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Introduction
Here's a Mate 10 that is less than half the price of any other Mate 10. Yet it looks similarly modern with its tall screen, and even comes with four cameras. So what's going on? Can you really get flagship-like features for a fraction of the price?

Lite is the new Mini, and that has ringed true for a few years now. If you've been following the mobile space long enough, then you probably remember Samsung's Galaxy S5 mini and its predecessors, fondly or less so. That was the phone unofficially referred to as 'the S5 for people who couldn't afford an S5'. While the Korean company has since given up on using a flagship's brand for a mid-ranger, Huawei has stepped in and carried the torch with its Lite models.
The Mate 10 Lite is the latest in that series of devices. Its name wants you to believe it's closely related to the other members of the Mate 10 family, but even a cursory comparison of specs will reveal it not to actually be the case. The branding is there just to give the Lite a better perception. What about the experience of using it, though? Is that as far removed from a Mate 10 Pro as the Mate 10 Lite's pricing?
That's what we wanted to find out in this long-term review. The Mate 10 Lite should obviously pack quite a few compromises in order to reach its price point, yet it intriguingly has more cameras than its expensive relatives. So what does it deliver if you use it for weeks on end, as your one and only day to day smartphone?
Join us over the next few pages and we'll let you know. We're going to cover a lot of ground and reveal where the compromises make sense and where they seriously impact the phone's usability. Additionally, you'll find out what we have surprisingly discovered that the Mate 10 Lite does better than most of its competitors and even some bona fide flagships.
Display
The Mate 10 Lite gets a few of the currently prevailing trends of the mobile space right, chief among which is the tall aspect ratio display. It has an 18:9 touchscreen with 1,080x2,160 resolution, and those are great specs for the price you're paying. The panel is still surrounded by obvious bezels, but they are smaller than what we're used to seeing from mid-rangers sporting the older 16:9 aspect ratio, so that's a plus. Yet trimming the bottom bezel meant the fingerprint sensor has to live on the back, a decision that is surely going to please some and annoy others.
The screen can be seen well in bright sunlight, and the automatic brightness is adequate for the most part. However, the lowest possible brightness setting still seems too high for our eyes when using the phone in pitch darkness.
That isn't helped by the fact that the device's Eye comfort setting is a bit weird compared to other blue light filter implementations we've seen. It is quite green, while solutions from competitors are more yellow, orange or red.

And when you turn it on, even in complete darkness, the perceived brightness of the screen remains exactly the same as before - that's different from what we've encountered on other phones, where when you apply the blue light filter the display seems to get every so slightly less bright too.
The Mate 10 Lite's software comes with a strange bug that will dim the screen somewhat when you enter certain apps. This doesn't move the brightness slider at all, it just happens and it's easiest to notice when the brightness isn't all the way up - so like the aforementioned yellow tint, you'll probably be annoyed by this more indoors than outdoors. Searching online for the issue has revealed that it isn't the only Huawei device with this problem, which has been going on for a while. In fact we have already received two software updates on the Mate 10 Lite since we got our review unit and the dimming in apps is still there.
It's not all apps, but you will encounter this when going into Chrome, Gmail, Medium, and even the built-in Dialer and Messaging apps, among others. YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, and Instagram aren't affected at the moment, running the latest software (B133). When you leave an app that suffers from this issue the brightness immediately goes up to the level it used to have before you entered it.

Another problem with the Mate 10 Lite's panel is an odd one that we didn't expect to encounter. It has severe contrast shifting when you're not looking at it straight-on, with the top or bottom half appearing normal while the other half would take on a rather weird, less contrasty look. This happens in all lighting conditions but it's harder to notice when you're out and about in bright natural light - it will be most obvious indoors.
All you have to do is visit a website or use an app with a white background and a lot of text (or just go into Settings), look at the phone, and then tilt it up/down somewhat. It's one of those things that are hard to unsee after you first notice it, but how disturbing it will be to you depends on your tolerance for such things.
Design, handling
The Mate 10 Lite comes with an aluminum unibody construction, which has been the most prevalent option among mid-rangers ever since plastic was relegated to only the cheapest tier of smartphones. It wears the metal well, feeling incredibly solid in the hand, and the front is covered by one continuous sheet of glass that's only interrupted by the small earpiece grille.
While it may be starting to look a little bit dated in today's world filled with glass-backed flagship devices, the design is well executed and the LED flash being placed inside the top antenna band helps make the Mate 10 Lite stand out a bit in a sea of very similarly looking competitors.
The fingerprint scanner is in a perfect position, but the dual rear camera island protrudes quite a bit and won't allow the phone to sit flat on a table when you place it on its back. Unless you slap a case on it, because then it all levels out.

