor 400 Pro are getting official on May 22, but the company has already listed them on its website ahead of that. Thus, we get confirmation of some of their specs. Honor 400 Pro
The Honor 400 Pro has a 200 MP main camera using a 1/1.4" type sensor, a 50 MP telephoto camera with 3x optical zoom and OIS using a "customized" Sony IMX856 sensor, and a 12 MP ultrawide with 112-degree field-of-view. For selfies you're getting a 50 MP camera with f/2.0 aperture.
It comes with a screen that has 5,000-nit peak brightness, 1280x2800 resolution, 120 Hz refresh rate, 3,840 Hz PWM dimming, and 1.5-nit minimum brightness.
It's powered by the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset, paired with 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, and has a 6,000 mAh Si/C battery with support for 100W wired and 50W wireless charging. The phone is IP68 and IP69 certified for dust and water resistance, and has a 5-star SGS rating for drop and crush resistance. NFC, dual speakers, and an IR blaster are also in.
The Honor 400 Pro weighs 205g and is 8.1mm thick. It will be available in Midnight Black, Lunar Grey, and Tidal Blue. Honor 400
The Honor 400 has an identical camera setup save for the fact that it's missing the telephoto shooter. It's powered by the Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 SoC, paired with the same 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage. Its display has the same peak brightness, 1264x2736 resolution, and otherwise the same specs (size isn't mentioned though and rumors did say that will differ between the two).
The Honor 400 also has the same battery as the Pro, but it only charges via wires at 80W. The 400 is 7.3mm thick and weighs 184g, and will be offered in Midnight Black, Desert Gold, and Meteor Silver. This one only has IP66 dust and water resistance, but it gets the five-star drop resistance too.
Source 1 | Source 2 | Via

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GSM Arena
20 hours ago
- GSM Arena
Weekly poll: would you buy the Honor 400? What about the Honor 400 Pro?
Honor's new 400 and 400 Pro phones went on sale on Friday last week – did you buy one? Do you plan to? Let's talk about this new pair of phones equipped with 200MP cameras. The duo features 200MP 1/1.4' sensors with OIS in their main cameras, plus 50MP selfie cameras – both are capable of 4K video recording. There's also a 12MP ultra-wide on each with a 112° lens with autofocus, enabling macro mode. Honor 400 Pro The Honor 400 Pro stands out with a dedicated tele camera – a 50MP 1/2.0' sensor with an OIS-enabled 3x lens. The 200MP main will do well at 2x, but image quality typically drops off at 3x and 4x. That is something that we will explore in our upcoming review of the Pro. By the way, the Pro has a pill-shaped notch as it houses a 2MP depth sensor for face unlock next to the selfie camera. The 400 Pro also has more processing power with its Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, a larger 6.7' display and more versatile charging options for the battery – 100W wired and 50W wireless. The battery has 5,300mAh capacity for Europe and 6,000mAh for the rest of the world. This model also has a higher water resistance rating, IP68/IP69, for submersion and water jets. Honor 400 The Honor 400 misses out on the tele camera, so it relies on the 200MP for all zooming tasks – again, this is something to explore in its upcoming review. The vanilla model is a bit smaller with its 6.55' display and features a mid-range Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 chipset paired with 8GB of RAM (vs. 12GB on the Pro). The battery – 5,300mAh for Europe, 6,000mAh everywhere else – does 66W/80W wired-only charging. Other things to note are no Wi-Fi 7 and a lower IP65/IP66 rating. Key features: Honor 400 • Honor 400 Pro Here is the pricing info for the UK and Europe for the Honor 400 and 400 Pro: Honor 400 Honor 400 Pro 8/256GB 8/512GB 12/512GB UK £400 £450 £700 EU €500 €550 €800 Let's have a brief look at the competition – there isn't much below the flagship segment, if we're looking at phones with 200MP cameras. Really, it's only the Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 Pro and Pro+. The Pro+ model has a Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chip, so it's no match even for the vanilla 400, never mind the 400 Pro. But it does have an IP68 rating and 120W charging for its 5,110mAh battery. As for the cameras, both Pro and Pro+ have 200MP mains and 8MP ultra-wides, neither has a telephoto. Note that these two launched with Android 14 and Xiaomi has only promised 3 OS updates. Meanwhile, the Honor 400s come with Android 15 out of the box and will receive 6 OS updates. On the plus side, even the Pro+ is quite cheap at €380 for a 12/512GB model (compared to €550 for an 8/512GB Honor 400). Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 Pro 5G (Global) • Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G • Nothing Phone (3a) Pro The Nothing Phone (3a) Pro also uses the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3, but forgoes the 200MP main camera (it has a 50MP 1/1.56' module instead) in favor of a 50MP 3x telephoto. It also has an 8MP ultra-wide and a 50MP selfie camera. The 5,000mAh battery with 50W wired-only charging and IP64 rating are not great, but the €460 price undercuts the Honor 400. The Poco F7 Ultra flaunts Snapdragon 8 Elite power, giving it the upper hand in processing power. However, its cameras are more limited – 50MP main (1/1.55', OIS), 50MP 2x tele and 32MP ultra-wide. The 5,300mAh battery has 120W wired and 50W wireless charging and the phone is rated IP68. You can grab a 12/256GB model for €700. Xiaomi Poco F7 Ultra • Realme GT 7 5G • OnePlus 13T The new Realme GT 7 features the Dimensity 9400e instead. It has a 6.78' LTPO display and a 50MP 2x tele camera in addition to the 50MP main (1/1.56') and 8MP ultra-wide. Note that there is no OIS on any of the cameras. On the plus side, the phone has a massive 7,000mAh battery (yes, even in Europe) with 120W wired-only charging. It's rated IP69 and you can have a 12/256GB unit for €650. It's only available in China and coming soon to India, but the OnePlus 13T/13s has the Snapdragon 8 Elite power packed in a relatively small size with its 6.32' display. Its battery is larger than any Honor 400 variant at 6,260mAh capacity and it has 80W wired-only charging. The camera is a bit odd – 50MP main (1/1.56', OIS) and 50MP ultra-wide, but no telephoto at all and it doesn't have the benefit of a higher resolution main for zooming. That is only some of the competition that the Honor 400 series is up against. Time to vote – would you buy a 400 model? Let's vote on the Honor 400 Pro first. The extra processing power and the better image quality when zooming will certainly be felt when this phone gets in the latter half of its 6-year lifespan. But it does have a €250/£250 premium over the vanilla model and that's looking at the pricier 512GB variant. Now the Honor 400. If you can fit within 256GB storage, the price gap to the Pro opens up to €300/£300. The Pro costs nearly twice as much – is it twice as good? PS. Have a look at your local site – e.g. in the UK, the Honor 400 Pro has a £150 discount coupon (plus free TWS buds and charger), the Honor 400 gets a free storage upgrade on top of a £50 coupon. Do these deals change your outlook on the Honor 400 and 400 Pro? Honor 400 Pro 5G Honor 400 5G


