Honor MagicPad 3
Lenovo Idea Tab Pro

Honor MagicPad 3 Lenovo Idea Tab Pro

Overview

Welcome to our in-depth spec comparison between the Honor MagicPad 3 and the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro — two capable Android tablets targeting demanding users. We examine the key battlegrounds that matter most: raw processing performance, display quality, battery endurance, audio capabilities, and everyday connectivity. Read on to discover which of these two tablets best fits your needs.

Common Features

  • Neither product has a detachable keyboard.
  • Neither product has a backlit keyboard.
  • Neither product offers water resistance.
  • Neither product has tilt sensitivity.
  • Neither product has branded damage-resistant glass.
  • Both products have a touch screen.
  • Neither product has a sapphire glass display.
  • Neither product supports HDR10+.
  • Neither product supports Dolby Vision.
  • Neither product has an e-paper display.
  • Both products use a 4 nm semiconductor.
  • Both products support 64-bit processing.
  • Both products use big.LITTLE technology.
  • Both products support DirectX 12.
  • Both products have integrated graphics.
  • Both products have 1 MB of L2 cache.
  • Both products have 8 CPU threads.
  • Both products have TrustZone support.
  • Both products have a flash.
  • Both products have a front camera.
  • Both products have a built-in HDR mode.
  • Neither product can create panoramas in-camera.
  • Both products have touch autofocus.
  • Neither product has an optical zoom.
  • Neither product has a BSI sensor.
  • Both products have manual white balance.
  • Neither product has LDAC.
  • Neither product has aptX Low Latency.
  • Neither product has aptX Lossless.
  • Both products have stereo speakers.
  • Neither product has a 3.5 mm audio jack.
  • Neither product has a radio.
  • Both products support fast charging.
  • Neither product has wireless charging.
  • Both products have a battery level indicator.
  • Both products have a rechargeable battery.
  • Neither product has a removable battery.
  • Neither product has Mail Privacy Protection.
  • Both products have on-device machine learning.
  • Both products have clipboard warnings.
  • Both products have location privacy options.
  • Both products have camera and microphone privacy options.
  • Both products can block app tracking.
  • Neither product blocks cross-site tracking.
  • Both products support split screen.
  • Both products use DDR5 memory.

Main Differences

  • Weight is 595 g on Honor MagicPad 3 and 620 g on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Thickness is 5.8 mm on Honor MagicPad 3 and 6.9 mm on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Width is 293.9 mm on Honor MagicPad 3 and 291.18 mm on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Height is 201.4 mm on Honor MagicPad 3 and 189.1 mm on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Volume is 343.31 cm³ on Honor MagicPad 3 and 379.93 cm³ on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • A stylus is included with Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not with Honor MagicPad 3.
  • Screen size is 13.3″ on Honor MagicPad 3 and 12.7″ on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Resolution is 3200 x 2136 px on Honor MagicPad 3 and 2944 x 1840 px on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Pixel density is 289 ppi on Honor MagicPad 3 and 273 ppi on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Refresh rate is 165 Hz on Honor MagicPad 3 and 144 Hz on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • HDR10 support is present on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not available on Honor MagicPad 3.
  • Internal storage is 1024 GB on Honor MagicPad 3 and 256 GB on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • RAM is 16 GB on Honor MagicPad 3 and 8 GB on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • The chipset is Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 on Honor MagicPad 3 and MediaTek Dimensity 8300 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • The GPU is Adreno 750 on Honor MagicPad 3 and Mali G615 MP6 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Geekbench 6 multi-core score is 7325 on Honor MagicPad 3 and 4610 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Geekbench 6 single-core score is 2213 on Honor MagicPad 3 and 1485 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • An external memory slot is available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not on Honor MagicPad 3.
  • GPU clock speed is 900 MHz on Honor MagicPad 3 and 1400 MHz on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • RAM speed is 4800 MHz on Honor MagicPad 3 and 8533 MHz on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Android version is Android 15 on Honor MagicPad 3 and Android 14 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Thermal Design Power is 12.5 W on Honor MagicPad 3 and 6 W on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • The main camera is 13 MP and 2 MP (dual) on Honor MagicPad 3 and 13 MP (single) on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Front camera resolution is 9 MP on Honor MagicPad 3 and 8 MP on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Slow-motion video recording is supported on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not on Honor MagicPad 3.
  • aptX support is present on Honor MagicPad 3 but not available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • aptX HD support is present on Honor MagicPad 3 but not available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • aptX Adaptive support is present on Honor MagicPad 3 but not available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Battery capacity is 12450 mAh on Honor MagicPad 3 and 10200 mAh on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) is supported on Honor MagicPad 3, while Lenovo Idea Tab Pro supports Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax) instead.
  • App offloading is available on Honor MagicPad 3 but not on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • GPS is available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not on Honor MagicPad 3.
  • Bluetooth version is 5.4 on Honor MagicPad 3 and 5.3 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Download speed is 10000 Mbit/s on Honor MagicPad 3 and 7900 Mbit/s on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Upload speed is 3500 Mbit/s on Honor MagicPad 3 and 4200 Mbit/s on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • A compass is available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not on Honor MagicPad 3.
Specs Comparison
Honor MagicPad 3

