Like most current flagships, the Xiaomi 15 and the 15 Ultra have the Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset. The regular 15 has 12 GB of RAM and 256 or 512 GB of speedy storage (UFS 4.0). The Ultra ups that to 16 GB of RAM and 512 GB or 1 TB of even faster storage (UFS 4.1). I watched videos, browsed the web, and played several games on the 15 and 15 Ultra, and both coped easily. These flagships are fast and slick, whether you’re jumping in and out of apps or playing demanding games. The Ultra is slightly more capable, but I rarely felt it outside the camera app.
Xiaomi has beefed up its batteries, increasing the 15 substantially to 5,240 mAh (up from 4,610 mAh), and the 15 Ultra has a 5,410-mAh battery (up from 5,000 mAh). After a busy day around Edinburgh, Scotland, shooting photos, with some web browsing and gaming on the way there and back, the 15 Ultra had more than 30 percent left. A 20-minute session of Lichtspeer ate 4 percent of the 15 Ultra’s battery. A full charge can get you through two light days with either phone.
Plug in the supplied USB-C cable with a Hypercharge (Xiaomi’s proprietary charging standard) capable charger (neither includes one in the box), and you can charge at up to 90 watts, meaning you can fill the battery in under an hour. The 15 Ultra also supports 80-watt wireless charging with a Xiaomi wireless charger, while the Xiaomi 15 goes up to 50 watts for wireless charging. Both get warm when charging at top speed. They also still charge fairly quickly with other chargers because there’s support for the QC 3+, PD 3.0, and Qi charging standards, among others.
I’m salty about the lack of Qi2, which I would take in a heartbeat over faster charging. Magnetic accessories and perfect charging alignment are so convenient and would be especially handy for the 15 Ultra, which is often tricky to place on wireless chargers.
Photo Fantastic
The Xiaomi 15 Ultra is the camera king, but the Xiaomi 15 is no slouch. It boasts a triple-lens camera system, each rated at 50 megapixels. The large 1/1.31-inch sensor and f/1.62 aperture in the main camera ensure decent low-light performance, the telephoto can get you close to distant subjects and handles close-up macro photography well, and the ultrawide is ideal for landscapes. Tuned by Leica, you can also opt for natural or more vibrant colors to suit your tastes, and there’s a wealth of filters and options to tweak in the camera app. Most folks will be perfectly content with the regular Xiaomi 15 camera.
Photograph: Simon Hill
Xiaomi 15 Ultra, main camera