Verdict
The Honor 600 is a fantastic mid-ranger that feels like a watershed moment in raising the stock of this kind of phone with a stylish finish, excellent battery life and a capable, detailed dual camera setup. We also get a solid OLED screen and reasonable internal power, although for the raised price against the old model, some more grunt may have been nice.
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Gorgeous, redesigned chassis
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Bright and sharp OLED screen
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Solid cameras and battery life
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More expensive than its predecessor
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SoC inside is just okay for the price
Key Features
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Redesigned chassis
The 600 has a majorly redesigned chassis that gives it a classier and more premium finish in this mid-range price category.
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Capable dual camera array
The 200MP main snapper is derived from the brand’s Magic 8 Pro flagship, giving the camera array quite the pedigree.
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All day battery life
The 600 also benefits from a large battery and efficient internals that can easily keep it going all day.
Introduction
The new Honor 600 feels like a real watershed moment for upping the quality of mid-range phones.
Typically, this market segment has cut a fair number of corners as manufacturers attempt to cram in a solid feature set in a more affordable chassis, leading to phones that feel a little imbalanced in terms of features.
The 600 strikes an excellent balance of form and function, with a sublime redesigned chassis to it, alongside a bright 6.57-inch OLED screen, a capable Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 SoC, great battery life and a capable dual-camera array derived from its flagship handset.
The problem with the mid-range market is that it’s fiercely competitive on features and price, and the 600 has bumped up prices against last year’s Honor 400, perhaps due to a range of reasons, including current issues with component affordability.
The 256GB model retails for €549.99, with UK pricing expected soon, putting it above the likes of the Samsung Galaxy A57 5G and the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Plus 5G, which I’d have considered key rivals.
I’ve been putting this handset through its paces for the last couple of weeks to see if it’s one of the best mid-range phones out there in 2026.
Design
- Sharp and stylish looks
- Gorgeous off-white colourway
- Class-leading water and dust resistance
I noted in last year’s review of the 400 Pro that Honor had opted for a more grown-up aesthetic, although I think that’s been taken to the next level with the 600.
We’ve got a blend of brushed aluminium for the phone’s midframe and a composite fibre back that gives it a smooth and rather premium feel for a mid-range phone. A piece of plastic fantastic this is not.
I’m also a fan of the overall redesign Honor has opted for with this phone, with a small camera ‘shelf’ that spans across the width of the phone, rather than being a more obtuse bump just around the camera array. There are immediate iPhone 17 Pro comparisons that can be made here, but I’m not going to go that far.
Colour options are either black or golden white for this UK model (elsewhere also gets the orange), with my sample coming in the latter. It’s a mix of white and golden to create a subtle off-white, almost cream colour that I’m a big fan of.

The 600 comes with flat edges, which keep it right on trend with this year’s flagships, as it seems like we’ve moved beyond curved edges and back to flat again. What’s also quite impressive is that the bezel around the phone is less than 1mm thick, which helps the phone’s especially modern looks, and is a world first.
Ports across the bottom are standard fare, with a USB-C port and pop-out SIM tray, and for buttons, you’ll find a volume rocker and power button in their usual places, plus an AI button further down the side.

Honor has also bumped up the water and dust resistance for the 600, giving it full IP68/IP69/IP69K coverage that’s up there with the top flagship devices. There’s even a clever ‘Underwater’ camera mode that allows you to take underwater photos at a depth of up to two metres for a few seconds, which I’ve never seen before on a phone.
Screen
- 6.57-inch 120Hz 1264×2728 AMOLED
- 8000 nits peak brightness
- Smaller screen is pleasant to use
The display here is a standout point, with the 600 having a decent-sized 6.57-inch 1264×2728 AMOLED panel, complete with 120Hz refresh rate, meaning we’re getting good detail with lovely definition that makes it a good choice for everything from gaming to video consumption and, of course, general use.
Okay, it may not be as large as some of the other screens I’ve seen on more modestly-priced handsets, but I don’t mind that. The real estate on offer here is still more than enough for most folks.

