At a glance Expert's Rating Pros Excellent performance Beautiful display Superb battery life Super-fast and versatile charging Cons Display could be brighter and dimmer Limited telephoto camera performance Software support shorter than rivals Our Verdict There aren’t many good compact flagships on the market today, and the Xiaomi 17 is one of the few worth Considering. Its top-tier performance, capable Leica camera system, feature-rich software experience, sharp colourful display and outlandishly large battery make a compelling case for compact phones that few others can match. Price When Reviewed This value will show the geolocated pricing text for product undefined Best Pricing Today Best Prices Today: Xiaomi 17 Retailer Price Check Price comparison from over 24,000 stores worldwide Product Price Price comparison from Backmarket Although the base Xiaomi 17 may present itself as the most predictable and modest entry in the company’s latest flagship smartphone line, it’s still built to be among the most competitive around. Almost five months on from the series’ debut in the company’s homeland of China, Xiaomi held its annual global launch event in Barcelona as part of MWC 2026 in order to bring the Xiaomi 17 series to international audiences. While the intriguing Xiaomi 17 Pro and Xiaomi 17 Pro Max – with their ‘Dynamic Back Displays’ – sadly didn’t make the jump to international audiences, the base Xiaomi 17 – which arrives alongside the company’s latest uber-flagship, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra – still packs plenty of punch. When word of Asus’ withdrawal from the mobile market dropped back in January, it was a blow, not just because competition is good in the mobile industry and one less player takes pressure off rivals to innovate, but because Asus was known for creating great, powerful compact smartphones; a rarity today. That’s why the arrival of the base Xiaomi 17 feels all the more important; it’s a small flagship that looks like it can deliver, and that’s a hard needle to thread. So difficult, in fact, that barely any phone makers outside of Apple, Google and Samsung attempt it. So, does the Xiaomi 17 live up to its potential as a compact flagship? Or does this combination of small size and big feature set miss the mark? Design & Build Black, Ice Blue, Alpine Pink & Venture Green colourways IP68-certified + Xiaomi Guardian Structure & Xiaomi Shield Glass 3.0 191g, 8.09mm thick, 1.18mm uniform bezels To look at, the Xiaomi 17 is elegant, but unexciting. Similar to the Xiaomi 15 , which came before it (no, there was no Xiaomi 16 series of phones) With no rear display to worry about, Xiaomi has fallen back on its current go-to design layout, which, aside from four elements within the camera bump as opposed to three, looks a lot like an iPhone 15 Pro or 16 Pro. That doesn’t stop it from being a wonderfully elegant and well-made device, though. Despite an on-trend flat-backed and flat-sided form, Xiaomi says it’s paid particular attention to hand feel this generation. While the brand’s marketing team throws around terms like “Golden Arc-derived corners” and a “super-elliptical design for a smoother, more refined feel,” all I can tell you is that this phone is nice to handle. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd Yes, its inherent compact dimensions are a delight in the hand or in your pocket, compared to the swathes of 6.7-inch+ phones that dominate the market, but genuinely, no edge is too sharp and the corners are pleasant against your palm. Its small size and weight (191 grams) also mean it’s easy enough to manipulate in one hand, without much fear of dropping it. It’s also the thinnest compact Xiaomi flagship since the Xiaomi 13. I mention dropping, because that smooth anodised frame and subtly diffuse matte back glass, while great at repelling fingerprints, don’t offer heaps of grip, which is something to be aware of. Unlike previous entries, which include a functional but somewhat unattractive dark grey flexible TPU case, the 17 comes with a transparent hard shell case instead. It’s thinner and likely won’t spread impact force as effectively as the softer TPU material, but still works for repelling scrapes, includes free-moving transparent button pieces, so you’re not robbed of the phone’s inherent tactile ‘click’ and still lets you enjoy your chosen colourway. While the global version of the Xiaomi 17 arrives in four main finishes, just like the Chinese model did, last September, there’s no white