Huawei has widened its Wi‑Fi 7+ roster again, adding new phones and tablets to the list just as the company pushes the technology beyond its usual premium stronghold. The message is pretty clear: faster wireless networking is no longer being treated like a flagship perk, and Huawei wants it across far more of its lineup.
The move matters because Huawei had previously limited the feature mostly to top-end devices. At the launch of the Enjoy 90 series, the company said all future smartphones would support Wi‑Fi 7, with the plan now stretching into the mid-range and more affordable classes as well. That is a smart way to make a spec sound less niche and more like a baseline expectation.
Which Huawei devices now support Wi‑Fi 7+
Huawei’s updated compatibility list includes the Enjoy 90 series, Pura 90 phones, and some tablets. The company says the broader goal is for practically every device in its family to support the newest wireless features, which is ambitious even by marketing standards.
- Enjoy 90 series
- Pura 90 phones
- Selected tablets

Wi‑Fi 7+ itself is Huawei’s enhanced take on Wi‑Fi 7, built around extremely high throughput. The company says it can reach up to 46 Gbit/s, with 4 times lower latency and 5 times more bandwidth than Wi‑Fi 6, while also improving reliability and reducing network congestion. Those are the sort of figures that make routers sound suddenly underdressed.
Why Huawei is pushing Wi‑Fi 7 beyond flagships
There is also a competitive angle here. As phone makers chase features that are easy to market but hard to feel in a store, wireless specs are becoming one of the few ways to separate a cheaper model from a cheaper-feeling one. If Huawei keeps extending Wi‑Fi 7 support downward, rivals will have to decide whether to match it or explain why a supposedly modern phone still ships with yesterday’s connectivity story.
The open question is execution: expanding support on paper is easy, but making sure routers, chipsets, and software actually deliver the promised experience is the part that tends to expose the fine print. If Huawei can keep the feature consistent across more of its portfolio, Wi‑Fi 7+ could stop being a headline spec and start becoming the default.