Honor promises up a maddening 8000 nits of peak brightness with the 600’s screen, albeit this is a headline figure in a small percentage window on the screen. You’re more likely to see a peak close to 3000 nits in HDR, which is still plenty bright enough to keep content sharp and very vibrant.
Having up to 120Hz of refresh rate on offer helps general hippiness, and is a surefire bump if you’re moving from a more standard 60Hz or slightly higher panel. This phone is lacking the LTPO tech you’ll find on the 600 Pro, meaning the variable refresh rate works in a blockier manner. In my experience, I mostly saw and felt the full 120Hz, for what it’s worth.

There is an under-display fingerprint sensor here, which responds to unlock inputs, though it suffers the same issue I’ve observed on some Xiaomi phones: it’s mounted quite far down the screen.
Cameras
- Simple dual camera setup derived from Magic 8 Pro
- Good detail and depth in ideal conditions
- Lack of a dedicated telephoto becomes apparent at longer focal lengths
Against the 400, Honor has made some changes to the camera array of this new option in terms of the makeup of its arrangement, although it sticks to its core mid-range-ness.
We’ve got a dual-snapper arrangement, with some of the innards transplanted from the flagship Magic 8 Pro, with the main 200MP 1/1.4-inch sensor with a maximum aperture of f/1.9 and CIPA 6.0 image stabilisation. You also get a 12MP ultrawide with a maximum aperture of f/2.2. You get no dedicated telephoto lens – for that, you’ll need to step up to the 600 Pro.

The main 200MP sensor is understandably the star of the show here, offering solid detail for casual shooting and social media grid posting workloads you’re likely to undertake with this phone. To my eyes, by default, colours were rich and poppy, although perhaps on the saturated side for some; that’s largely because the phone’s camera defaults to ‘Vibrant’ mode. Change it to ‘Natural’, and it’ll resolve some of the issues.
For super-wide shots of buildings or landscapes, the 12MP shooter found on the 600 follows much of the same pattern in terms of its colour science. In cropping in, we are getting good detail resolution, although you are better off using the main sensor if you want to crop in – to my eyes, it’s sharper.

The lack of a telephoto zoom is apparent when going beyond around 4x (or 108mm) using the main sensor, and the further you get into the zoom range, the more you get into the weeds.
I had the same complaint about last year’s 400 Pro, which leaned heavily on some AI-assisted image repair and sharpening to try to make up for the lack of a dedicated telephoto lens. If you pixel peep, you are sure to notice, but for general photography that’s going to be compressed and posted to the social media app of your choice, you may fare a bit better.

There is a macro mode here, as is present on other Honor phones, and that extracted some pleasant detail on up-close subjects in my walkaround, such as flowers.

Low-light performance from the main snapper, even in particularly iffy conditions, is pretty good, with strong detail resolution when conditions are more favourable. Do things such as zoom in a little too far, or in situations with little light at all, and things don’t go too well.

The 600 also comes with a 50MP selfie snapper that’s decent for taking vain photos of yourself. It provides good clarity and depth, plus decent bokeh with the aperture at its widest. I did find that using some of the AI background blurring left a synthetic feel at times.
Performance
- Mid-range Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chip inside
- Reasonable performance for day-to-day use
- More intensive loads reveal its limitations
The 600 features the Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chip inside, which is a reasonably popular choice for powering mid-range handsets such as this one – it’s the same chip as you’ll find in the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G, for instance. To go with it, my sample of this phone also comes with 8GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD.
The scores in the likes of the Geekbench 6 benchmark test are similar to Xiaomi’s option and the Samsung Galaxy A57 5G with its Exynos 1680 chip inside, with performance equating to a flagship phone from a couple of years ago.
With this in mind, the OnePlus Nord 5 is a fair bit cheaper than this phone, and has it beaten for pure grunt, and I can’t help but feel the likes of the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 found in the 400 Pro from last year would have been a step up for this year’s 600.