option internationally, instead replaced by an elegant Venture Green, which adds cohesion with the new Starlit Green finish of the Xiaomi 17 Ultra. You also have the option of black (pictured), which does have some dimension and tonality to it, along with a pastel-like Ice Blue and Alpine Pink. Sadly, there doesn’t appear to be an outlandish Liquid Silver option this year, as we saw with the 15. Part of what gives the 17 such an elegant appearance is its razor-thin bezels. We first got a look at the LIPO process the company uses to achieve such a thin border on the likes of last year’s Xiaomi 15T Pro . Here, however, it’s been pushed even further, giving the Xiaomi 17 some of the thinnest borders I’ve seen on a smartphone, at just 1.18mm all the way around. It unquestionably ups the premium feel of the phone, and despite its inherently small display, helps make the viewing experience more immersive in your hand. As for durability, the 17 takes on the same ‘Xiaomi Guardian Structure’ as its predecessor, which includes a 6M42 aluminium alloy frame around the sides, and Xiaomi Shield Glass 3.0 on the front (which the company claims is 20x more drop resistant compared to conventional toughened smartphone glass). In my time with the 17, the frame, glass camera deco and display all remained blemish-free, with even the pre-fitted plastic screen protector proving more resilient than expected. The 17 also features IP68-certified protection against dust and water ingress, which, while appreciated, is essentially the bare minimum for a high-end Android flagship these days. Rivals like the Oppo Find X9 Pro , OnePlus 15 and Honor Magic 8 Pro include additional IP69 (and even IP69K) protection, so while I have no qualms with the level of resilience on offer from the Xiaomi 17, there’s a clear path for improvement with future generations. Screen & Speakers 6.3-inch 1.5K 120Hz LTPO AMOLED display Peak 3,500-nit brightness output Dolby Atmos stereo speakers Just because the Xiaomi 17 sports the smallest display in the lineup, it doesn’t mean Xiaomi has treated it with any less respect. It’s, in fact, one of the sharpest, brightest panels in its class. At 6.3-inches with a 19.6:9 aspect ratio, it’s fractionally shorter and smaller than the last two generations of compact Xiaomi flagship. Twin this pint-sized panel with an impressively dense 2656 x 1220 resolution, and you get a pixel density of 464ppi, beating out the likes of the new Samsung Galaxy S26 (411ppi) and the iPhone 17 Pro (460ppi), for raw sharpness. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd The use of LTPO tech grants it a truly dynamic refresh rate between 1- and 120Hz, which is great for delivering smooth visuals whilst also balancing power efficiency. The M10 panel used also includes a new SuperRED luminous material – a feature I first encountered on the Poco F8 Pro ‘s screen – which reportedly increases luminance efficiency by 11.4%, which leads to the panel’s 23% reduction in overall power consumption, compared to previous displays used in the series. If you like watching HDR content on the go, the new increased peak 3500-nit brightness output, as well as the display’s compatibility with HDR10+, Dolby Vision and the newer China-born HDR Vivid standard, will serve you particularly well. The only fly in the ointment here is a lower panel-wide brightness ceiling, from 1500nits on the Xiaomi 15, down to 1200nits here. The jump isn’t catastrophic, and when gaming with a bright window internationally behind me, I was still able to come first in a few rounds of Call of Duty: Mobile, but brighter does usually mean better, so here’s hoping Xiaomi’s able to maintain a high peak brightness, whilst also increasing panel-wide performance again, with the Xiaomi 17’s successor. At the other end of the scale, I would like a lower brightness limit, especially when the likes of Oppo’s Find X9 Series is able to drop down to just 1 nit for improved eye comfort in low light, not to mention Xiaomi’s user experience insists on hiding relevant native Android features, like Extra Dim, which would be a welcome stopgap. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd The 17’s display can dynamically switch between DC and PWM Dimming, if you toggle the new ‘Adaptive refresh rate Pro’ toggle on in the display settings. I can only assume this increases power consumption, otherwise why wouldn’t Xiaomi just have this feature enabled by default or all the time? Despite this being a small phone, you do get a decently big sound, without distortion The 12-bit AMOLED panel used, paired with those thin bezels, makes for a pleasingly immersive viewing experience, in spite of the Xiaomi 17’s size, and I really like the default ‘Original colour PRO’ colour space the phone is set to. Xiaomi does, however, also give you plenty of control over screen colour temperature, alongside an additional ‘Vivid’ colour profile. It’s not as rich as Honor’s frankly overwhelming eye comfort toolset, but for most users, it should provide more than enough control to deliver an attractive viewing experience that doesn’t cause eye strain. The use of a more premium ultrasonic (instead of optical) fingerprint sensor makes for a more convenient unlocking experience, with the sensor able to be placed higher, away from the bottom bezel, while also offering faster and more reliable unlocking, even with damp fingers. Even registering your fingerprints is quicker and less tedious than the method required for optical sensors, so no complaints at all on that front. As for audio, despite this being a small phone, you do get a decently big sound, without distortion, even at maximum volume. Although the Xiaomi 17 qualifies as delivering stereo audio, bass output can only really be found from the down-firing speaker. If you’re looking for a phone with better overall loudness, balance and superior bass response, the iPhone 17 Pro is the better pick. That’s not to say the Xiaomi 17 has bad speaker performance, but it doesn’t impress as much as some key rivals. Specs & Performance Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset 12GB (LPDDR5X) RAM & up to 512GB storage Supports Xiaomi Offline Communication A small phone with a big brain, the Xiaomi 17 relies on the same Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip as the China-only Pro models and the Xiaomi 17 Ultra. It’s consistently proved to be the beefiest mobile silicon on the market right now, finding its way into almost every Android flagship worth talking about. On paper, Xiaomi and Qualcomm cite 20% better CPU performance with 35% better power efficiency, 23% better GPU performance with 20% better power efficiency, and 37% better AI performance with 16% better power efficiency, compared to the previous Snapdragon 8 Elite. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd My benchmarking places multi-core performance 13% to 15% higher (depending on whether I enable ‘Performance Mode’ in the phone’s battery settings), compared to the scores out of the Xiaomi 15, placing the Xiaomi 17 amongst the most capable phones currently on the market (scoring about 5% lower than the similarly-specced OnePlus 15 5 and Honor Magic 8 Pro). With Xiaomi disallowing the 3DMark app, we typically use to assess graphical and sustained performance ahead of launch, I can only speak to my experience with real-world testing instead. Hopping into various rounds of Call of Duty: Mobile, with the phone’s native Game Turbo settings maxed out, the Xiaomi 17 delivered an impressively responsive and reliable gameplay experience. Increased touch responsiveness was evident during matches (even though I don’t have an exact figure from Xiaomi), while the frame rate hovered between 110fps and 120fps, with far less heat build-up than I expected. The smaller the phone, the smaller the thermal envelope, and heat was my main concern going into testing this phone. The 17 got warm when I was gaming, but never to the point where I was worried; potentially thanks to a 31.9% larger (Xiaomi’s figure) cooling area – compared to the Xiaomi 15 – as part of its IceLoop vapour chamber cooling system. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd Sustained performance tests by other publications on the Chinese model suggest a drop in performance over time of up to 30%, paired with noticeable heat build-up; however, these findings only ever really posed an issue under benchmarking conditions, and reportedly didn’t impact gaming and other high-intensity tasks. Should 3DMark become available to me on the Xiaomi 17, I’ll update my findings here accordingly, but based on my time with the phone, performance seemed surprisingly unflappable. Connectivity-wise, Xiaomi’s also ensured the 17 maintains a reliable connection over cellular, with extensive band support meant to cover more than 210 countries, WiFi 7 and Bluetooth 6 connectivity, USB 3.2 Gen 1 speeds (as on the Xiaomi 15) and an enlarged antenna design, as part of the phone’s alloy frame. The Xiaomi 17 also bolsters