Xiaomi Pad 7 11.2" 2410CRP4CG Gray 2025
Driven by a Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3, the 11.2-inch 3.2K 144Hz LCD with 800 nits peak brightness and Dolby Vision delivers sharp, smooth HDR visuals. Quad speakers with Dolby Atmos, HyperOS 2’s AI tools, and a slim 500g body enhance its entertainment and light productivity appeal. It’s best for media streamers and digital note-takers who prioritize a vivid high-refresh display, stylus support, and an 8850mAh battery for extended use.
About This Tablet
Driven by a Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3, the 11.2-inch 3.2K 144Hz LCD with 800 nits peak brightness and Dolby Vision delivers sharp, smooth HDR visuals. Quad speakers with Dolby Atmos, HyperOS 2’s AI tools, and a slim 500g body enhance its entertainment and light productivity appeal. It’s best for media streamers and digital note-takers who prioritize a vivid high-refresh display, stylus support, and an 8850mAh battery for extended use.
- CPU 2.8E+3
- RAM 8 GB
- Storage 256 GB
- Screen 11.2" 3200x2136
- OS Android 14 HyperOS
- Stylus
The 30-Second Version
The Xiaomi Pad 7 delivers an absolutely gorgeous 3.2K 144Hz display and a speedy Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 at a price that undercuts nearly everything with similar specs. Battery life is stellar, the build feels premium, and the quad speakers are a treat. Just be ready to buy your own charger, switch off auto refresh rate to avoid occasional stutters, and live without cellular or storage expansion. If your tablet is mostly for movies, games, and reading, this is the best value we've seen this year.
Overview
The Xiaomi Pad 7 is one of those devices that makes you wonder why anyone pays twice as much for a tablet. For somewhere between $329 and $390, you're getting an absurdly good 11.2-inch 3.2K LCD that refreshes at 144Hz, a Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 that punches well above its weight class, and a massive 8850mAh battery wrapped in a 500g metal body. It's a WiFi-only slate with no SIM slot, no SD card slot, and no charger in the box, but Xiaomi clearly focused the budget on the stuff you'll actually stare at and touch all day. If your tablet time is 90% Netflix, YouTube, comics, and some light gaming, this thing is practically a cheat code. We ranked its screen in the absolute top tier of all tablets we've tested, landing in the 99th percentile, and the CPU and GPU scores aren't far behind. That's flagship-level visual horsepower at a midrange price.
Performance
That Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 sits in our database at the 97th percentile for CPU and 96th for GPU, which is firmly in 'one of the best on the market' territory even if it isn't the latest Snapdragon 8 series. Day-to-day use feels snappy, apps open fast, and the 8GB of RAM (66th percentile, so solid but not groundbreaking) handles multitasking without throwing apps out of memory the moment you switch away. Real-world gaming is smooth, with the Adreno GPU keeping frame rates high in titles like Genshin Impact at medium-high settings. There's a quirk worth knowing, though. Several owners and our own testing confirm that leaving the auto refresh rate setting on can introduce occasional stutter because the tablet doesn't always switch modes gracefully. Flipping it to a fixed 144Hz in display settings clears that right up and the UI becomes buttery.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Stunning 3.2K 144Hz display that's best-in-class for this price 99th
- Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 delivers top-tier performance for media and gaming 97th
- Excellent battery life with the 8850mAh cell, regularly lasting over a day of heavy use 96th
- Quad speakers with Dolby Atmos support sound rich and loud for a tablet 88th
- Lightweight 500g all-metal build feels premium and travels easily
Cons
- No charger included, and you'll need a 45W adapter to hit fast charging speeds
- Auto refresh rate can cause UI lag; requires manual fix to 144Hz
- No microSD slot or SIM support, so storage and connectivity are fixed
- Ram is just average at 8GB, and heavy multitaskers may notice limits
- Xiaomi's OS update track record is inconsistent, leaving long-term software support uncertain
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Processor
| CPU | 2800 |
| Cores | 8 |
Memory & Storage
| RAM | 8 GB |
| Storage | 256 GB |
| Storage Type | SSD |
| Expandable | No |
Display
| Size | 11.2" |
| Resolution | 3200 |
| Panel | LCD |
| Refresh Rate | 144 Hz |
| Brightness | 800 nits |
Connectivity
| Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi 6E |
| Bluetooth | Bluetooth 5.4 |
| USB-C | 1 |
| Cellular | No |
Features
| Stylus Support | Yes |
Physical
| Weight | 0.5 kg / 1.1 lbs |
| OS | Android 14 HyperOS |
Value & Pricing
At $329 to $390, the Pad 7 makes a lot of the $500+ competition look greedy. You're getting a screen that would be the star of a flagship device, a processor that's quick enough for almost anything you'd do on an Android tablet, and battery life that comfortably handles a full day of binging and browsing. Yes, you'll need to buy a separate charging brick if you don't already have a USB-PD adapter, and the lack of expandable storage means that 256GB is your ceiling. But when the user sentiment score sits in a strong 88th percentile, it's clear most buyers feel they got more than they paid for. The occasional grumble about competitors like the Honor Magic Pad 2 offering a slightly newer chip or different features at this price is fair, but for raw media consumption per dollar, the Xiaomi is hard to beat.
