Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Infamous “Apple copycat” offers an ingenious smartphone battery upgrade that Apple must copy

Xiaomi’s battery upgrade program is exactly what old iPhones need

Add as a preferred source on Google
The Xiaomi 13 Ultra held like a camera.
Xiaomi 13 Ultra Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Xiaomi has long been accused of taking inspiration from Apple. But this time around, the inspiration needs to move the other way. The company has expanded its paid battery upgrade program in China to cover the Xiaomi 13, Xiaomi 13 Pro, and Xiaomi 13 Ultra.

Unlike a typical battery replacement, where a company simply swaps the worn-out cells with the same capacity, Xiaomi is offering larger batteries that give older phones a boost in endurance.

Wait… a battery upgrade years after release?

According to details shared by Xiaomi President Lu Weibing on Weibo, the standard Xiaomi 13 can move from a 4,500mAh battery to a 4,850mAh unit. The Xiaomi 13 Pro gets a bigger jump from 4,820mAh to 5,361mAh, while the Xiaomi 13 Ultra goes from 5,000mAh to 5,500mAh. This isn’t the kind of massive capacity bumps that we’re seeing on its recent flagships, but this is still quite a meaningful improvement for models that are almost four years old now.

And it’s not even that expensive.

Recommended Videos

The service costs 189 Yuan (roughly $27), and that price includes labor charges. Xiaomi also warns that availability may be limited, so this is not quite a wide-open global program yet. Regardless, the idea is pretty solid. Phone makers already encourage longer software support and longer ownership cycles. A higher-capacity official battery swap fits perfectly into that future. It doesn’t just refresh your battery life, it improves it—just like how an OTA update improves the software.

Apple should take notes

Apple already offers battery replacements for older iPhones, which is great. But Xiaomi’s approach is more interesting because it turns a repair into an upgrade. Imagine taking an older iPhone in for service and getting a certified higher-capacity battery designed by Apple, tuned through iOS, and covered by official support. That would make the battery replacement feel more appealing than simply restoring the phone to its original battery life.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
Apple coughs up $250 million to pay iPhone users because Siri just wasn’t smart enough
Siri’s big AI glow-up is late, and it's costing Apple a lot
Siri finding flight details from email app

Apple’s long-delayed Siri upgrade is no longer just an embarrassing AI setback, as the company has agreed to a very real, very hefty settlement. The company is paying $250 million to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging it misled iPhone buyers in the US about the AI-powered Siri features announced as part of Apple Intelligence.

According to the Financial Times, the case centers on Apple’s promise of a more personalized Siri that was first shown at WWDC 2024 and promoted alongside newer iPhones.

Read more
Google is adopting a new framework to stop shady Android apps from raising hell
Android’s next security trick is a public record for official apps
iPhone screen showing a folder with all of the Google apps.

Android security is getting another layer of accountability, and it's aimed squarely at a problem that digital signatures can't solve. Google has announced that it is expanding Binary Transparency across the Android ecosystem. Starting with the production of Google apps for Android and Mainline modules, the company will log official releases on a public append-only ledger, which should make it easier to verify whether the software running on a device is the exact version Google intended to release.

Why digital signatures no longer cut it

Read more
I tested the Xiaomi 17 Ultra’s camera and I don’t think I’ll ever go back to an iPhone
In a "Galaxy" of slow innovation and complacency, the famed "Apple copycat" is setting a high standard for everyone.
Xiaomi 17 Ultra

When it comes to flagship phones, the word “Ultra” has started to lose meaning. Every brand throws it around, but very few actually deliver something that feels… ultra. Take the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, for instance. It’s a solid phone, sure, but exciting? Not quite. And that’s the bigger issue with the US market right now. Some of the most interesting Android flagships simply don’t make it here.

Meanwhile, brands like Vivo, Oppo, and Honor are quietly pushing smartphone cameras into territory that feels closer to dedicated cameras than ever before. And then there’s the Xiaomi 17 Ultra. After using it for a couple of weeks, one thing is clear: this isn’t just a phone with a great camera. It’s a camera that happens to be a phone. And honestly, it kind of feels like a modern-day revival of the Samsung Galaxy Camera.

Read more