OnePlus 15R Review Roundup (Dec 19, 2025): 165Hz Display, 7,400mAh Battery — and the Big Trade-Offs at $699

December 19, 2025
OnePlus 15R Review Roundup (Dec 19, 2025): 165Hz Display, 7,400mAh Battery — and the Big Trade-Offs at $699

The OnePlus 15R is built around two headline features — a 165Hz AMOLED display and a huge 7,400mAh battery — plus Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5. Here’s what the latest reviews and hands-ons say about real-world battery life, camera quality, charging, OxygenOS 16, price, and whether it’s worth buying.

The OnePlus 15R is shaping up to be one of the most polarizing “almost-flagship” Android phones of late 2025 — not because it’s bad, but because it’s so good at the two things it prioritizes (battery life and smoothness) while being conspicuously average in the places people increasingly care about (camera flexibility and wireless charging).

As of December 19, 2025, the early consensus from reviewers is surprisingly consistent: if you want a phone that goes for days and feels buttery fast, the 15R is compelling. If you want the most reliable camera experience for $700, the compromises are harder to ignore. [1]


OnePlus 15R at a glance: specs and price that define the story

OnePlus is marketing the 15R as a performance-first “R” model with a top-tier chipset, a high-refresh display, and its largest-ever phone battery — and those are not small claims.

Key highlights (global/US-focused):

  • Chipset: Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 [2]
  • Display: 1.5K AMOLED with a 165Hz top refresh rate (with some caveats) [3]
  • Battery:7,400mAh (with silicon-carbon battery tech, per reviewers) [4]
  • Cameras: 50MP main + 8MP ultrawide, no telephoto [5]
  • Charging: Up to 80W with compatible gear, but 55W with the included brick in box (per multiple reports) [6]
  • Wireless charging:None [7]
  • Durability: Multiple high IP ratings are being widely reported (IP66/IP68/IP69/IP69K) [8]

US pricing being widely reported:

  • $699 for 12GB/256GB
  • $799 for 12GB/512GB [9]

India pricing (for local buyers):

  • Starting around ₹47,999 for 12GB/256GB, per Gadgets 360. [10]

The main reason the OnePlus 15R exists: battery life that feels unreal

If there’s one line that captures the 15R’s identity, it’s this: reviewers are measuring battery in days, not hours.

The Verge reports that with light-to-moderate use (even in the phone’s highest performance mode and with always-on display enabled), the 15R typically didn’t dip below 20% until after three full days — and suggests that aggressive power saving could push it toward “most of a week” territory. [11]

Hands-on coverage at 9to5Google lands in the same place: the writer describes it as one of the hardest phone batteries they’ve tried to kill, often choosing to top up after two days more out of habit than necessity. [12]

Even reviewers who are less impressed overall still concede the 15R is an “easy two-day phone.” SlashGear, for example, calls out multi-day endurance in normal use — even while criticizing the camera compromises and price jump. [13]

The catch: silicon-carbon batteries and long-term health

The Verge adds an important nuance: the silicon-carbon battery approach that enables the big capacity can come with faster degradation versus traditional lithium-ion, though OnePlus claims the battery should retain 80% capacity after four years. [14]

That doesn’t mean the 15R will age poorly — but it’s a real consideration for anyone who keeps phones 4+ years.


The 165Hz display: ultra-smooth, but (for most people) not always meaningful

Yes, OnePlus put a 165Hz panel in a $700 phone, and it’s a legitimate differentiator — especially in the Android midrange where 120Hz is still the norm.

But multiple sources point out the same practical truth: 165Hz is not “always on” in real life.

  • SlashGear says the display can hit 165Hz only in supported games, and is otherwise capped at 120Hz. [15]
  • Gizmochina echoes that framing: 165Hz is available in certain games and not enabled by default (with 120Hz as the typical experience). [16]
  • 9to5Google also frames it as a “narrow use case” advantage that’s most relevant in titles that actually support the higher refresh. [17]

Where the high-refresh panel does matter even outside gaming is perception: scrolling and transitions feel extremely fluid, and that’s part of the OnePlus “fast” identity.

Touch response and “gaming phone energy”

OnePlus is leaning hard into responsiveness with a dedicated touch response chip and “instant sampling” claims on its product page. [18]
Review coverage also repeatedly frames the 15R as being tuned for gaming responsiveness and thermal stability. [19]


Performance: Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 feels flagship-fast — even if it’s not the “Elite” chip

The OnePlus 15R is widely described as the first wave of phones using Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5, positioned below the “Elite” variant used in the more expensive OnePlus 15. [20]

The important part: in daily use, reviewers aren’t complaining about speed.

The Verge calls it effectively “just as powerful” for everyday tasks, citing smooth scrolling through heavy web pages and noting they didn’t see the kind of aggressive background app killing OnePlus has been criticized for in the past. [21]

9to5Google similarly reports solid day-to-day performance and stable behavior during longer use — and points to gaming-focused software scheduling and cooling as part of the phone’s identity. [22]


Cameras: the compromise everyone agrees on (even if they disagree on how bad it is)

Here’s the simplest way to understand the OnePlus 15R camera situation:

  • The main camera can be good in favorable light
  • The overall system is less versatile than many rivals
  • The ultrawide, in particular, is where reviewers most often feel the corners were cut

The Verge says the 15R can deliver very nice photos in good lighting, but results become unpredictable in mixed or dim indoor light — sometimes overly bright or saturated — and low light remains a challenge. It also criticizes the 8MP ultrawide as a noticeable downgrade that can turn low-light ultrawide shots into “a smeary mess.” [23]

9to5Google is less definitive but aligns on the basics: dual rear cameras (50MP + 8MP), with results that can feel overly processed in certain modes, and “nothing to scream about” from a hardware standpoint. [24]

SlashGear is even more blunt: it calls the camera system the most disappointing part of the phone, describing the ultrawide as “only just ok,” and criticizing video stabilization consistency. [25]

No telephoto lens — and that matters more at $700 than it used to

OnePlus dropping a telephoto camera is a recurring critique. The Verge calls it forgivable under $800, but still part of why the phone feels “off balance” for the price. [26]
Gizmochina’s comparison angle is sharper: it argues the older OnePlus 13R remains appealing partly because it retains a more versatile camera setup, including telephoto. [27]


Charging: fast wired, but no wireless — and reviewers are not letting it slide

OnePlus clearly expects you to justify the lack of wireless charging with the phone’s monster battery. Reviewers… kind of agree, but still don’t love it.

