iQOO’s upcoming flagship, the iQOO 16, is rumored to debut in China as soon as October – but Indian fans might be out of luck. Rising memory prices could push its retail price above ₹85,000 (around $1,030), a price tier that poses serious challenges in the Indian smartphone market. While nothing is officially confirmed, insider reports suggest an India launch could be shelved altogether.
Tipster Yogesh Brar revealed that iQOO is wary of sticker shock in India, where the brand’s previous numeric-series models have comfortably stayed below the ₹80,000 mark. Crossing ₹85,000 puts the iQOO 16 in direct competition with Samsung’s and Apple’s premium-segment devices, where consumer loyalty and brand prestige make it a much tougher sell.
The same source claims iQOO may drastically scale back its lineup in India by the second half of 2026, limiting releases to budget-friendly Z-series models only. This aligns with the company’s earlier announcement that it won’t launch any new Neo-series phones in India this year, indicating a strategic pullback rather than a one-off decision.
The iQOO Z11 seems likely to be the sole flagship candidate for India going forward. Recently spotted on Geekbench alongside the Z10 Lite, the Z11 fits iQOO’s logic: midrange and budget devices tend to shift quicker in India, especially when rising component costs pressure margins and pricing.
That said, it’s too early to write off the iQOO 16 in India. The device’s model number was registered in the IMEI database back in May, often a sign of impending multi-region launches. However, IMEI filings aren’t a guarantee – manufacturers frequently register devices months before reveal and adjust plans based on final costs and competitive pricing.
We’ll likely have more clarity by fall, when the iQOO 16 series is expected to launch officially in China. If pricing does surpass ₹85,000, iQOO will face a classic Android flagship dilemma in India: shrinking mass appeal and direct competition not just from premium Android models, but from entry-level iPhones that have steadily gained traction among aspirational consumers.
As iQOO weighs whether to bring the 16 series to India or double down on budget markets, it highlights the growing influence of component costs on smartphone pricing-and the limits of premium Android penetration in price-sensitive regions. The coming months should reveal if iQOO can recalibrate its strategy or if the ₹85,000 threshold proves a hard barrier for the brand.