The only problem with the Mate 10 Lite's design has to do with handling, and specifically the fact that it's a bit top heavy. This is by no means an issue that's only found on this device - the top-of-the-line Samsung Galaxy Note8 is even worse in this regard.
Combined with how slippery the Mate 10 Lite's sides are (thanks to the rounded aluminum used), this top-heaviness might make for some awkward handling. You can grab it from further up, of course, but then it will be quite a hassle to reach the navigation keys without adjusting your grip.
The 18:9 aspect ratio of the screen makes the Mate 10 Lite look very modern, even if it still has top and bottom bezels - the latter so spacious that it even fits the Huawei logo with some room to spare.
Huawei bundles a transparent case in the box with the Mate 10 Lite, and that helps - to make you feel better about the times you eventually drop the phone, but it also does away with the slippery feel since you aren't touching the smooth aluminum anymore.
Camera app
Before we show you an assortment of photo samples so you can judge for yourself how good the Mate 10 Lite's snaps are, let's talk about the handset's camera app.
First, starting it. This is a mixed bag, to put it nicely. If you 'cold start' it from the app drawer or home screen (meaning you haven't used it in a while so it wasn't already loaded in memory), the process can unfortunately take anywhere between 5 and 30 seconds in our experience, probably depending on what else you were doing beforehand. And sometimes it only shows a black screen even a minute in. We didn't wait past that point to see what would happen, instead opting to close it and then re-open - at which point you'll once again encounter that 5 to 30 second wait.

On the other hand, you can use the shortcut of double-tapping the volume down key to start the app when the screen is off. By default this will also capture an image once the camera app has loaded, without you needing to do anything else. When started like this, the camera app loaded in under two seconds around 90% of the time, while the maximum amount it took to open and capture a shot was 12 seconds.
If you change this behavior from the Camera app's Settings so the double-tap on the volume down key only loads the app and doesn't instantly snap a picture too, then start-up performance takes a hit, though most times it's not as long a wait as if you would use the app icon on the home screen.
The problem with Huawei choosing the volume down button for this function instead of the power key like other Android device makers is that the shortcut simply won't work when you have music playing with the screen off - in that case, all that happens is that the volume is lowered.
Anyway, if you're the type to want to very quickly capture a moment, you should probably try to always use that shortcut. Otherwise you may find you miss a lot of shots while you're waiting around for the camera app to be ready. The good news is that if you've recently used the app it will come up quicker when you go back to it, almost instantly sometimes.

In terms of resolution options for the main dual camera array, there's interestingly no 16:9 setting, you can go with the 4:3 aspect ratio (at either 16 MP or 8 MP) and live with huge black bars on the sides when viewing your images on the phone's screen, 18:9 (11 MP or 5 MP), or a square 12 MP format. The future may or may not bring 18:9 to all the things, but right now TVs are still 16:9 so viewing pictures shot with the Mate 10 Lite on one will always result in black bars being shown somewhere.
Camera samples
At this price point, it's unrealistic to expect the Mate 10 Lite to produce images that are comparable to those out of a Pixel, iPhone, or recent Samsung, LG or Huawei flagships. The Mate 10 Lite wants to woo you with the fact that it has four cameras, but two of those are only used as depth sensors to create the bokeh effect.
That said, the phone does produce some pleasant pictures when shooting in good to decent lighting conditions outside, as our samples can attest. The colors are mostly true to life, but overall we wouldn't call these anything more than decent. There could be a little more detail in there, some more dynamic range, and less noise in the shadows. HDR mode is an option but it doesn't produce shots that are much better than the normal Auto mode, so you're probably not going to bother with it too much.
Huawei Mate 10 Lite daytime photos
At night things are wont to go wrong, as the noise levels in the Mate 10 Lite's pictures are quite high. While it doesn't produce anywhere close to the worse night shots we've ever seen, this output is definitely nothing special. We suggest you try and capture images when there's at least some reasonable light around, and save yourself the frustration of seeing all that noise in low-light. The camera performance at night reminds us of where flagships were some years back, and it also serves to underscore how far the top of the line phones have come in this regard recently.
Huawei Mate 10 Lite night-time photos
Portrait Mode is there, of course, enabled for both front and rear cameras by the secondary 2 MP sensors that capture depth information. The blurring is decent, but not perfect, and as usual with fake bokeh you will achieve the best results if your subject isn't very close to the background you're trying to blur. One thing you shouldn't expect is for the Mate 10 Lite's Portrait Mode shots to be anywhere near a Pixel 2's or an iPhone X's. The functionality is there and it's passable, but nothing to write home about.

