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Buying a OnePlus phone used to be simple, but that’s changed in multiple ways

July 30, 2025

In October of last year, buying a new OnePlus phone was incredibly simple. First, head toOnePlus.com. Second, pick theOnePlus 6T colorwayyou like the best. Finally, head to the checkout page to place your order. That was it.

Now, things aren’t so straightforward. It started earlier this year with the introduction of theOnePlus 7 Pro, the first “Pro” phone from the company and the first time it introduced a device that wasn’t part of the primary line nor part of the “T” series.

OnePlus 7 Pro cameras with logo

Even the vanillaOnePlus 7— launched at the same time as the 7 Pro — was confusing since it only landed in specific areas of the world (primarily the United Kingdom and India). Now, things are even more confusing with the introduction of theOnePlus 7Tand the upcoming reveal of what we expect to be called theOnePlus 7T Pro.

It’s only been one year since the launch of the OnePlus 6T, but buying a OnePlus phone has gotten so much more tricky. Is this a good thing?

OnePlus 7 red back panel with camera and logo

The confusing OnePlus phone lineup explained

By the end of this year, OnePlus will likely have launched five smartphones in 2019. Those phones are:

Let’s compare that to last year’s lineup from OnePlus:

In just one year, OnePlus has more than doubled its smartphone output.

To make things even more confusing, the OnePlus 6T is — as of right now — still sticking around here in the United States. In the US, if you head to OnePlus’ website orT-Mobileto buy a phone, you will have at least three choicesstarting on October 18: the OnePlus 7 Pro, the OnePlus 7T, and the OnePlus 6T.

OnePlus 7T warp charge 30T

Meanwhile, in the UK, things get even more intense. By the end of this year, they will need to choose between the OnePlus 7T, the OnePlus 7 Pro, the OnePlus 7 Pro 5G, and possibly even the OnePlus 7T Pro.

Now, I’m not trying to knock down offering consumers plenty of choices when it comes to buying a OnePlus phone. Choices are great! But the problem here is that many of these phones share the same specs and even have similar price points.

Let’s take the OnePlus 7, the OnePlus 7T, and the OnePlus 7 Pro as examples. Check out the specs of those devices here:

I don’t know about you, but I don’t see too many wild differences on that table.

Maybe you can better differentiate OnePlus’ smartphone lineup through pricing? Nope. In the UK, the starting price of the OnePlus 7 Pro is £649. OnePlus hasn’t revealed UK pricing for the OnePlus 7T, but we expect it to be £599 based on its confirmed US pricing ($599). We also don’t know the UK price of the OnePlus 7T Pro, but it will likely be the same £649 or possibly slightly more.

This makes things incredibly difficult for the consumer. Why spend £649 on the OnePlus 7 Pro when the OnePlus 7T offers most of the same specs for an expected £599? Why buy a OnePlus 7T Pro when the OnePlus 7 Pro will likelylook exactly the sameas the 7T Pro?

Related:OnePlus 7T vs OnePlus 7 vs OnePlus 7 Pro

Do you see what I’m getting at here? If OnePlus had one phone that retailed for £299, another that retailed for £499, and then another that retailed for £699, that would make a lot of sense. That would make the choice much easier for the consumer as they could easily judge for themselves just how much phone they can afford.

Instead, OnePlus is likely going to offer three phones with very similar names at very similar price points with very similar specs and even very similar designs. That’s very confusing.

Let’s hope OnePlus is ready to handle this responsibility

Theexpansion of the OnePlus phone lineupwas inevitable. The fractured global strategy — meaning the idea of releasing certain products in specific areas of the world while not releasing those products in other areas — was also inevitable. If OnePlus is going to grow to a global scale it needs to cater its products to specific areas of the world.

But OnePlus isn’t really doing that yet. All the phones we’re seeing this year are very similar to each other and could work well in any part of the world. There’s no phone in the OnePlus 7 series that I can look at and say, “Ah, this is the one designed for the Indian consumer,” or, “Yeah, this phone clearly is targeted at the wealthier consumer in the US.” All I see are five very similar phones that could sell pretty much anywhere.

If OnePlus is really going to do this global expansion thing, it needs to think more likeSamsung. Samsung’s Indian strategy is wildly different from its strategy here in the US. In India, theGalaxy M seriesof smartphones is what Samsung is banking on, which offer innovative designs, certain high-end specs, low prices, and you can only buy them online. Here in the US, we have the ultra-premium flagships and one or two mid-rangers you can buy from pretty much any carrier.

Just by looking at the specs sheet and pricing of theSamsung Galaxy M30and theSamsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus, you can easily tell which one goes to which market. That’s a solid strategy.

Related:OnePlus in 2020: Going to be some growing pains

That’s what OnePlus needs to do. The easiest solution would be to bring back theOnePlus Xline and sell a modern version of that to the Indian consumer. That would do incredibly well. But releasing a bunch of phones that are only slightly different from one another, staggering their releases, and only making some available in certain areas of the world is not the best idea. That confuses me, a guy who writes about smartphones for a living. I can’t imagine how much that would confuse the average smartphone buyer.

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