Honor MagicPad 3

Lenovo Idea Tab Pro

Lenovo Idea Tab Pro

Design:
weight 595 g 620 g
thickness 5.8 mm 6.9 mm
width 293.9 mm 291.18 mm
height 201.4 mm 189.1 mm
volume 343.310468 cm³ 379.9287522 cm³
Stylus included
Has a detachable keyboard
Has a backlit keyboard
water resistance None None
Has tilt sensitivity

In terms of physical form factor, the Honor MagicPad 3 holds a clear structural advantage. It is notably slimmer at 5.8 mm versus 6.9 mm, lighter at 595 g versus 620 g, and occupies less overall volume (343.3 cm³ vs 379.9 cm³). In practice, that 25 g weight difference and 1.1 mm slimmer profile may seem marginal on paper, but during extended handheld use or when slipping the tablet into a bag, the MagicPad 3 will feel meaningfully more portable and less bulky. The Idea Tab Pro is taller in height but narrower, giving it a slightly different aspect ratio that may suit some content formats differently, though neither dimension is dramatically larger.

The single most impactful design differentiator, however, works in the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro's favor: it ships with a stylus included. This is a significant value consideration — a bundled stylus means the tablet is immediately ready for note-taking, sketching, or annotation workflows out of the box, with no additional purchase required. The MagicPad 3 includes no such accessory. Both tablets lack a detachable keyboard, backlit keyboard, water resistance, and tilt sensitivity, so those dimensions are a complete tie.

Overall, the two tablets trade blows in design: the MagicPad 3 has the edge in portability and build elegance with its slimmer, lighter chassis, while the Idea Tab Pro counters with the practical advantage of a bundled stylus. Which advantage matters more depends entirely on the user's priorities — those valuing a sleeker, more travel-friendly device will prefer the MagicPad 3, while users who intend to use a stylus regularly will find the Idea Tab Pro the more complete out-of-box package.

Display:
screen size 13.3" 12.7"
resolution 3200 x 2136 px 2944 x 1840 px
pixel density 289 ppi 273 ppi
Display type IPS, LCD LCD, IPS
refresh rate 165Hz 144Hz
has branded damage-resistant glass
supports HDR10
has a touch screen
Has sapphire glass display
supports HDR10+
supports Dolby Vision
Has an e-paper display

The Honor MagicPad 3 leads on raw screen real estate and sharpness. Its 13.3″ panel versus the Idea Tab Pro's 12.7″ means noticeably more usable workspace — particularly valuable for split-screen multitasking, document editing, or media consumption. The resolution advantage follows suit: 3200 x 2136 px at 289 ppi against 2944 x 1840 px at 273 ppi. While both densities are comfortably sharp for a tablet, the MagicPad 3's higher pixel count translates to crisper text rendering and finer detail in images — a difference most users will perceive when reading or working close to the screen.

Where the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro pushes back is in HDR support. It is the only one of the two to support HDR10, meaning it can display a wider range of brightness and color when streaming HDR-mastered content from compatible platforms. The MagicPad 3 supports neither HDR10 nor any other HDR standard, which is a meaningful gap for users who prioritize video quality. That said, the MagicPad 3 counters with a faster 165Hz refresh rate compared to the Idea Tab Pro's 144Hz — a tangible benefit for scrolling smoothness and any interactive or gaming use cases, where higher refresh rates reduce motion blur and improve responsiveness.

On balance, neither tablet dominates outright. The MagicPad 3 holds the edge for users who prioritize screen size, pixel sharpness, and fluid motion, while the Idea Tab Pro's HDR10 certification gives it an advantage specifically for high-dynamic-range video playback. Both share identical panel technology (IPS LCD) with no damage-resistant glass, so the decision here comes down to use case: content creators and multitaskers will favor the MagicPad 3, while media-focused users streaming HDR content may lean toward the Idea Tab Pro.

