Honor Pad 10
Lenovo Idea Tab Pro

Honor Pad 10 Lenovo Idea Tab Pro

Overview

Welcome to our in-depth specification comparison between the Honor Pad 10 and the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro — two capable 12-inch-class Android tablets targeting users who demand more from their mobile productivity and entertainment setup. In this head-to-head, we examine their key battlegrounds, including display quality and refresh rate, chipset performance, camera capabilities, connectivity options, and overall design. Read on to find out which tablet best matches your priorities.

Common Features

  • Neither product has a detachable keyboard.
  • Neither product has a backlit keyboard.
  • Neither product offers water resistance.
  • Neither product has tilt sensitivity.
  • Both products feature an LCD IPS display type.
  • Neither product has branded damage-resistant glass.
  • Both products support HDR10.
  • 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 come with 256GB of internal storage.
  • Both products have 8GB of RAM.
  • Both products use a 4 nm semiconductor size.
  • 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 TrustZone support.
  • Both products have an 8MP front camera.
  • Both products have a front camera.
  • Both products have a built-in HDR mode.
  • Neither product can create panoramas in-camera.
  • Both products support slow-motion video recording.
  • Both products have touch autofocus.
  • Neither product offers optical zoom.
  • Neither product has a BSI sensor.
  • Neither product has aptX HD support.
  • Neither product has LDAC support.
  • Neither product has aptX Low Latency support.
  • Neither product has aptX Adaptive support.
  • Neither product has aptX Lossless support.
  • Both products have stereo speakers.
  • Neither product has a 3.5mm 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 525 g on Honor Pad 10 and 620 g on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Thickness is 6.3 mm on Honor Pad 10 and 6.9 mm on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Width is 277.1 mm on Honor Pad 10 and 291.18 mm on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Height is 179.3 mm on Honor Pad 10 and 189.1 mm on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Volume is 313.009389 cm³ on Honor Pad 10 and 379.9287522 cm³ on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • A stylus is included with Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not with Honor Pad 10.
  • Screen size is 12.1″ on Honor Pad 10 and 12.7″ on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Resolution is 2560 x 1600 px on Honor Pad 10 and 2944 x 1840 px on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Pixel density is 249 ppi on Honor Pad 10 and 273 ppi on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Refresh rate is 120Hz on Honor Pad 10 and 144Hz on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • The chipset is Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 on Honor Pad 10 and MediaTek Dimensity 8300 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • The GPU is Adreno 720 on Honor Pad 10 and Mali G615 MP6 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • CPU speed is 8 x 2.13 GHz on Honor Pad 10 and 1 x 3.35 & 3 x 3 & 4 x 2.2 GHz on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • GPU clock speed is 950 MHz on Honor Pad 10 and 1400 MHz on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • RAM speed is 3200 MHz on Honor Pad 10 and 8533 MHz on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Maximum memory amount is 16GB on Honor Pad 10 and 24GB on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Maximum memory bandwidth is 25.6 GB/s on Honor Pad 10 and 68.2 GB/s on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Android version is Android 15 on Honor Pad 10 and Android 14 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Main camera resolution is 8 MP on Honor Pad 10 and 13 MP on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • A flash is present on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not available on Honor Pad 10.
  • A video light is present on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not available on Honor Pad 10.
  • aptX support is present on Honor Pad 10 but not available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Battery capacity is 10100 mAh on Honor Pad 10 and 10200 mAh on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Wi-Fi 6E support is present on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not available on Honor Pad 10.
  • App offloading is supported on Honor Pad 10 but not available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • A cellular module is present on Honor Pad 10 but not available on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • USB version is 2 on Honor Pad 10 and 3.2 on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Download speed is 5000 MBits/s on Honor Pad 10 and 7900 MBits/s on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • Upload speed is 160 MBits/s on Honor Pad 10 and 4200 MBits/s on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro.
  • A gyroscope is present on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not available on Honor Pad 10.
  • A compass is present on Lenovo Idea Tab Pro but not available on Honor Pad 10.
Specs Comparison
Honor Pad 10