Mate 10 Lite selfie camera portraits
Generally, selfies mostly come out OK, provided that you shoot them in good enough lighting conditions. There's a Beautification mode slider that you can turn all the way up to achieve an amusing level of softness in your face, as demonstrated by the samples below.
Mate 10 Lite night-time selfies with maxed out Beauty mode
Software
The Mate 10 Lite runs Android 7.0 Nougat with Huawei's EMUI 5.1 on top, despite launching pretty much at the same time as the Mate 10 and Mate 10 Pro, which have Android 8.0 Oreo and EMUI 8.0 on board. This is one of the differences you'll have to live with, unless Huawei ever decides to grace the cheapest member of the Mate 10 family with the latest tasty treat.
We'd call this yet another cost-cutting measure meant to enable the Mate 10 Lite to reach its price point, but we're not sure that would be accurate. It may just have been a matter of prioritizing development of EMUI 8 for the flagships, but as Huawei is a huge corporation we're baffled as to why it wasn't able to find more software developers to work on that for the mid-range Mate 10 Lite as well.

To consider EMUI 5.1 iOS-inspired would definitely be an understatement. The skin is heavy and you're not likely to recognize Google's vision for Android underneath it unless you specifically go looking for the smallest of things. The entire Settings menu has an iOS feel to it, and the Share function seems to have been deliberately made worse in terms of usability just to remind you of Apple's software. Oh, and by default there is no app drawer, with all of your apps being laid out on the home screens themselves - sound familiar?
All of this 'inspiration' from that other popular mobile operating system is paired with neon blue quick settings icons that take us back to a time when Google loved that color scheme too. It was introduced in Android Honeycomb, perfected in Ice Cream Sandwich and Jelly Bean, and altogether forgotten starting with Lollipop. Huawei's quick settings panel might thus instill you with some fond (or otherwise) memories of days gone by.
EMUI: Settings • Share sheet • Quick settings panel
The software's design is a matter of personal preference, of course. You may or may not like what EMUI looks like, or you might decide to live with it in spite of its looks. It comes with some interesting features and loads of gimmicks too. In the former category let's put the optional heavy restrictions for what apps can do in the background and the built-in screenshot editor (which is only making it to Google's iteration of the OS with Android P). There are a bunch of Huawei apps either alongside Google's or replacing them.
The Chinese company doesn't have its own app store like Samsung, but you will get its Calendar, Clock, Calculator, Contacts, Dialer, Gallery, Messaging, and Email apps, for example. A handy file manager is included too. There are also some preinstalled games such as Asphalt Nitro, Kingdoms, and Spider-Man: Ultimate Power, alongside the Quik video app. How annoyed you'll be by these depends on how useful you find each one, of course. Generally speaking, though, we prefer not to see bloatware at all on a smartphone, but let's not to get into the whole "what is bloatware" discussion that leads some people to say that even Google's apps count as such.
EMUI on the Mate 10 Lite is as far from a stock Android experience as you can get nowadays, which is definitely something to keep in mind if you're considering this as your next smartphone. The Xiaomi Mi A1 is cheaper and delivers an Android purist's dream in terms of software, so that's a better fit if having the OS 'as Google intended' is high on your priorities list and you don't mind some downgraded specs. If you don't care about that, EMUI brings you plenty of customization options, including built-in theming with an associated theme store.