I found the 600 to feel zippy in general day-to-day use, whether I was scrolling through social media, undertaking some quick work in a Google Docs or streaming music via Tidal or Plexamp when out and about – most of the time, I was doing at least two of the three simultaneously with other apps open in the background.
More intensive loads, such as heavy gaming with titles like Wuthering Waves, will bring this phone down a peg against the more obvious flagships, though it’s still perfectly playable as long as you’re happy to dial back some settings and are realistic with your expectations.

Likewise, Honor has put a Game Mode in the 600’s menus that pops up when you boot up your favourite title, which allows you to do things such as mute any other notifications, record gameplay and the like.
For more prolonged and intensive use, the vapour chamber cooling that this phone has does an admirable job of keeping it cool. The phone can get warm under load, although it isn’t to the point where I felt as if I had to put the 600 down for any length of time.
Software & AI
- MagicOS 10 feels like Liquid Glass in some respects
- Other AI features return
- Image to Video 2.0 is interesting
The 600 ships with MagicOS 10 (Honor’s own skin atop Android 16), and needed to do a couple of software updates before it’d even consider allowing me to install apps or use Google Pay, but that’s more so for being a review unit than any funny business, so your handset shouldn’t suffer the same immediate fate.
The look and feel of MagicOS 10 is similar to the variant running on the Honor Magic V3 foldable I use every day, which makes it more familiar than it otherwise would. There are cues borrowed from Apple’s Liquid Glass iOS refit, with translucent icons in the control panel and elsewhere, which make it quite smart and fluid to use.

Similar quirks and features from the previous iteration, such as the Magic Capsule, and handy customisation of the home and lock screen that automatically adjusts to the style of wallpaper you have fitted. For instance, cutesier hues, such as the pink in one of our wallpapers, completely changed the style of the time and date compared to another wallpaper I used.
As for AI gubbins, the 600 features a couple of intriguing new features, with most of them featured in the Gallery app for editing photos, adding them into a collage and more besides. By far the most interesting is the new Image to Video 2.0, where you can take an image you’ve taken and, with a prompt, turn it into a fake video.
For my testing, I asked it to make our ceramic cats dance around, make a statue I spotted in Poundbury look as if it were in a rave, and turn into a Saturn V rocket. The usual silliness we expect from AI these days.
To be fair, the model generated videos I asked it to, with a maximum time limit of eight seconds. You can also choose the aspect ratio and whether you want sound or not. The video of the cats, for instance, captured the detail of the cats, although the sofa in the background isn’t right, and it added extra artificial weathering to our side tables. I do see what the phone is going for, though.
In general, I’m impressed by what it does, with video generation made possible by handing off to an off-site model while you wait for it to finish. As with any of this AI guff, I just question the actual utility of it beyond the novelty factor for the first couple of images.
As with previous models from Honor, the 600 also comes with a dedicated AI button. A long press calls up either the Circle to Search function from Google Gemini or Honor’s AI memories function.
Honor is also promising six years of security patches and six years of software updates with this handset, giving some peace of mind for long-term use.
Battery Life
- 6800mAh battery
- 80W wired charging
- No wireless charging
One of the big upgrades that the 600 makes over last year’s Honor 400 is its battery capacity and specs, as we’ve now moved up to a hefty 6400mAh for the European model, up from the 5300mAh on the older iteration.
With this battery capacity in tow, I was able to get around six hours of screen-on time when it came to an intensive day of multi-tasking and using my phone as normal – that’s scrolling my social media, streaming music through Tidal or Plexamp, taking the odd photo when out and about and dealing with a small amount of work in a pinch.

For a more scientific test, a cursory run of the PCMark Work V3.0 battery test at 50% brightness worked out to nearly 16 hours of use.
The rated wattage for charging on the 600 has seen a bump, too, with up to 80W wired charging and 27W reverse wired to another device, although we are still without any form of wireless charging on this non-Pro model.