Honor Pad 10

Lenovo Idea Tab Pro

Lenovo Idea Tab Pro

Design:
weight 525 g 620 g
thickness 6.3 mm 6.9 mm
width 277.1 mm 291.18 mm
height 179.3 mm 189.1 mm
volume 313.009389 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 footprint, the Honor Pad 10 is the more compact and lighter of the two. At 525 g and 6.3 mm thick, it is noticeably easier to hold for extended periods compared to the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro, which weighs 620 g and measures 6.9 mm thick. That 95 g difference may sound modest on paper, but during long reading sessions or one-handed use, it translates into meaningfully less fatigue. The Honor Pad 10 also occupies a smaller overall volume (313 cm³ vs 380 cm³), making it slightly more portable and easier to slip into a bag.

The most significant functional differentiator in this group is stylus support. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro ships with a stylus included, which opens the door to note-taking, sketching, and annotation workflows right out of the box — at no extra cost. The Honor Pad 10 offers no stylus support at all, which is a real limitation for users who value pen input. Neither tablet offers a detachable keyboard, backlit keyboard, water resistance, or tilt sensitivity, so those factors are a wash.

Overall, the Honor Pad 10 has a clear edge in portability thanks to its lighter weight and slimmer profile, making it the better pick for users who prioritize comfort during casual use or on-the-go handling. However, the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro holds a meaningful advantage in productivity by bundling a stylus, adding versatility that the Honor Pad 10 simply cannot match without an additional purchase.

Display:
screen size 12.1" 12.7"
resolution 2560 x 1600 px 2944 x 1840 px
pixel density 249 ppi 273 ppi
Display type LCD, IPS LCD, IPS
refresh rate 120Hz 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

Both tablets use an LCD IPS panel, so color reproduction and viewing angle characteristics are broadly similar. Where they diverge is in scale and sharpness. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro sports a larger 12.7″ screen versus the 12.1″ on the Honor Pad 10, and pairs that extra real estate with a higher resolution of 2944 x 1840 px — resulting in a pixel density of 273 ppi compared to 249 ppi. That 24 ppi gap means text and fine details render slightly crisper on the Lenovo, which is most noticeable when reading small fonts or viewing detailed images up close.

The refresh rate gap is worth noting as well. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro runs at 144Hz versus the Honor Pad 10's already-smooth 120Hz. In day-to-day use — scrolling, browsing, watching video — both feel fluid and responsive. The difference becomes more perceptible in fast-motion content or gaming, where 144Hz delivers a marginally smoother visual cadence. It is a meaningful but not transformative advantage for most users. Both panels support HDR10 and lack Dolby Vision or HDR10+, so the high dynamic range experience is equivalent across the two.

Across every display metric provided — screen size, resolution, pixel density, and refresh rate — the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro holds a consistent edge. No single difference is dramatic in isolation, but they all point in the same direction: the Lenovo simply offers a more detailed and slightly more immersive screen. For media consumption, creative work, or productivity on a large canvas, it is the stronger display choice based on these specs alone.

Performance:
internal storage 256GB 256GB
RAM 8GB 8GB
Chipset (SoC) name Qualcomm SM7550-AB Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 MediaTek Dimensity 8300
GPU name Adreno 720 Mali G615 MP6
CPU speed 8 x 2.13 GHz 1 x 3.35 & 3 x 3 & 4 x 2.2 GHz
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 950 MHz 1400 MHz
RAM speed 3200 MHz 8533 MHz
Has TrustZone
maximum memory amount 16GB 24GB
Android version Android 15 Android 14
Thermal Design Power (TDP) 6W 6W
maximum memory bandwidth 25.6 GB/s 68.2 GB/s

On the surface, these two tablets look evenly matched — both pack 8GB of RAM, 256GB of storage, a 4nm process node, and a 6W TDP. But dig into the underlying silicon and the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro pulls ahead in several meaningful ways. Its MediaTek Dimensity 8300 features a more aggressive CPU configuration, led by a prime core reaching 3.35 GHz, compared to the Honor Pad 10's Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 running all cores at a uniform 2.13 GHz. For burst workloads — launching apps, processing large files, or handling complex UI transitions — the Lenovo's higher peak clock gives it a tangible responsiveness edge.

