The iQOO 15T is shaping up to be the sort of phone that tries to win spec-sheet arguments before anyone has even held it. A fresh iQOO 15T leak says the upcoming handset will pair a 6.82-inch AMOLED display with 2K resolution and a 144Hz refresh rate, plus a Dimensity 9500 chip, an 8,000mAh battery, and 100W wired charging. Wireless charging, meanwhile, is apparently left off the guest list.
That combination puts the 15T squarely in the same arms race as other Chinese flagships expected this month, including the OnePlus Ace 6 Ultra and Redmi K90 Max. The interesting part is not that iQOO is chasing them; it is that the company seems determined to do it with battery capacity first and compromise later, which is exactly the sort of formula that gets attention in a market where endurance has become a selling point again.
iQOO 15T leaked specs
- 6.82-inch AMOLED display
- 2K resolution
- 144Hz refresh rate
- Dimensity 9500 chipset
- 8,000mAh battery
- 100W wired charging
- No wireless charging, according to the leak
- 200-megapixel Samsung HP5 main camera
- Metal frame
The camera story is still incomplete, which is becoming a familiar pattern in early flagship leaks: one headline-grabbing sensor gets named, and the rest of the rear array stays hidden for later. A 200-megapixel Samsung HP5 main camera is a loud number, but it does not tell us much about the final tuning, and that is usually where the real phone either earns praise or gets filed under ”nice try.”
iQOO’s next Chinese launches
The 15T is not the only device reportedly on iQOO’s short list. The company is also said to be preparing a Neo 11 series phone for China, described as an incremental upgrade over the current model, and a flagship tablet called the iQOO Pad 6 Pro. That tablet is tipped to bring a 13.2-inch LCD panel with 4K resolution, Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, 16GB of RAM, 512GB of storage, and a 13,000mAh battery with 90W charging.
If those leaks hold up, iQOO is leaning hard into a simple playbook: bigger batteries, fast charging, and top-tier chips wrapped in hardware that looks aimed at buyers who care more about performance than luxury flourishes. The only real question is whether the 15T’s missing details – especially the secondary cameras and final software polish – end up making it feel like a tuned flagship or just another aggressive spec dump with a premium price tag.

