Xiaomi didn’t just bring a new tablet to MWC 2026 – it brought the most unapologetically “iPad Pro, but Android” device we’ve seen in years, and honestly, that might be exactly what a lot of people want right now.
On the show floor in Barcelona, the Pad 8 Pro looks instantly familiar in the best (and most obvious) way. It’s a super‑slim 11.2‑inch slab with uniform black bezels, flat metal sides, and that cool, squared‑off aesthetic you typically associate with Apple’s iPad Pro. Xiaomi has even gone as far as matching the vibe of Apple’s keyboard cases and stylus – the Xiaomi Magic Keyboard Pro Focus and the Focus Pen Pro feel like they’ve been designed to slide into the same mental slot as the Magic Keyboard and Apple Pencil, just on the Android side of the fence.
In the hand, the Pad 8 Pro feels premium and surprisingly light for its size, especially when you remember there’s a 9,200mAh battery tucked inside this 5.75mm chassis. Xiaomi’s offering both a standard metal finish and a Matte Glass version, the latter using a nano‑texture and anti‑reflective coating that cuts down on glare and sparkle while making stylus input feel closer to writing on paper than on glass. You can get it in Blue, Gray, or Pine Green globally, and all three look far more “flagship laptop accessory” than “cheap Android tablet you forget about after three weeks.”

The display is where Xiaomi really leans into the “Pro” branding. You’re looking at an 11.2‑inch 3.2K panel (3200 x 2136) with a 3:2 aspect ratio, 144Hz refresh rate, HDR10 and Dolby Vision support, and up to 800 nits of brightness. That 3:2 ratio matters more than you’d think: it’s simply nicer for split‑screen work, reading long articles, and editing documents than the wider 16:10 panels you get on many budget tablets. Scrolling through dense web pages or bouncing between apps feels smooth and immediate thanks to the high refresh rate, while color coverage (DCI‑P3 with 68 billion colors) and TÜV Rheinland certifications on blue light and flicker show Xiaomi is taking eye comfort and creator‑friendly tuning seriously.

Under the hood, this thing isn’t pretending to be mid‑range. Xiaomi is using Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite platform, a 3nm chip with an 8‑core Oryon CPU and Adreno 830 GPU – essentially smartphone flagship silicon pointed at tablet workloads. Xiaomi claims CPU performance is up by 81 percent and GPU by 103 percent generation‑over‑generation, which lines up with what early reviews describe as “laptop‑ish” snappiness for multitasking, gaming, and creative apps. You can spec the Pad 8 Pro with up to 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, with lower tiers starting at 8GB/128GB, and storage on most configurations uses fast UFS 4.1.
The interesting bit is how Xiaomi positions all that horsepower: not as a full laptop killer, but as “PC‑level productivity when you need it, tablet first when you don’t.” HyperOS 3 – Xiaomi’s Android‑based platform – is doing a lot of the heavy lifting here. The interface looks very iPad‑adjacent, from iconography to layout, but Xiaomi has layered in more computer‑like behaviors: advanced split‑screen options (including a 5:5 vertical split and a 1:9 strip mode), a beefed‑up Workstation Mode, and a PC‑style browser with right‑click actions, hover previews, and a more capable toolbar. It even ships with a WPS Office “PC edition,” so writing, building decks, and editing spreadsheets feels closer to a laptop than a blown‑up phone app.
That said, Xiaomi’s software still isn’t perfect, and it shows. HyperOS 3 can feel like a stretched smartphone OS in places, particularly when you start playing around with widgets and home screen layouts. Some elements are overly rigid and waste screen real estate, and the visual similarities to iPadOS will either comfort you or make you roll your eyes, depending on how you feel about ecosystems borrowing from each other. On the flip side, having Google Gemini baked in as the default assistant – accessible with a long‑press of the power button – gives you instant AI tools for summarising, drafting, and answering questions without the ecosystem lock‑in you’d get on Apple’s side.