The memory subsystem gap is even more striking. The Lenovo's RAM runs at 8533 MHz with a memory bandwidth of 68.2 GB/s, versus 3200 MHz and 25.6 GB/s on the Honor. That is nearly 2.7× the bandwidth, which directly benefits GPU-intensive tasks, multitasking, and any workload that moves large amounts of data quickly. The Lenovo's Mali G615 MP6 GPU also clocks in at 1400 MHz versus the Adreno 720's 950 MHz, reinforcing its advantage in graphics rendering and gaming. The Lenovo further supports a higher memory ceiling of 24GB versus 16GB, offering more headroom in higher-spec configurations.

One point in the Honor Pad 10's favor: it ships with Android 15 versus Android 14 on the Lenovo, meaning it arrives with a more current software foundation out of the box. That said, on raw performance metrics, the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro holds a clear and consistent advantage — particularly for demanding use cases like gaming, creative applications, or heavy multitasking.

Cameras:
megapixels (main camera) 8 MP 13 MP
megapixels (front camera) 8MP 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
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

Tablet cameras are rarely a primary purchase driver, but the gap here is worth understanding. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro steps ahead with a 13 MP rear camera versus the 8 MP shooter on the Honor Pad 10. More megapixels mean greater detail in stills and more flexibility when cropping — useful for scanning documents, capturing whiteboards, or shooting anything where fine detail matters. The front cameras are identical at 8 MP on both devices, so video calls and selfies are an even match.

Beyond resolution, the Lenovo also includes a flash and a video light, neither of which the Honor Pad 10 offers. In low-light scenarios — think dimly lit rooms or evening use — this gives the Lenovo a practical advantage for both photos and video recording. The video light in particular is useful for sustained illumination during clips, rather than just the brief burst of a flash. All other camera capabilities are shared: both support slow-motion recording, continuous autofocus during video, HDR mode, and a full set of manual controls including ISO, white balance, focus, and exposure.

The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro has a clear edge in cameras, combining a higher-resolution main sensor with dedicated lighting hardware. For users who regularly use their tablet to capture documents, participate in video calls in varied lighting, or shoot occasional video, these additions are genuinely useful rather than cosmetic. The Honor Pad 10's camera setup is functional but strictly more limited by the data provided.

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

The audio specs for these two tablets are nearly identical, with one notable exception. Both feature stereo speakers, drop the 3.5mm headphone jack, and lack a radio — so wired audio and FM listening are off the table for either device. For wireless audio, however, the Honor Pad 10 supports aptX, while the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro supports no advanced Bluetooth audio codec from the provided data. AptX reduces latency and improves audio quality over Bluetooth compared to the standard SBC codec, which matters most when pairing with compatible wireless headphones or speakers.

Neither tablet offers aptX HD, LDAC, aptX Adaptive, or aptX Lossless, so neither reaches the highest tier of wireless audio fidelity. The Honor Pad 10's aptX support is a modest but real advantage — particularly for users who watch video with Bluetooth headphones, where even small latency reductions help keep audio and visuals in sync.

Given how closely matched these two are, the Honor Pad 10 holds a slight edge in audio strictly based on its aptX codec support. It is not a dramatic difference, and users who rely on the built-in speakers or do not own aptX-compatible headphones will notice no practical gap. But for Bluetooth audio quality and sync, the Honor Pad 10 has the marginal advantage the data supports.

Battery:
battery power 10100 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 about as close as it gets between these two tablets. The Honor Pad 10 carries a 10100 mAh cell while the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro edges it by just 100 mAh at 10200 mAh. That difference is statistically negligible — in real-world use, both tablets will deliver essentially the same runtime per charge, and no user will perceive a gap of this magnitude during a full day of use.

Everything else in this category is a complete tie. Both support fast charging, neither offers wireless charging, and both have non-removable, rechargeable batteries with a level indicator. The absence of wireless charging is worth noting for users who prioritize cable-free convenience, but it is a shared limitation rather than a differentiator.