Performance:
internal storage 1024GB 256GB
RAM 16GB 8GB
Chipset (SoC) name Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 MediaTek Dimensity 8300
GPU name Adreno 750 Mali G615 MP6
CPU speed 3 x 3.15 & 2 x 2.96 & 2 x 2.26 & 1 x 3.3 GHz 1 x 3.35 & 3 x 3 & 4 x 2.2 GHz
Geekbench 6 result (multi) 7325 4610
Geekbench 6 result (single) 2213 1485
has an external memory slot
semiconductor size 4 nm 4 nm
Supports 64-bit
Uses big.LITTLE technology
DirectX version DirectX 12 DirectX 12
Has integrated graphics
GPU clock speed 900 MHz 1400 MHz
L2 cache 1 MB 1 MB
CPU threads 8 threads 8 threads
RAM speed 4800 MHz 8533 MHz
Has TrustZone
maximum memory amount 24GB 24GB
Android version Android 15 Android 14
Thermal Design Power (TDP) 12.5W 6W
Uses HMP
L3 cache 12 MB 4 MB
maximum memory bandwidth 76.6 GB/s 68.2 GB/s
memory channels 2 4
OpenCL version 2 2

The chipset gap here is substantial. The Honor MagicPad 3 runs on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, a flagship-tier SoC, while the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro uses the MediaTek Dimensity 8300, a strong mid-to-upper-range chip. The Geekbench 6 scores make the performance delta concrete: the MagicPad 3 posts 2213 single-core and 7325 multi-core results, versus 1485 and 4610 respectively for the Idea Tab Pro. That is roughly a 49% single-core and 59% multi-core advantage — differences that manifest as faster app launches, snappier UI responsiveness, and significantly more headroom for demanding workloads like video editing, AI-assisted features, or sustained gaming sessions.

The RAM and storage disparity reinforces that gap even further. The MagicPad 3 ships with 16 GB of RAM and a massive 1 TB of internal storage, compared to just 8 GB RAM and 256 GB storage on the Idea Tab Pro. More RAM means more apps can remain active in the background simultaneously without being force-closed, which is critical for multitasking-heavy use. The Idea Tab Pro does partially compensate with a microSD card slot for expandable storage — something the MagicPad 3 lacks entirely — but it cannot close the RAM gap through hardware expansion. One nuance worth noting: the Idea Tab Pro's RAM runs at a faster 8533 MHz versus 4800 MHz on the MagicPad 3, and uses more memory channels (4 vs 2), which improves memory bandwidth efficiency. However, the MagicPad 3's higher raw bandwidth (76.6 GB/s vs 68.2 GB/s) and much larger 12 MB L3 cache (versus 4 MB) mean the Snapdragon platform still handles data-intensive tasks more fluidly overall.

The MagicPad 3 holds a commanding and clear advantage in performance across virtually every meaningful metric — processor throughput, memory capacity, and storage. The Idea Tab Pro's expandable storage and higher RAM clock speed are practical consolations, but they do not shift the overall balance. Users who demand peak processing power, heavy multitasking, or future-proof headroom will find the MagicPad 3 in a different league here.

Cameras:
megapixels (main camera) 13 & 2 MP 13 MP
megapixels (front camera) 9MP 8MP
has a flash
has a front camera
has a built-in HDR mode
can create panoramas in-camera
supports slow-motion video recording
has touch autofocus
optical zoom 0x 0x
has a BSI sensor
has manual white balance
has a CMOS sensor
supports HDR10 recording
has continuous autofocus when recording movies
supports Dolby Vision recording
Has a front-facing LED flash
number of flash LEDs 1 1
has manual ISO
has a video light
Shoots 360° panorama
has a serial shot mode
has built-in optical image stabilization
has 3D photo/video recording capabilities
Has a dual-tone LED flash
has manual focus
Has a RGB LED flash
has manual exposure
has manual shutter speed

Camera systems on tablets are rarely a primary selling point, and these two are no exception — but there are a few meaningful distinctions worth examining. The Honor MagicPad 3 features a dual rear camera setup (13 MP + 2 MP), while the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro relies on a single 13 MP rear shooter. That secondary 2 MP sensor on the MagicPad 3 typically serves as a depth assistant for portrait-mode shots, which marginally expands its computational photography capabilities. On the front, the MagicPad 3 also edges ahead with a 9 MP selfie camera versus the Idea Tab Pro's 8 MP — a minor but real difference for video calls, which represent the primary front-camera use case on tablets.