The accessories are where the “mini laptop” fantasy either clicks for you or doesn’t. Xiaomi offers a couple of keyboard options: a lighter, more portable Magic Keyboard Pro and the chunkier Magic Keyboard Pro Focus, which adds a trackpad and turns the Pad 8 Pro into something that genuinely feels like an 11‑inch notebook when you dock it. The keys themselves have a decent travel and laptop‑like layout according to early hands‑on impressions, and combined with the high‑refresh screen, typing out long emails, reports, or even light coding sessions feels surprisingly natural. The Focus Pen Pro, meanwhile, snaps magnetically to the frame and supports high sampling rates (up to 240Hz) and pressure sensitivity, aimed at note‑takers, students, and casual sketchers more than hardcore illustrators.
Then there’s the camera story, which is frankly overkill for a tablet – in a good way. On the back, you get a 50MP main sensor with PDAF that can shoot up to 4K at 60fps, paired with a 32MP ultrawide selfie camera on the front for sharp video calls and content creation. It’s not about turning your tablet into your main camera, but it does mean you can jump on a client call, record a vlog, or capture a whiteboard in a meeting without looking like a blurry potato. Audio matches that ambition, with quad speakers tuned for Dolby Atmos and Hi‑Res playback; think Netflix binges, gaming, and YouTube sessions that don’t make you immediately reach for headphones.
Battery life, on paper, is one of the Pad 8 Pro’s strengths. That 9,200mAh cell, combined with a 3nm chip and smart power management in HyperOS, is rated to comfortably handle a full day of mixed work and entertainment, and likely more if you’re mostly browsing, reading, or using it as a sidecar display. When you do run low, 67W HyperCharge means you can top up dramatically faster than most tablets in this class, shrinking the “dead tablet during travel” anxiety that plagues cheaper hardware. There’s even support for reverse wired charging at 22.5W, letting the tablet act as an emergency power bank for your phone or earbuds.
Zoom out and Xiaomi’s positioning becomes clear: the Pad 8 Pro is not trying to beat the iPad Pro in raw performance or ecosystem depth, but it’s trying to get close enough on experience that Android users don’t feel like they’re compromising anymore. You get a high‑end screen, a genuinely fast chip, polished hardware, a maturing productivity‑focused OS, strong accessories, and AI‑enhanced workflows – all without locking yourself into iCloud, iMessage, or Apple‑only apps.
There are trade‑offs, of course. If you live inside pro‑grade creative apps like Final Cut, Logic, or Procreate, the iPad Pro ecosystem still runs circles around anything on Android, and the Pad 8 Pro’s “PC‑like” features are still built on top of mobile apps and browser tools. You also don’t get things like a 3.5mm headphone jack, microSD expansion, or cellular connectivity – this is very much a Wi‑Fi‑only, bring‑your‑own‑cloud‑storage type of device. But for a lot of people, especially students, freelancers, and everyday users who want one device that can handle Netflix, emails, light editing, and some side‑hustle work, that might be an acceptable compromise.
The big question is price and availability. Internationally, early listings put the Pad 8 Pro somewhere around the mid‑range tablet bracket – roughly the cost of a decent mid‑tier smartphone – with pricing expected to start in the ballpark of 340 euros for the base configuration, climbing as you add RAM, storage, and accessories. That makes it significantly cheaper than an equivalently kitted iPad Pro once you factor in the keyboard and pen, which is precisely Xiaomi’s play: offer 80–90 percent of the premium tablet experience at maybe 60–70 percent of the price.
Walking away from Xiaomi’s booth at MWC 2026, the feeling the Pad 8 Pro leaves you with is pretty simple: this is the Android tablet that finally stops apologizing for not being an iPad. It leans into familiar design, borrows the best parts of Apple’s playbook, and then layers on Android flexibility, Google Gemini, and aggressive pricing to make a very compelling “good enough for work, great for everything else” machine. If you’ve been waiting for an iPad Pro‑style experience without having to switch ecosystems, Xiaomi’s latest slab might be the one that finally gets you to take Android tablets seriously again.
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