Honor doesn’t ship a charger in the box with this phone, so I was left to use my usual 66W 6A Honor adapter. As much as this isn’t maxing out the 600’s rated speeds, it was still brisk in its speeds, taking 28 minutes to get to 50 percent and 65 minutes to get back to full charge.
Should you buy it?
You want a stylish mid-ranger
The 600 excels in providing a flagship feel and look at a more modest price point. It’s definitely one of the best-looking phones of the year in my eyes.
You want more grunt for the price
The Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 SoC inside is fine for most people, although with this phone’s raised price tag against the competition, it can leave a bit of a sour taste.
Final Thoughts
The Honor 600 is a fantastic mid-ranger that feels like a watershed moment in raising the stock of this kind of phone with a stylish finish, excellent battery life and a capable, detailed dual camera setup. We also get a solid OLED screen and reasonable internal power, although for the raised price against the old model, some more grunt may have been nice.
The Samsung Galaxy A57 5G provides similar performance, a larger screen and arguably offers a more polished software feel for a similar price for the base 256GB model (the 600 costs a little more), although with the 512GB model, Honor’s price tag is much more appealing.
My issue with the 600 is purely on internal power – I understand that this is a mid-range phone, and has been kitted out appropriately, but the price tag is knocking on the door of flagship kit that’s much beefier. Even some more affordable phones, such as the OnePlus Nord 5 have Honor beat in terms of pure grunt.
In spite of the raised price and okay SoC, I’m still a huge fan of what Honor has done with the 600 with its fit and finish, cameras, battery life and more. For more options, though, check out our list of the best mid-range phones we’ve tested.
How We Test
We test every mobile phone we review thoroughly. We use industry-standard tests to compare features properly and we use the phone as our main device over the review period. We’ll always tell you what we find and we never, ever, accept money to review a product.
Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.
- Used as a main phone for over a week
- Thorough camera testing in a variety of conditions
- Tested and benchmarked using respected industry tests and real-world data
FAQs
No, in spite of the Honor 600 supporting up to 80W fast charging, you will need to source a brick separately.
Yes, the Honor 600 has full IP68/IP69/IP69K coverage for water and dust resistance.
Honor has committed to six years of both Android and security updates for the 600.
Test Data
| Honor 600 | |
|---|---|
| Geekbench 6 single core | 1310 |
| Geekbench 6 multi core | 4088 |
| Geekbench 6 GPU | 4737 |
| 1 hour video playback (Netflix, HDR) | 3 % |
| Time from 0-100% charge | 65 min |
| Time from 0-50% charge | 28 Min |
| 60-min recharge (no charger included) | 95 % |
| 30-min recharge (no charger included) | 53 % |
| 15-min recharge (no charger included) | 32 % |
| 3D Mark – Wild Life | 2063 |
| 3D Mark – Wild Life Stress Test | 97 % |
Full Specs
| Honor 600 Review | |
|---|---|
| UK RRP | £-1 |
| EU RRP | €549.99 |
| Manufacturer | Honor |
| Screen Size | 6.57 inches |
| Storage Capacity | 512GB |
| Rear Camera | 200MP 1/1.4-inch main sensor, f/1.9, CIPA 6.0 & 12MP ultrawide, f/2.2 |
| Front Camera | 50MP selfie camera |
| Video Recording | Yes |
| IP rating | IP69K |
| Battery | 6400 mAh |
| Fast Charging | Yes |
| Size (Dimensions) | 74.7 x 7.8 x 156 MM |
| Weight | 190 G |
| Operating System | MagicOS10 (Android 16) |
| Release Date | 2026 |
| First Reviewed Date | 27/04/2026 |
| Resolution | 1264 x 2728 |
| HDR | Yes |
| Refresh Rate | 120 Hz |
| Ports | USB-C, SIM card |
| Chipset | Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 |
| RAM | 8GB |
| Colours | Black, Golden White |