the company’s Xiaomi Offline Communication network, which, despite requiring a SIM registered to your phone, lets you make calls or send messages at over a kilometre, without cell signal. It was a feature introduced with last year’s Xiaomi 15T series, but the more devices support the feature, the stronger and more reliable the Offline Communication network becomes; handy if you’re looking to keep communications from snooping governmental bodies or you’re stuck in the middle of nowhere. As is often the case, internationally the Xiaomi 17 is offered up with fewer RAM and storage pairings than in its homeland, with global audiences able to pick the phone up in either 256- or 512GB storage configurations, both paired to 12GB of RAM. This is still a flagship, though, so you can expect the fastest and most power-efficient memory standards in the space, with UFS 4.1 storage and LPDDR5X RAM. The phone’s Memory Extension feature also lets you reallocate storage to serve as additional RAM, with 6GB set out of the box, but the ability to access up to an additional 12GB if desired. With no discernible performance issues in real-world use, I suggest simply disabling the feature, as running storage as RAM does increase power drain. Cameras Quad 50Mp Leica camera setup Floating 2.6x telemacro lens Up to 4K 60fps recording with Dolby Vision Even high-end phones typically boast a large main sensor, maybe a capable telephoto and then a much smaller and/or lower resolution ultrawide. With the Xiaomi 17, all four of the phone’s sensors (that’s front and back) clock in at 50MP, and use binning to serve up shots with better low light performance and more dynamic range than you might typically expect, especially when it comes to the ultrawide and selfie snapper. While this isn’t the Ultra, the base model still enjoys the fruits of the company’s long-standing partnership with Leica, which namely falls to the default colour tuning you can shoot in: Leica Vibrant (my preferred preset and the setting used for the camera samples in this review) and the more muted Leica Authentic. Switching to Portrait Mode, there’s also a new dedicated Master Portrait tuning option, as well as the previous Leica Portrait profile, designed to better represent skin tones. the Xiaomi 17 takes superb stills, especially in natural light Leica Vivid (left), Leica Authentic (right) There’s also the lens configuration that Leica’s advised on. Dubbed ‘Leica UltraPure optical design’, the main sensor uses a seven-element lens, which includes one glass element, paired to an optical coating process to improve sharpness, clarity and reduce glare or reflectivity. Does it work? As I suspected, the Xiaomi 17 takes superb stills, especially in natural light. Despite a move from Xiaomi’s own Light Fusion 900 sensor (on the Xiaomi 14 and 15) to a near identically-specced Light Fusion 950 1/1.31-inch main sensor, the 17 does lose out on its Pro siblings’ Light Hunter 950L lead sensor, which boasts LOFIC (Lateral Overflow Integration Capacitor) tech to deliver a wider 16.5EV of dynamic range (instead of 13.5EV). Even so, the 17 handles high-contrast shooting admirably against competing flagships (I tended to compare shots with its main rival, the iPhone 17 Pro), with accurate colours and minimal noise, even in darker areas of a scene. In low light, expect softer details than Apple’s most like-minded adversary, and 4K Dolby Vision video capture that tops out at 60fps, rather than 120fps, as on newer rivals. Unlike Google, whose Pixels insist on brightening shadows up, Xiaomi lets contrast sit in its images, and is better for it; with more dynamism, drama and depth as a result. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd At 2.6x magnification, the Xiaomi 17’s telephoto zoom abilities are somewhat lacking, with image quality falling apart at 10x magnification and beyond; however, the unusual floating lens design of its telephoto sensor does mean you get a super-charged macro shooting experience. Even though the 17’s large ultrawide is better equipped than most to double as a macro sensor, by using the phone’s telephoto, you can grab some excellent detail shots, at as close as 10cm from your subject. The default focal lengths also lend themselves more readily to portrait photography, with excellent edge detection, and natural-looking bokeh and convincing fall-off without any real distortion. The only caveat is that the front camera produces weaker colour reproduction than the rest of the phone’s cameras, despite