Huawei is preparing a China-only twist on the MatePad Pro Max, and the local version looks a lot more generous than the global model. According to insider information, the Huawei MatePad Pro Max should arrive next month with more memory choices, new finishes, and even a Collector’s Edition that goes up to 20 GB of RAM.
That is the sort of spec-sheet flex that still matters in China, where premium tablets often live or die on configuration variety as much as raw performance. Huawei also appears to be nudging the price lower than the global version, which is a neat way to make the same hardware feel more exclusive and less expensive at the same time. Ambitious, sure. Confusing for everyone outside China, too.
Huawei MatePad Pro Max memory options go up to 20GB RAM
The biggest change is the memory lineup. The Chinese MatePad Pro Max is expected to come in versions with up to 16 GB of RAM and 1 TB of storage, plus a special Collector’s Edition with 20 GB of RAM. In total, Huawei is said to be preparing as many as seven RAM-and-storage combinations, which is more choice than many laptop buyers get.
- Up to 16 GB RAM
- Up to 1 TB storage
- Collector’s Edition with 20 GB RAM
- As many as seven memory configurations
Three colors and a thinner flagship pitch
Huawei is also expanding the color palette with black, gray, and white versions. Under the hood, the tablet may use either the new T93 tablet chip or Kirin 9030 paired with HarmonyOS 6.1. The company is pushing MatePad Pro Max as its thinnest flagship tablet, which is exactly the kind of claim that sounds great in a launch presentation and becomes a testing target the moment the device hits stores.
The broader pattern is familiar: Chinese launches often get extra storage tiers, special editions, and price tweaks that global buyers never see. Samsung, Xiaomi, and Apple all play variations of that game in different markets, but Huawei’s version is especially aggressive here, using configuration sprawl as a premium signal. Whether buyers care more about 20 GB of RAM or the bragging rights is almost beside the point – Huawei clearly expects both to sell.
What Huawei is signaling with the China launch
If the leak holds up, the China release is less about a new tablet and more about sharpening an already existing one for Huawei’s home market. Lower starting pricing, broader memory options, and a Collector’s Edition suggest the company wants the MatePad Pro Max to look like a prestige device first and a productivity machine second. The real question is whether the extra 20 GB option is a practical flex, or just the sort of spec that gets people talking before they compare it to the rest of the tablet aisle.

