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Xiaomi 17 Ultra is the new zoom monster at MWC 2026

Leica’s fingerprints are everywhere here, from color tuning to the wild 75–100mm optical zoom telephoto that anchors Xiaomi’s camera story.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 1, 2026, 12:32 PM EST
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Xiaomi 17 Ultra smartphone
Image: Xiaomi
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Xiaomi didn’t just quietly drop the 17 Ultra at MWC 2026 – it basically walked into Barcelona, slammed this thing on the table, and said: “Fine, if phones are cameras now, let’s go all in.” This is the most unapologetically camera-first flagship Xiaomi has built yet, and it makes almost every other “camera phone” at the show look conservative.

There was no Xiaomi 16 Ultra, in case you’re wondering if you missed a launch; the company just jumped from 15/15 Ultra to 17/17 Ultra, very likely to line up with Apple’s “17” branding and avoid looking like it’s numerically behind. The hardware story, though, is less about the number on the box and more about how aggressively Xiaomi has doubled down on imaging while still keeping the raw specs firmly in ultra–flagship territory.

In the hand, the 17 Ultra feels like a proper slab, but not the wrist-snapping brick earlier Ultras could be. At 8.29mm and around 218 grams, this is actually Xiaomi’s thinnest and lightest Ultra to date, which is impressive when you consider the size of that circular camera island on the back. The front is dominated by a 6.9‑inch LTPO OLED panel with 1.5K resolution and 120Hz refresh rate, framed by slim bezels and protected by Xiaomi’s latest Dragon Crystal Glass 3, so the first impression is “serious flagship,” not “weird camera experiment.”

Under the hood, the spec sheet is exactly what you’d expect from a 2026 Android powerhouse. Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 runs the show, paired with 16GB of RAM and either 512GB or 1TB of storage, with no microSD slot in sight. Xiaomi backs that up with a 6,000mAh “Surge” battery, 90W wired charging, and 50W wireless charging, so you’re getting all–day stamina even if you lean heavily on that telephoto, plus very fast top–ups when you do manage to drain it. There’s also a revamped cooling system with Xiaomi’s 3D Dual‑Channel IceLoop design, promising better thermals and more sustained performance for gaming and long shooting sessions.

But let’s be honest: no one is buying the 17 Ultra for its Geekbench scores. The main event is the camera stack, and it’s absurd in all the right ways. Xiaomi is running a triple rear setup co‑engineered with Leica: a 50‑megapixel main camera with a 1‑inch “Ultra Dynamic” sensor, a 50‑megapixel ultra‑wide, and a 200‑megapixel telephoto with a 75–100mm mechanical optical zoom range. On paper, that 200MP telephoto is the showpiece, but the main sensor has been reworked with LOFIC HDR tech and a large f/1.67 Leica Summilux lens, aiming for dramatically better highlight and shadow handling in night shots.

Xiaomi 17 Ultra smartphone
Image: Xiaomi

The zoom story is where Xiaomi clearly wants to flex. The 75–100mm telephoto delivers what the company calls “optical‑level zoom” up to 17.2x, and in practice, reviewers have already pushed it much further, capturing usable 100x images where you can read text on distant signs your eyes can barely make out. It’s not magic – AI is working overtime at those extremes, and you can see it in the way letters and fine edges are reconstructed – but if your idea of fun is snapping a flower across a field or zooming into building details from a rooftop, this phone will happily indulge you.

The ultra‑wide sits in a more familiar, utility role: 50 megapixels, 115‑degree field of view, and support for close‑up macro at around 5cm, giving you the usual mix of sweeping landscapes and “get the entire table in the shot” flexibility. Up front, there’s a 50‑megapixel selfie camera, because of course there is, and the whole imaging pipeline is laced with Leica color science, familiar shooting profiles, and a collection of Leica‑branded filters and modes for people who really want that slightly nostalgic, contrast‑y look.

What pushes the 17 Ultra into “camera that happens to make calls” territory are the accessories. Xiaomi is selling two Photography Kits that snap onto the phone and basically turn it into a compact camera: a smaller kit that keeps the form factor just about pocketable, and a larger, two‑part Photography Kit Pro that adds more battery, physical controls, and styling but also makes the device noticeably bulkier. They look cool, no question, and they give you extra buttons and grip, but they also underline the device’s core tension: this is a phone for people willing to trade everyday practicality for serious camera ergonomics.​

Xiaomi 17 Ultra photography kit
Image: Xiaomi

That trade‑off is also obvious in some of the design compromises. The camera bump is still huge and top‑heavy, which means the phone can feel a bit unbalanced and doesn’t play nicely with Xiaomi’s own magnetic wireless battery accessories. The battery is marginally smaller than on the regular Xiaomi 17, so if you don’t actually care about the monster zoom, the standard model arguably makes more sense as a “normal” flagship. The 17 Ultra is aimed squarely at photography enthusiasts rather than casual buyers.

If you want to lean even harder into the Leica aesthetic, Xiaomi has a surprise sidekick: the Leica Leitzphone, essentially a special variant of the 17 Ultra shown alongside it in Barcelona. It keeps most of the core hardware but wraps it in a more retro, Leica‑inspired design with extra Leica shooting modes and, crucially, a physical zoom ring around the camera bump. That ring lets you twist to zoom in and out as you would on a compact camera; it’s surprisingly precise, though you do have to watch your fingers so they don’t wander into the frame.

On the software side, Xiaomi’s latest HyperOS on top of Android 16 brings the usual mix of customization and Xiaomi’s growing AI ambitions. The company leans into “AI‑powered productivity” and computational photography here, using on‑device AI both to clean up long‑zoom shots and to accelerate features like portrait relighting, object removal, and smarter gallery search. It’s not the headline like the 200MP telephoto, but it’s an important part of how the phone gets away with such extreme zoom claims without falling completely apart in noise and artifacts.

Pricing firmly plants the 17 Ultra in the “you really need to want this” tier. In Europe, the phone starts at €1,499 for the 16GB/512GB configuration, with a pricier 1TB variant above that. The Leica Leitzphone climbs even higher at around €1,999 and will only be available in select markets, with no confirmed U.S. launch for either model as of now.

So who is the Xiaomi 17 Ultra really for, especially here at MWC, where we’re seeing thinner, smaller, more “balanced” flagships from everyone else? It’s for the person who has already bumped up against the limits of their current phone camera, who has tried 5x or 10x zoom and thought, “nice, but not quite enough.” It’s for travelers who’d love to leave the mirrorless at the hotel and still come back with tightly framed architectural details, wildlife shots, and low‑light street photos worth printing. It’s for people who don’t just post photos, but obsess over them.

For everyone else, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra might honestly feel like overkill. The regular Xiaomi 17 will give you a great display, a big battery, and capable cameras without the massive bump or the photography‑kit cosplay. But as a statement piece at MWC 2026, the Ultra does exactly what it needs to do: it shows that Xiaomi is willing to push camera hardware and zoom experiences further than most mainstream rivals, even if that means embracing a slightly niche audience. It’s more camera than phone – and Xiaomi seems perfectly okay with that.


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