relying on the same OV50M as the ultrawide (albeit with a different equivalent field of view, at 90º, versus 102º). Battery Life & Charging 6330mAh Xiaomi Surge Battery (international model) 100W wired charging, 50W wireless charging, 22.5W reverse wireless charging No power adapter in the box Internationally, the Xiaomi 17 befalls the same fate as devices like Honor’s Magic 8 Pro, when it comes to battery capacity, dropping from a whopping 7000mAh on the Chinese model, to only… 6330mAh on the global version. Don’t whip out your box of tissues just yet, though. Anything over 6000mAh is still pretty huge by today’s standards, and Xiaomi’s used its latest silicon-carbon (Si-C) battery tech to fit such an energy-dense cell inside a phone as small as this, which is an engineering achievement worth commending. Even with the reduction in capacity between regions, this smallest member of the Xiaomi 17 line still packs in a larger battery than the Xiaomi 17 Pro (6300mAh) and even the new Xiaomi 17 Ultra (6000mAh), not to mention similarly-sized rivals, like the Galaxy S26 (4300mAh), iPhone 17 Pro (physical SIM model: 3988mAh / eSIM only model: 4252mAh), and the Google Pixel 10 (4970mAh). 45% better longevity on a single charge. That just doesn’t happen. What’s more, comparing benchmark results from our Xiaomi 15 review last year, the strides made with regards to battery capacity and performance efficiency have paid dividends, with the 17 Pro’s score of 19 hours 59 minutes translating to a whopping 45% better longevity on a single charge. That just doesn’t happen. This 16% silicon Xiaomi Surge Battery has also been rated to maintain 80% of its original capacity, even after 1600 charge cycles. That’s roughly four years of daily use. To sweeten the pot even further, the Xiaomi 17 boasts faster 100W wired charging than its predecessor (90W), and you no longer have to fork out for one of Xiaomi’s own HyperCharge adapters to enjoy the phone’s fastest charging speeds, with additional support for the PPS PD charging standard, at that same 100W maximum. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd In testing, while I didn’t refill the Xiaomi 17 at top speed, I was already able to hit 50% charge in 30 minutes, with a full recharge in exactly 60. While there’s no Qi2-style magnetic attachment system built into the 17 (which would have been nice), the phone does also support wireless charging at up to 50W, and reverse wired charging at up to an impressive 22.5W. Xiaomi should also consider adding bypass charging, especially as its high-end phones are so well equipped for gaming. Check out our rundown of the best battery life phones for alternatives. Software & AI HyperOS 3 atop Android 16 at launch Google Gemini integration with Mind Space 5 years OS + 6 years security update support It’s not just hardware where Xiaomi looks to be taking cues from Apple, it’s evident in the Xiaomi 17’s software experience, too. HyperOS 3 has a lot of good ideas and handy features, but some are unashamedly ripped straight from iOS. Honor, Oppo and OnePlus are all guilty of this, too, with Honor’s MagicOS 10 arguably being the most egregious copy of iOS 26, with its glassy iconography, but HyperOS 3 has a few familiar features of its own. Buying a pricier Xiaomi phone doesn’t just get you better hardware; you get a cleaner, more personal software experience too Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd The HyperIsland is a pill-shaped element that appears around the front camera when you have an active notification, like music playback, a running timer or when a voice note is recording. The nice thing about Xiaomi’s implementation is the ability to swipe between active experiences, without entering into the phone’s app switcher, so despite the unoriginality, it’s a useful inclusion in Xiaomi’s latest software release. You also have plenty of control over the general look of HyperOS, even if the customisation controls come with a learning curve for newcomers. As with Extra Dim, Xiaomi does seem to intentionally bury native Android features for reasons that continue to escape me, but it also adds functionality you wouldn’t find on the likes of a Pixel, with depth-effect lock screens, floating app windows and more. Wireless file sharing with iPhone and Mac has been a welcome addition in recent years, and while the Xiaomi 17’s out-of-box experience comes with a little bloat, it’s nothing compared to the company’s more affordable phones, which feature baked-in ads throughout, from first-party apps, to your notifications shade and lock screen. Buying a pricier Xiaomi phone doesn’t just get you better hardware; you get a cleaner, more personal software experience too. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd Xiaomi isn’t pushing its AI efforts as aggressively as its rivals, which I actually appreciate, but Google’s Gemini Live with Camera Share comes pre-loaded, while Xiaomi’s own AI tools can help with everything from tone adjustment on written text, to document summarisation and power image manipulation, like AI out-painting and reflection removal. Results aren’t as clean as, say, Samsung’s, but they tend to be better than Apple’s. As a Xiaomi flagship, you’re also getting the company’s best software promise with the Xiaomi 17: five generations of OS updates and six years of security updates, which is respectable, even if it’s still shorter than market leaders like Apple, Google and Samsung – all of which promise 6 to 7 years of both for most of their devices, which means better long-term value if you’re the kind of user who tends to hold onto a phone long time (or who wants good resale value). Price & Availability Despite the Xiaomi 17 series’ initial release in China taking place way back on September 25, 2025, the company made international fans wait until February 28, 2026 for a global rollout, which feels longer than previous generations. Even so, the Xiaomi 17 (as well as the Ultra) still feels like a wholly competitive flagship entry against the biggest players in the space. With a UK starting price of £899, it looks as though Xiaomi hasn’t yet passed the rising cost of components like RAM (fuelled by global AI infrastructure demands) onto its consumers, with pricing remaining the same as its predecessor. If you want double the storage – at 512GB – that’ll cost £100 more, at £999, but even then, you’re still paying less than the entry-level iPhone 17 Pro and Pixel 10 Pro . As usual, the phone isn’t available in the US. Xiaomi also throws in three months of Google Gemini 2TB plan (worth £18.99 a month), plus Early Bird discounts are sure to follow (although unconfirmed at the time of writing). Check out our list of the best phones you can buy right now. Should you buy the Xiaomi 17? If you’re after a compact flagship-level phone, there’s little that offers the same degree of bang for your buck right now. Samsung’s Galaxy S26 offers a more elegant user experience and longer software support, but falls down on battery and charging performance. It’s a similar story with the iPhone 17 Pro, which delivers superior video capture and cleaner, longer-lasting software, but otherwise falls short of the raw performance and breadth of features Xiaomi has squeezed into this phone. The Pixel 10 Pro is a great option in many ways, but starts at £999 for only 128GB of storage, which doesn’t feel very, well, pro. Foundry | Alex Walker-Todd While there are a fair few areas that leave clear room for improvement, they’re all small criticisms that don’t undermine the holistic experience the Xiaomi 17 delivers. 4K @ 120fps Dolby Vision recording, a brighter (and darker) display, a longer telephoto lens, more comprehensive IP-certified protection to match its rivals, longer software support and a cleaner (perhaps more original) user experience. These are all areas where the Xiaomi 17’s successor could improve upon, but none that render the company’s latest offering anything other than excellent. Specs Android 16 with HyperOS 3 6.3-inch 19.6:9 1.5K (2656 x 1220) 1-120Hz LTPO AMOLED display Ultrasonic in-display fingerprint sensor Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset 12GB RAM (LPDDR5X) 256GB or 512GB storage (UFS 4.1) Cameras: 50Mp 23mm equivalent 1/1.31-inch ƒ/1.67 Xiaomi Light Fusion 950 main sensor w/ OIS & 1G+6P hybrid lens 50Mp 17mm equivalent 1/2.88-inch ƒ/2.4 OV50M 102º ultra-wide sensor w/ 1.22μm 4-in-1 pixel size 50MP 60mm equivalent 1/2.75-inch ƒ/2.0 Samsung ISOCELL JN5 2.6x floating telephoto sensor w/ OIS 50Mp 21mm equivalent 1/2.88-inch ƒ/2.2 OV50M 90º front sensor Up to 4K @ 60fps video recording + Dolby Vision Stereo speakers Dual-SIM Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/6/7 Bluetooth 6.0 6330mAh Xiaomi Surge Battery 100W wired HyperCharge + support for 100W via PPS standard 50W wireless HyperCharge 22.5W reverse wired charging Xiaomi Guardian Structure Xiaomi Shield Glass 3.0 IP68 certified 151.1 x 71.8 x 8.06mm 191g Colours: Black, Ice Blue, Alpine Pink, Venture Green