The Verge says the lack of wireless charging is annoying “on principle” for a $700 phone, even if charging every few days makes it more tolerable. It also reports up to 55W wired charging with the included brick and cable. [28]

9to5Google similarly calls out the lack of wireless (no Qi2/Qi2 Ready), while noting up to 80W charging is possible and the included brick is 55W. [29]

PhoneArena frames it the same way: up to 80W if you buy a higher-rated SUPERVOOC adapter, but 55W with what ships in the box. [30]


OxygenOS 16, the Plus Key, and update policy: good (not great) for $700

On the software side, OnePlus is pushing OxygenOS 16, plus an iPhone-style customizable hardware button (“Plus Key”) and AI features that integrate with Google Gemini in parts of the experience. [31]

But what matters for buyers is support length, and the widely reported commitment is:

  • 4 years of OS upgrades
  • 6 years of security updates [32]

That’s decent, but it’s not class-leading in a world where some flagship lines push seven years.


Design and durability: a more “mainstream” OnePlus — with serious water resistance

Several reviewers note the 15R is adopting the OnePlus 15 design language, with flatter edges and a more squared-off camera bump. [33]

Durability is a bright spot. Multiple outlets report the phone carries four IP ratings (including IP69K-level messaging), which is unusually aggressive for a phone positioned below the top flagship tier. [34]


Price and availability: the biggest debate after the camera

The OnePlus 15R starts at about $699, which is exactly where expectations change: at $700, people stop forgiving midrange compromises.

The Verge flatly says “$700 feels a little too steep” given the camera and wireless charging trade-offs, even while praising battery life. [35]

SlashGear makes a similar point: this phone would be easier to recommend at $599–$649, but at $699 it’s competing with strong alternatives (especially for camera-first buyers). [36]

When can you buy it?

Availability details vary by market and retailer, but multiple reports agree pre-orders started December 17, 2025. [37]

For the US/Canada timeline, PhoneArena reports the “official sale” begins January 8, 2026 on OnePlus.com (with Amazon/Best Buy availability also discussed). [38]
A press-release-style write-up republished by Techaeris also states open sale follows on January 8, 2026 in the US and Canada. [39]

Meanwhile, some UK/Europe-focused coverage has cited January 15, 2026 as the open-sales date. [40]

If you’re shopping internationally, the safest move is to treat early January 2026 as the rollout window and verify the date on your local OnePlus storefront.


Should you buy the OnePlus 15R?

Buy the OnePlus 15R if you want:

  • The closest thing to an “all-weekend phone” battery in a mainstream slab device [41]
  • A very smooth-feeling phone with high-refresh perks that actually matter for supported games [42]
  • Flagship-like everyday performance without flagship pricing [43]

Skip it (or wait for discounts) if you care most about:

  • A consistent, reliable camera system — especially ultrawide and low-light performance [44]
  • Wireless charging at $700 [45]
  • Telephoto zoom versatility [46]

What else is happening today in OnePlus news (Dec 19, 2025)?

While OnePlus 15R reviews and comparisons continue, OnePlus is also expanding the ecosystem around it.

TechRadar published today (Dec 19) on the new OnePlus Watch Lite, highlighting a budget-friendly smartwatch positioned around strong battery life and a bright display, and noting it won’t be available in the US. [47]

And today’s OnePlus 15R vs 13R comparison piece from Gizmochina argues the 15R is the more “future-proof” device (chipset, battery, display), while the 13R can still be the smarter buy for people who want telephoto versatility and a lower price. [48]

OnePlus 15 Review: This is Not Normal!

References

1. www.theverge.com, 2. www.oneplus.com, 3. www.oneplus.com, 4. www.oneplus.com, 5. www.theverge.com, 6. 9to5google.com, 7. www.theverge.com, 8. www.slashgear.com, 9. www.phonearena.com, 10. www.gadgets360.com, 11. www.theverge.com, 12. 9to5google.com, 13. www.slashgear.com, 14. www.theverge.com, 15. www.slashgear.com, 16. www.gizmochina.com, 17. 9to5google.com, 18. www.oneplus.com, 19. 9to5google.com, 20. www.theverge.com, 21. www.theverge.com, 22. 9to5google.com, 23. www.theverge.com, 24. 9to5google.com, 25. www.slashgear.com, 26. www.theverge.com, 27. www.gizmochina.com, 28. www.theverge.com, 29. 9to5google.com, 30. www.phonearena.com, 31. 9to5google.com, 32. www.phonearena.com, 33. 9to5google.com, 34. www.gadgets360.com, 35. www.theverge.com, 36. www.slashgear.com, 37. www.phonearena.com, 38. www.phonearena.com, 39. techaeris.com, 40. www.techradar.com, 41. www.theverge.com, 42. www.slashgear.com, 43. www.theverge.com, 44. www.theverge.com, 45. www.theverge.com, 46. www.theverge.com, 47. www.techradar.com, 48. www.gizmochina.com

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