This group is effectively a draw. The 100 mAh nominal difference carries no practical weight, and the feature set is identical across every other battery-related spec. Battery life in real use will depend far more on screen size, brightness habits, and workload intensity than on any difference visible in this data.

Connectivity & Features:
release date May 2025 March 2025
Wi-Fi version Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) 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 a child lock
has an HDMI output
has NFC
Has a fingerprint scanner
USB version 2 3.2
Supports widgets
Bluetooth version 5.3 5.3
download speed 5000 MBits/s 7900 MBits/s
has a gyroscope
Is free and open source
Has offline voice recognition
has a compass
upload speed 160 MBits/s 4200 MBits/s
supports Wi-Fi
Has sharing intents
Has customizable notifications
Uses 3D facial recognition
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

A handful of meaningful differences emerge here despite the two tablets sharing a long list of common features. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro supports Wi-Fi 6E, extending connectivity into the less congested 6 GHz band — a real advantage in dense environments like offices or apartment buildings where the 5 GHz band is heavily occupied. Its wireless throughput reflects this, with a theoretical download speed of 7900 Mbits/s versus 5000 Mbits/s on the Honor Pad 10. The upload gap is even more dramatic: 4200 Mbits/s on the Lenovo against just 160 Mbits/s on the Honor. The Lenovo also features USB 3.2, which enables substantially faster wired data transfers compared to the Honor's USB 2.0 — a significant difference for users who regularly move large files to and from the tablet.

The Honor Pad 10 counters with one important advantage: it includes a cellular module, meaning it can connect to mobile networks independently of Wi-Fi. The Lenovo is Wi-Fi only, which restricts connectivity to areas with a wireless network or a hotspot. For users who need on-the-go connectivity without tethering to a phone, this is a decisive advantage for the Honor. On the sensor front, the Lenovo adds a gyroscope and compass that the Honor lacks, which matters for navigation apps, AR applications, and accurate screen rotation behavior.

This group has no single winner — it depends entirely on use case. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro is the stronger choice for home or office use, where its Wi-Fi 6E support, faster USB, and superior wireless speeds shine. The Honor Pad 10 is the better pick for mobile users who need standalone cellular connectivity. Both share an identical and comprehensive software feature set, so that aspect of the decision is a non-factor.

Miscellaneous:
DDR memory version 5 5

The only data point in this group is the DDR memory version, and both tablets are on equal footing: each uses DDR5 memory. DDR5 is the current mainstream standard for mobile devices, offering improved power efficiency and higher bandwidth potential compared to its DDR4 predecessor — benefits that underpin the overall memory performance of both platforms.

With a single shared spec and no differentiating data to analyze, this group is a complete tie. Neither the Honor Pad 10 nor the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro holds any advantage here.

Comparison Summary & Verdict

After examining every specification, it is clear that both tablets serve slightly different audiences. The Lenovo Idea Tab Pro pulls ahead in raw performance territory, offering a higher-resolution 144Hz display, a faster GPU at 1400 MHz, significantly greater memory bandwidth at 68.2 GB/s, a 13MP rear camera with flash, a bundled stylus, USB 3.2, and Wi-Fi 6E — making it the stronger choice for power users and creatives. The Honor Pad 10, on the other hand, is lighter at 525 g, runs the latest Android 15, includes a cellular module for on-the-go connectivity, supports aptX audio, and allows app offloading — advantages that matter to mobile-first users who prioritize portability and flexibility. Neither is a clear-cut winner for everyone; your ideal pick depends entirely on how and where you plan to use your tablet.

Honor Pad 10
Buy Honor Pad 10 if...

Buy the Honor Pad 10 if you want a lighter, more portable tablet with built-in cellular connectivity, Android 15, and aptX audio support for on-the-go use.

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

Buy the Lenovo Idea Tab Pro if you prioritize a sharper 144Hz display, superior GPU performance, an included stylus, and faster USB 3.2 and Wi-Fi 6E connectivity.