It also seems to give you a much better idea of what's going on in the background at all times, including which apps are draining your battery more than others. These "Power-intensive apps" are listed in a special section of the Battery settings, and you can choose to let them keep the phone awake or close them. There's also the option to close all apps when the screen locks, or just a subset.
Updates
While we haven't seen Oreo yet on our review unit, we have received two software updates already, the latest one coming with the February 1, 2018 security patch level. That's just one month behind what's current, and unfortunately not many mid-rangers can boast even this level of security fixes, so props to Huawei here for doing a slightly better job than others. We're hoping for improvements in this area in the future, but not holding our breath.
Latest software as of mid-March 2018
Bugs
No piece of software is bug-free, and EMUI on the Mate 10 Lite is no different. We've encountered around one random reboot every week, and there are times when the Camera app simply refuses to start from the home screen or app drawer - showing a black screen for a minute or two before we give up and try to go back. That brings us to the fact that when an app or the system misbehaves in any way, everything else will usually slow down to a crawl.
Going back to the home screen or trying to invoke the multitasking menu when the camera app bugs out sometimes takes 30 seconds or so from when we tap the corresponding button in the navigation bar and until the desired thing actually happens. General slowdowns are covered more on the next page of this review.
Additionally, at random times the recent apps menu takes around 2-3 seconds to come up, even if there's theoretically nothing intensive going on in the background, and that doesn't make for very smooth multitasking.
Performance
The Mate 10 Lite is a rather affordable mid-ranger, so it goes without saying that its performance will never match the flagships, including the Mate 10 and Mate 10 Pro. In general use, the phone is reasonably fluid, but even from the moment you set it up it does feel slower than the top of the line options.
While that's quite easy to get used to, especially if you don't have another phone around that happens to be a flagship from the last couple of years, the problem with the Mate 10 Lite's performance is consistency.
At the best of times it will give you 90% of the perceived speed and 'smoothness' of a Huawei P10, for example.
But at any point those times may be abruptly ended by a wave of stutters, or even worse - a freeze. The former are easiest to accomplish if you update an app in the Play Store and then try and do anything else at the same time. And if you want to freeze the Mate 10 Lite for at least a couple of seconds, add some Bluetooth music streaming on top of that. In such a scenario, we've had everything from a 2-4 second freeze to a one minute period in which the device simply stopped responding to our touches.

Something like this would have been unforgivable for a flagship in this day and age, but the Mate 10 Lite isn't that despite what its name wants to make you think. So we're giving it a bit of a pass here, but not entirely - we understand the need to hit a specific price point comes with compromises in all aspects of a product, but we would have appreciated it if the Mate 10 Lite was more resilient. Two of the three animation duration settings are 0.5x by default to aid in perceived UI speed (the Android defaults are 1x for all). If you enjoy this 'tweak', you can go even further by disabling animations entirely by activating the Developer Options and digging in there.
Huawei uses the Kirin 659 chipset in a bunch of devices, and it seems to be its only mid-range SoC at the moment. It's a shame that the company didn't choose something like the Snapdragon 660 for the Mate 10 Lite, instead preferring to keep things in-house. With that chipset and an optimized software stack on top, we assume the phone would have had none of these issues, or they would have shown up only in the rarest of occasions under very specific circumstances. That would also have made it much more worthy of carrying the Mate 10 name.
As it is, the handset forces you to constantly consider how to best go about doing things without crossing the threshold of what it can handle. To an extent that's true of all midrangers of course, yet we can't help but feel things could have gone better for the Mate 10 Lite on this front - maybe with another chipset, or who knows, perhaps only with more optimized software. It doesn't seem to be able to do a lot of things at once, and this is going to possibly require some adjusting on the part of your usage. If you're updating apps, let that finish before you jump into doing anything else if you want to have a smooth experience - things like that.
Battery life
While some mid-range smartphones do ship with bigger batteries, the Mate 10 Lite's 3,340 mAh cell isn't small by any definition of that term. And yet we were not very impressed with the battery life we managed to get out of it. It's definitely not a record-breaker in this regard, not even close.
What's more, we've seen some pretty erratic battery life unfortunately, for which we haven't been able to pinpoint the culprit(s) despite EMUI having a pretty detailed Battery section in Settings.
Standby battery life seems to take a pretty big hit when the handset isn't connected to Wi-Fi but only to 4G, and streaming music via Bluetooth appears to consume much more than it does on devices using other chipsets. The same goes for GPS positioning, which takes quite a toll on the Mate 10 Lite, with the battery level dropping fast if you're navigating somewhere.
Our Screen-On time record is five hours before we hit 3% left in a usual 16-hour day, during which the phone was mostly connected to Wi-Fi, with a couple of hours of 4G connectivity, an hour of phone calls, and about one hour of music streaming via Bluetooth.
We have also seen as little as three hours of screen on time if we used 4G for 3-4 hours and streamed music for 2-3 hours, so your mileage may obviously vary, and possibly by a lot. That's always how things go when talking about battery stats.
Praiseworthy aspects
Huawei's Phone Clone system for transferring your data from your older smartphone works very well, no cables required. You're offered the option to use it when you first set up your Mate 10 Lite, but you can also come back to it at any time through Settings > Advanced settings > Data transfer.
This system creates a Wi-Fi hotspot on the Mate 10 Lite, which you then connect to with your previous device through the Phone Clone app that you can download onto that from the Play Store. Since Wi-Fi is used, the transfer shouldn't take too long, but that's obviously dependent on how much stuff you want carried over. Before you start the process, you will get a (pretty accurate) estimate of how much time it will take along with how much space your transferred items will use.

