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

Xiaomi steals Leica from Huawei for its next flagship phone

Add as a preferred source on Google

Xiaomi is working with Leica on the camera for its next flagship, the Xiaomi 12 Ultra, and has additionally shared that the new phone will be equipped with the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 processor. Previously Leica shared a successful partnership with Huawei, but this has come to an end with the announcement of the new deal.

huawei p20 pro leica
Daven Mathies/Digital Trends

“Xiaomi focuses on creating the ultimate user experience, and has always hoped to explore the capabilities of smartphone photography to the extreme. Xiaomi and Leica agree with each other’s pursuits and ideas and appreciate each other’s advantages and industry. This cooperation will provide a strong boost to Xiaomi’s imaging strategy,” Lei Jun, founder, chairman, and CEO of Xiaomi Group said. “During the cooperation, from optical design to tuning aesthetic orientations, the innovative technologies, product philosophies, and imaging preferences of both parties have experienced unprecedented in-depth collision and fusion.”

Recommended Videos

Xiaomi will join other manufacturers like OnePlus and Vivo who have partnered with notable camera brands to push their imaging prowess further. As Samsung, Apple, and Google have shown, it’s not always necessary. It sure helps, though.

Xiaomi’s Ultra phones have been photography powerhouses in the past, offering large cameras and large screens to use them with. And the Xiaomi 12 and 12 Pro are good enough. Still, the last true Xiaomi camera phone was the 11 Ultra, coming with a massive camera bump, a 50-megapixel main camera, a 48MP wide lens, and a 48MP telephoto.

“The main camera has a lovely natural tone, with just the right amount of color to accurately capture the atmosphere of a scene. I’ve enjoyed using it a lot, and have rarely taken a photo that I didn’t like. Xiaomi has kept the look of the photos consistent across the 48MP wide-angle camera, with very few differences in color and dynamic range, unless the lighting is particularly challenging,” Digital Trends’ Andy Boxall wrote of the 11 Ultra, adding that the zoom camera was also impressive but noting that there were some focusing issues that undermined the otherwise solid package.

Huawei and Leica part ways

Xiaomi is rumored to be reusing the same camera configuration as the 11 Ultra, albeit swapping the main Samsung sensor for a Sony one. With that change and the Leica partnership, hopefully, the company can fix the focusing issues that we found so troublesome.

Xiaomi is taking a leaf from one of its rivals — or in this case,  is taking the whole book. With Xiaomi’s 12 Ultra, Huawei will no longer be the only company using the Leica branding. Huawei has worked with Leica on its flagship phones since the Huawei P9 in 2016. Huawei had since then been restricted from selling its phones in the U.S., with Google Play Services being stripped for the rest of the world.

Huawei has confirmed that its partnership with Leica has now ended, making the Huawei P50 the last Huawei phone to include Leica’s expertise in the camera system. While the camera experience remains spectacular and comparable to the best from Apple, Samsung, and Google, restrictions placed on Huawei by the U.S. government likely have made the partnership unattractive for both parties.

The Xiaomi 12 Ultra is scheduled to launch in July.

Michael Allison
Former Mobile News Writer
A UK-based tech journalist for Digital Trends, helping keep track and make sense of the fast-paced world of tech with a…
Tim Cook says Apple price hikes are unavoidable as AI drives memory costs higher
Buying a new Apple device this fall may cost more than expected
Tim Cook

The rising cost of RAM and storage has become a growing problem for the tech industry. Apple has largely kept those increases from affecting customers, but according to a recent Wall Street Journal report, that may be about to change.

Speaking to the publication, Apple CEO Tim Cook said price increases are now "unavoidable" as the cost of DRAM memory and NAND storage continues to climb. The surge is being driven largely by the AI boom, as cloud providers and AI companies compete for the same chips used in consumer devices. Apple has largely shielded customers from those increases so far, but Cook indicated that strategy has reached its limits.

Read more
The iPhone Air could get a second camera and a better chip in spring 2027
Apple heard the camera complaints about the iPhone Air, and the fix is coming in spring 2027.
iPhone Air Featured

There have been plenty of rumors about the second-generation iPhone Air, but the most recent one sheds some light on the improvements it could bring and its launch window. 

According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, the second-generation iPhone Air, codenamed V62, is headed for a spring 2027 launch. This adds further detail to Apple's already-reported staggered launch strategy for the iPhone 18 lineup.

Read more
iPhone 18 Pro could cost as much as $1,399 and even Tim Cook can’t avoid the sting
Owing to the rising memory and storage costs, the price of the base model could go up by as much as $200.
iPhone 17 Pro

Earlier today, Tim Cook sat for an interview with The Wall Street Journal and made a bunch of ominous predictions. Among them, the outgoing Apple CEO highlighted that the rising price of memory and storage modules has finally forced Apple to raise the prices of its devices. Apple has already increased the base price of its Macs. In the coming months, the same would reflect on other Mac models as well as the iPad. The biggest hit, however, will be felt on the price of iPhones.

Just how bad is the situation?

Read more