The Idea Tab Pro, however, holds one exclusive feature: slow-motion video recording. The MagicPad 3 does not support this mode at all. For users who occasionally want to capture slow-motion clips — whether for content creation or simply for fun — this gives the Idea Tab Pro a unique capability that cannot be replicated on the MagicPad 3. Beyond this, the two tablets are remarkably alike in their camera feature sets: both offer manual controls (ISO, white balance, exposure, focus), touch autofocus, continuous autofocus during video, HDR photo mode, and a video light, with neither supporting optical zoom, OIS, or advanced HDR video formats.

Overall, the camera category is essentially a wash with two narrow trade-offs. The MagicPad 3 has a slight edge in hardware — a dual rear system and marginally higher front resolution — while the Idea Tab Pro counters with slow-motion video as its sole exclusive capability. Neither device is positioned as a camera-centric tablet, and neither pulls far enough ahead to claim a decisive overall win in this category.

Audio:
has aptX
has aptX HD
has LDAC
has aptX Low Latency
has aptX Adaptive
has aptX Lossless
has stereo speakers
has a socket for a 3.5 mm audio jack
Has a radio

Wired audio is a non-starter on both tablets — neither the Honor MagicPad 3 nor the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro includes a 3.5 mm headphone jack, so wireless listening is the default path for both. For speaker output, the two are evenly matched, with stereo configurations on each side. The meaningful separation happens in Bluetooth audio codec support, where the MagicPad 3 pulls significantly ahead.

The MagicPad 3 supports aptX, aptX HD, and aptX Adaptive — a suite of Qualcomm's high-quality wireless audio codecs. AptX HD enables lossless-quality audio transmission over Bluetooth at higher bitrates than standard SBC, while aptX Adaptive is the most advanced of the three, dynamically adjusting bitrate between 276 kbps and 420 kbps (or higher) to balance audio quality and latency based on connection conditions. The Idea Tab Pro, by contrast, supports none of these codecs — it is limited to baseline Bluetooth audio, which typically means SBC or AAC depending on the connected headphones. For users pairing premium wireless headphones that support aptX HD or aptX Adaptive, the MagicPad 3 will deliver noticeably richer, higher-fidelity sound.

The MagicPad 3 has a clear and unambiguous advantage in this category. While both tablets are evenly matched on speaker hardware and equally lack a headphone jack, the MagicPad 3's codec support stack makes it the substantially stronger choice for anyone serious about wireless audio quality.

Battery:
battery power 12450 mAh 10200 mAh
Supports fast charging
has wireless charging
has a battery level indicator
has a rechargeable battery
has a removable battery

Battery capacity is where the Honor MagicPad 3 establishes another decisive lead. Its 12,450 mAh cell is roughly 22% larger than the 10,200 mAh unit inside the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro — a gap significant enough to translate into real, perceptible differences in daily endurance. All else being equal, a larger battery means more hours of screen-on time before needing to reach for a charger, which matters considerably for users who rely on their tablet through long work sessions, travel, or classroom use without guaranteed access to an outlet.

It is worth contextualizing that advantage against the performance data from earlier: the MagicPad 3's Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 carries a 12.5W TDP versus the Idea Tab Pro's 6W, meaning the more powerful chip draws more power under load. Even accounting for that higher consumption, the MagicPad 3's battery lead is large enough that it is likely to maintain a real-world endurance advantage in typical mixed-use scenarios. Both tablets support fast charging and share identical constraints — no wireless charging, no removable battery — so the charging ecosystem is a complete tie.

The MagicPad 3 wins this category cleanly. A 2,250 mAh capacity advantage is not a marginal rounding difference; it represents a meaningful buffer that should translate to longer unplugged usage in practice. For users who prioritize all-day or multi-day battery life, the MagicPad 3 is the stronger choice on paper.