You can choose to transfer everything over, or just a subset of things. It's a very flexible system that allows you to fine tune exactly what you need. If you use Google Photos for backing up your snaps, for example, there's no point in transferring any of your images through Phone Clone because they're already in Google's cloud. Once the process completes, you may see an error as we did - but if you just ignore it you'll notice that the error itself is a bug, as everything you selected did actually make the jump.
The Mate 10 Lite has managed to auto-reconnect to every Bluetooth device we've paired it with, every single time without any issue. We're talking earbuds, various speakers, and even car systems. This is commendable since we have unfortunately found that Bluetooth on Android can be a mess from this point of view, and it's extremely satisfying to find that everything just works as it should on this phone when it comes to using Bluetooth accessories. There are still flagship Android handsets that struggle with this seemingly simple process (Pixels and Note8 included), so it's quite impressive that a mid-ranger gets things so right in this regard.
With tall 18:9 screens becoming the norm even for non-flagship devices, pulling down the notification pane with your thumb without having to adjust your grip of the phone is increasingly difficult in this day and age. But on the Mate 10 Lite there's an easy solution to this problem - you can add a fourth navigation button that when pressed will do just that, bring down the notification area. It can be enabled through Settings > Navigation key and will show up in the rightmost position on the navigation bar.
It's one of those simple things that we'll definitely miss when we switch to a phone that doesn't have this functionality. Huawei isn't the only company that has such an option for personalizing the navigation buttons, but we're disappointed that this still isn't a feature on every Android smartphone there is, especially those with tall displays. It's just a boon for day-to-day usability. Note that you can also bring down the notification area with a swipe from top to bottom on the fingerprint sensor, but oftentimes the dedicated navigation key is more handy.
Speaking of the fingerprint scanner, it is fast and accurate. We've only had it not recognize our prints twice out of hundreds of unlocking attempts. It's reliable and another one of those things that 'just works' and isn't likely to frustrate you at all, ever.