Price History
vs Competition
Stacked against the Apple iPad Pro M4 and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra, the Pad 7 is obviously outgunned in sheer performance and ecosystem polish. But those tablets start at nearly three times the price. The more reasonable comparison is the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro, which trades blows in this same $300-$400 space. The Lenovo often includes a stylus in the box and has a slightly more productivity-focused UI, but its display can't match Xiaomi's pixel density or refresh rate. Then there's the Microsoft Surface Pro 11, a totally different animal with Windows and full desktop apps, but it's heavier, pricier, and its battery life pales next to the Pad 7. If you don't need a keyboard and trackpad for spreadsheet work, the Xiaomi walks away with the entertainment crown. The DOOGEE U11 is a budget alternative, but its screen and performance are a steep drop-off, so it only makes sense if you need to stay well under $200.
| Spec | Xiaomi Pad 7 11.2" 2410CRP4CG | Apple iPad Pro M5 | Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra SM-X930NZAAXAR | Lenovo Idea Tab Pro Idea Tab Pro | Microsoft Surface Pro 11th Edition | HOTWAV R9 Ultra 5G R9 Ultra 5G |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPU | 2.8E+3 | Apple M5 | MediaTek Dimensity 9400+ | MediaTek Dimensity 8300 Processor (3.35 GHz ) | Intel Core Ultra 7 268V | 2.3 GHz |
| RAM (GB) | 8 | 12 | 12 | 8 | 32 | 24 |
| Storage (GB) | 256 | 256 | 256 | 128 | 512 | 512 |
| Screen | 11.2" 3200x2136 | 13" 2752x2064 | 14.6" 2960x1848 | 12.7" 2944x1840 | 13" 2880x1920 | 11" |
| OS | Android 14 HyperOS | Apple iPadOS | Android 16 | Android 14 | Windows 11 Pro | Android 15 |
| Stylus | true | true | true | true | true | true |
| Cellular | false | true | false | true | false | true |
| Battery (Wh) | - | 39 | - | - | 47 | - |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Cpu | Gpu | Ram | Screen | Battery | Feature | Storage | User Sentiment | Connectivity | Social Proof |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xiaomi Pad 7 11.2" 2410CRP4CG | 96.7 | 95.8 | 66.2 | 98.6 | 86.2 | 52.8 | 83.5 | 87.9 | 78.8 | 87 |
| Apple iPad Pro M5 Compare | 96.2 | 95.1 | 81.2 | 99.9 | 98.4 | 96.8 | 83.5 | 98.7 | 98.4 | 97.8 |
| Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra SM-X930NZAAXAR Compare | 97.3 | 96.3 | 81.2 | 95.9 | 93.3 | 86.5 | 73.7 | 94.8 | 63.3 | 97.8 |
| Lenovo Idea Tab Pro Idea Tab Pro Compare | 83.3 | 82.2 | 77.5 | 91.9 | 91.2 | 99.8 | 64.9 | 53.3 | 96.5 | 97.8 |
| Microsoft Surface Pro 11th Edition Compare | 74.4 | 93 | 98.6 | 95.4 | 99 | 84.2 | 93 | 76.7 | 93.8 | 37.5 |
| HOTWAV R9 Ultra 5G R9 Ultra 5G Compare | 94.3 | 93.5 | 96.1 | 43 | 30.9 | 93.7 | 89.5 | 94.8 | 72.4 | 47.6 |
Common Questions
Q: Is the auto refresh rate issue a dealbreaker, and can it be fixed?
Not a dealbreaker at all. The tablet sometimes hesitates when dynamically switching between refresh rates, which can make scrolling feel jittery. The fix is simple: head into display settings and switch from auto to a fixed 144Hz. That solves the lag completely without any noticeable hit to battery life in our experience, and the interface becomes consistently smooth.
Q: Does the Xiaomi Pad 7 support cellular or SIM cards?
No. This is a WiFi-only model with no SIM tray and no support for calls or texts over cellular. If you need mobile data on the go, you'll need to tether to your phone or look at LTE-enabled tablets from Samsung or Apple, which will cost more.
Q: What kind of charger do I need, and does it come in the box?
There's no power adapter in the box. To get the full 45W fast charging speed, you'll want a USB-C charger that supports PD3.0 or Xiaomi's own 45W brick. You can use a standard QC3.0 or PD charger you already have, but charging will be slower, and several users have noted that off-brand adapters don't always trigger the fastest speed.
Q: How is software update support on Xiaomi tablets?
Xiaomi's update policy for tablets has been inconsistent. While HyperOS itself is feature-rich and smooth, the company doesn't have the long, guaranteed update windows you'll find with iPads or Samsung's flagship tablets. This means you'll likely get a couple of major Android updates, but don't count on more than that. If years of guaranteed updates matter to you, the iPad or Galaxy Tab lines are safer bets.
Who Should Skip This
If you need cellular connectivity to stay online when there's no WiFi, this tablet isn't for you. The lack of a SIM slot is a hard stop for anyone who works on the go without a phone hotspot. Heavy productivity users should also look elsewhere. The business score of 60.1 reflects that multitasking with complex spreadsheets, extensive document editing, or using a keyboard and trackpad full-time feels cramped on HyperOS compared to an iPad with Stage Manager or a Windows tablet like the Surface Pro 11. And if you can't stomach the risk of only getting one or two major OS updates, I'd steer you toward an iPad even if it costs more upfront—it will get updates half a decade longer. The Pad 7 is a brilliant media slate, but it's not a laptop replacement.
Verdict
For anyone whose tablet serves as a portable TV, comic book reader, or gaming screen, the Xiaomi Pad 7 is a slam dunk. The 3.2K 144Hz display is genuinely great, the quad speakers fill a room, and the battery rarely leaves you hunting for an outlet. Casual creators who sketch with the optional stylus will appreciate the 240Hz pen sampling rate, though serious digital artists may miss the tighter integration you'd get on an iPad. Where it stumbles is as a business tool. Our database puts its business score at just 60.1, so if you need a tablet for heavy document editing, multitasking with multiple windows, or video calls with clients all day, you'll feel the limits of HyperOS and the average RAM headroom. For entertainment, reading, and light productivity, though, this is the new budget king.