GSM Arena
23-05-2025
- GSM Arena
Honor 400 in for review
Honor's new 400 series is now out, and we took our first look at the Honor 400 Pro, now it's time to check out the Honor 400. Depending on the phone style you like, this could be the phone you prefer. Whereas the Pro is curvy all around, the Honor 400 has flat glass panels on both ends and a wide, flat frame. The Honor 400 Pro next to the Honor 400 Like the Pro, the Honor 400 ships with nothing more than a SIM eject tool and a cable. This phone has 80W charging, if you buy the right charger. The Honor 400 is smaller (156.5mm vs 160.8mm) and lighter (184g vs 205g) than its counterpart. Upfront, it has a 6.55-inch 120Hz AMOLED display (compared to 6.7-inch on the Pro). It's a top panel in every aspect, with HDR and a bonkers 5,000 nits of peak brightness. The Honor 400 Another difference to the Pro is the camera system on the back - the Honor 400 lacks a telephoto unit. You do get the same two other cameras - the 200MP main camera (1/1.4" sensor, f/1.9 lens with OIS), and the 12MP ultrawide shooter (f/2.2 112°). Despite the move to a less potent Snapdragon 7 Gen 3, the Honor 400 offers Photo to Video, driven by Google's Veo 2art video generation model, running on Google Cloud's Vertex AI. It creates a 5-second video (no sound) from any photo you give it. The generating process takes about a minute. Here's a demo of Photo to Video, it really is impressive. Honor 400 5G


GSM Arena
22-05-2025
- GSM Arena
Honor 400 Pro in for review
Today, we have the new Honor 400 Pro, fresh off its announcement. In a phone world that's constantly moving towards flat and squared-off phones (thanks, Apple!), this curvy handset comes to serve those that still appreciate the improved fit inside your palm. Both the front and back panels of the Honor 400 Pro are rounded at the edges, and the corners are rounded. You either love curved phones or you hate them, we've found, even here at GSMArena opinions are split. But it's not all about the shape. Honor's numerical series has always been design-focused (similarly to Oppo's Reno series). The Honor 400 Pro is a pretty phone and feels nice in the hand - we'd even use this one case-free (gasp!). The Honor 400 Pro is also now IP68 and IP69 rated for the highest water and dust protection. The unboxing is nothing special - you get the phone in a box, plus a USB cable for €800. The phone supports potent 100W charging, but you'd need to buy Honor's pricey charger separately. The Honor 400 Pro is easy to tell apart from the vanilla Honor 400. The non-Pro has flat sides all around, one less camera on the back (no 3x zoom), and is lacking the depth sensor upfront. While on the inside, the Pro has a more potent SoC - SD 8 Gen 3 vs SD 7 Gen 3, and more RAM - 16 GB vs 8 GB. The Honor 400 Pro next to the Honor 400 Honor made some changes to the cameras compared to the 200 Pro - the main unit has a 200 MP sensor, while the zoom is slightly longer at 3x (vs 2.5x). The ultrawide is seemingly the same 12 MP f/2.2 unit, as is the 50 MP f/2.1 selfie shooter. Finally, the Honor 400 series has a neat little feature called Photo to Video, driven by Google's Veo 2art video generation model, based on Google Cloud's Vertex AI. It can create a 5-second video from a photo you give it. It takes about a minute to complete the video generation, and there's no sound, but the results are highly impressive.