We've grown to like the "Power-intensive app found" notification that you'll get from time to time, alerting you that something may have gone wrong with a certain application. It seems to show up only after a specific app has been feasting on your battery's milliamp hours for quite a bit, and you then have the option to ignore or close the offending app.
We have seen it amusingly come up after an hour or two of playing music through Deezer, for example, which is funny because a music streaming app that streams music in the background isn't doing anything shady, just what it was intended to. Even so, this notification's usefulness outweighs such hiccups. It's a great way to ensure that a rogue app won't completely drain your battery halfway through the day.
We found the "Wi-Fi+" setting very useful in day to day use, as it works very reliably. It turns Wi-Fi on automatically when you're near a known network, and turns it off after such networks are no longer in range. This feels like it may aid battery life, not allowing Wi-Fi to be on all the time. Wi-Fi+ also constantly evaluates how good the Wi-Fi network you're connected to is, and will auto-switch to mobile data when that will provide you with a better connection. Additionally, it suspends auto-connect for saved networks that don't have Internet access.
Finally, we're quite pleased with what you get for the price when you buy a Mate 10 Lite. This is obviously not a flagship, but purchasing one will make you a member of the still rather exclusive 'tall screen' club, also bringing you dual rear and front cameras, a great metal build, and decent overall performance too - when you don't push it too much. Mid-rangers at this price point have definitely come a long way in recent times.
Annoyances
We've covered our major frustrations with the Mate 10 Lite in the other sections of this review, where appropriate, but here are a few smaller things that didn't quite sit right with us.
The Mate 10 Lite doesn't support 5 GHz Wi-Fi, you're stuck with 2.4 GHz. It's not the only mid-range handset to come with this limitation, but it is something you will definitely need to keep in mind if you live in an apartment building where there are many networks on the 2.4 GHz band. In that case interference is a common issue, which means speeds and performance will suffer. Since you're at most using Wi-Fi 802.11n anyhow, the theoretical maximum top speed you can accomplish isn't that high to begin with.
To give you an idea of what to expect, in such an apartment building with around a dozen or so Wi-Fi networks visible at the same time, a speed test in the same room with the router may result in only 10-15Mbps for both downloads and uploads at peak times (generally in the evening). At other points we did manage to hit 40Mbps down and 35Mbps up. That's a far cry from anything that could be achieved with 802.11n on 5 GHz, not to mention 802.11ac, but it's probably still fine for most activities. Note that when walls come between the router and the phone speeds may be reduced even further.

Google's Smart Lock lets you choose to keep your device unlocked at certain locations, such as your home, but the Mate 10 Lite simply doesn't have this feature at all. Huawei has a Smart unlock of its own, but this only works when you're connected to specific Bluetooth devices.
Conclusion
The Mate 10 Lite is a Mate 10 in name only. Despite what Huawei's marketing would have you think, this phone has nothing in common with the Mate 10 and Mate 10 Pro other than the amount of RAM inside. The company has been using the 'Lite' trick for a few years now and it seems to have worked well, sales-wise, so far. We do however hope that no one buying a Mate 10 Lite will do that simply to boast that they have a "Mate 10", because the keyword in its name is "Lite".
It does come with a Lite price, compared to its siblings. But it also boasts Lite performance and lower-end specs. In the end whether you go for a Mate 10 Lite or not depends on whether you're willing to live with its issues and compromises for the sake of enjoying the big screen. We've tried to list everything we've encountered on this front while we've used it as our one and only smartphone, to make sure you have all the information before you decide if it's for you.
Coming to the Mate 10 Lite from a flagship smartphone of any brand, unlikely as that may be as a course of action, will leave you quite frustrated. Living with it isn't all smooth sailing, you will encounter various hiccups, slowdowns, and stutters throughout the day if you use it extensively and multitask a lot. From time to time you might even manage to make it come to a complete standstill, frozen for a minute or two before things go back to normal. This all depends on your usage and how much of a so called 'power user' you are.

Huawei's UI overlay that is built into the Mate 10 Lite on top of Android 7.0 will prove to be annoying to those who love a software experience as pure as Google could possibly make it. That doesn't mean EMUI doesn't have its strengths, though - they're just wrapped in a design that seems to have come straight from an iPhone, with some neon blue accents sprinkled on top for good measure.
If this is your first smartphone or if you're coming from a lower-end model, then the Mate 10 Lite will be more impressive. It has a lot of features and customization options, most of which you simply don't get with stock Android. You also have millions of apps in the Play Store waiting for you to try them. The phone comes with good cameras for the price point, though it's probably best if you ignore Huawei's 'more is better' way of marketing them - the two secondary 2 MP sensors are there to capture depth information only and won't apply any magic tricks to the normal photos you take.
If you don't mind the way EMUI looks, then performance is really the Mate 10 Lite's only obvious weak point, and even that doesn't present itself all the time. It's the main compromise you will have to live with when you pick this device over others. Yet provided that you're very careful about how many things you throw at the phone at once you will be able to alleviate this issue somewhat.
In the end, 'you get what you pay for' is true for smartphones in this day and age as a general rule. There are exceptions, but the Mate 10 Lite isn't one of them. Life with it won't be entirely niggle-free, but if your tolerance is pretty high it will make for a good companion.
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