Connectivity & Features:
release date July 2025 March 2025
Wi-Fi version Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax), Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax)
has Mail Privacy Protection
has on-device machine learning
has clipboard warnings
has location privacy options
has camera/microphone privacy options
can block app tracking
blocks cross-site tracking
supports split screen
has Live Text
has notification permissions
has full-page screenshots
has Quick Start
has theme customization
has Wi-Fi password sharing
has PiP
Can play games while they download
has an extra dim mode
can offload apps
has focus modes
has media picker
has dynamic theming
has dark mode
has battery health check
Has USB Type-C
has a cellular module
has 5G support
is a multi-user system
gets direct OS updates
has GPS
has a child lock
has an HDMI output
has NFC
Has a fingerprint scanner
USB version 3.2 3.2
Supports widgets
Bluetooth version 5.4 5.3
download speed 10000 MBits/s 7900 MBits/s
has a gyroscope
Is free and open source
Has offline voice recognition
has a compass
upload speed 3500 MBits/s 4200 MBits/s
supports Wi-Fi
Has sharing intents
Has customizable notifications
Uses 3D facial recognition
supports Galileo
Has a barometer
has an accelerometer
has voice commands
Has an iris scanner
Has a built-in projector
supports Ethernet
Has an infrared sensor
Tracks the current position of a mobile device

Wireless connectivity is where the two tablets diverge most sharply. The Honor MagicPad 3 supports Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be), the latest generation standard, while the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro tops out at Wi-Fi 6E. Wi-Fi 7 brings substantially higher theoretical throughput — reflected in the MagicPad 3's peak download speed of 10,000 Mbits/s versus 7,900 Mbits/s on the Idea Tab Pro — along with lower latency and better performance in congested multi-device environments. For most home users today, the real-world difference depends on having a Wi-Fi 7 router, but as network infrastructure upgrades, the MagicPad 3 is simply more future-proof. Bluetooth tells a similar story: version 5.4 on the MagicPad 3 versus 5.3 on the Idea Tab Pro, a minor but forward-looking edge.

The Idea Tab Pro counters with dedicated GPS and compass support — hardware the MagicPad 3 entirely lacks. While location tracking is listed as available on both, the MagicPad 3 appears to rely on network-based positioning rather than true satellite GPS. For a Wi-Fi-only tablet used primarily indoors, this distinction rarely matters, but it becomes relevant for navigation, mapping, or field use scenarios where satellite positioning is more accurate. The Idea Tab Pro also posts a slightly higher upload speed at 4,200 Mbits/s versus 3,500 Mbits/s, a modest advantage for users regularly pushing large files to the cloud. One small software edge goes to the MagicPad 3, which supports app offloading to free up storage without fully uninstalling — a feature absent on the Idea Tab Pro.

Across the rest of this feature set — split-screen, PiP, dark mode, privacy controls, sensors like gyroscope and accelerometer — the two tablets are functionally identical. On balance, the MagicPad 3 holds the broader connectivity advantage thanks to Wi-Fi 7, while the Idea Tab Pro's GPS and compass make it more capable for location-aware use cases. Users prioritizing cutting-edge wireless performance will lean toward the MagicPad 3; those needing reliable navigation hardware will find the Idea Tab Pro better equipped.

Miscellaneous:
DDR memory version 5 5

This category contains a single shared data point: both the Honor MagicPad 3 and the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro use DDR5 memory. DDR5 is the current-generation RAM standard, offering higher bandwidth and improved power efficiency compared to DDR4 — benefits that support faster data throughput between the processor and memory, which in turn aids multitasking and memory-intensive applications.

Since both tablets are on equal footing here, this spec is a complete tie and does not factor into any differentiation between the two devices. The Miscellaneous category, as represented by the available data, offers no basis for preferring one product over the other.

Comparison Summary & Verdict

After reviewing every specification, both tablets serve different priorities clearly. The Honor MagicPad 3 stands out with its larger 13.3″ display, higher 165 Hz refresh rate, significantly more powerful Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset, greater RAM and storage, a larger 12450 mAh battery, and superior aptX audio codec support — making it the stronger choice for power users and multimedia enthusiasts. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro, on the other hand, wins with its included stylus, HDR10 support, built-in GPS and compass, expandable storage, and a lower TDP that favors thermal efficiency — making it a well-rounded productivity companion for note-takers and travelers who value versatility over raw power.

Honor MagicPad 3
Buy Honor MagicPad 3 if...

Buy the Honor MagicPad 3 if you want top-tier performance, a larger high-refresh-rate display, more RAM and storage, and a bigger battery for extended use.

Lenovo Idea Tab Pro
Buy Lenovo Idea Tab Pro if...

Buy the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro if you need a stylus out of the box, HDR10 support, built-in GPS, and the flexibility of expandable storage for productivity on the go.