Honor X8c
Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global)

Honor X8c Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global)

Overview

Welcome to our in-depth comparison of the Honor X8c and the Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) — two competitive mid-range smartphones that share a surprising amount of common ground while diverging sharply in a few critical areas. Both phones bring OLED displays, 120Hz refresh rates, and 512GB of storage to the table, yet they tell very different stories when it comes to performance, connectivity, and audio capabilities. Which one truly delivers the better experience for your needs? Read on to find out.

Common Features

  • Both phones have an IP64 water resistance rating.
  • Both phones feature an OLED/AMOLED display.
  • Both phones support a 120Hz refresh rate.
  • Always-On Display is available on both phones.
  • Dolby Vision support is not available on either phone.
  • Neither phone has a secondary screen.
  • Both phones have a touchscreen.
  • Both phones offer 512GB of internal storage.
  • Both phones have integrated LTE.
  • Both phones are built on a 6nm semiconductor process.
  • Both phones support 64-bit processing.
  • Both phones use big.LITTLE technology.
  • Both phones have integrated graphics.
  • Both phones feature a multi-lens main camera with OIS.
  • Both phones can record video at 1080p 30fps on the main camera.
  • Both phones have a CMOS sensor.
  • Both phones support continuous autofocus during video recording.
  • Both phones run Android with theme customization and on-device machine learning.
  • Both phones have clipboard warnings and location privacy options.
  • App tracking can be blocked on both phones.
  • Neither phone supports wireless charging, but both support fast charging.
  • Neither phone has a removable battery.
  • Both phones use a dual SIM configuration.
  • Both phones have USB Type-C with USB 2.0.
  • Both phones support Wi-Fi 4 and Wi-Fi 5.
  • Both phones have a fingerprint scanner.
  • Neither phone has emergency SOS via satellite or crash detection.
  • Both phones have a video light.
  • Neither phone has a curved or e-paper display.

Main Differences

  • Weight is 174g on Honor X8c and 190g on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • Thickness is 7.1mm on Honor X8c and 8mm on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • Screen size is 6.7″ on Honor X8c and 6.67″ on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • Damage-resistant glass is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • HDR10 support is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • HDR10+ support is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • RAM is 8GB on Honor X8c and 12GB on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • The chipset is Qualcomm Snapdragon 685 4G on Honor X8c and MediaTek Dimensity 7025 on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • AnTuTu benchmark score is 321,000 on Honor X8c and 470,000 on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • Geekbench 6 multi-core score is 1510 on Honor X8c and 2291 on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • Maximum memory bandwidth is 17 GB/s on Honor X8c and 51.2 GB/s on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • The main camera setup is 108 & 5 MP on Honor X8c and 108 & 8 & 2 MP on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • The front camera is 50MP on Honor X8c and 20MP on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • Honor X8c ships with Android 15 while Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) ships with Android 14.
  • App offloading is supported on Honor X8c but not on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • Battery capacity is 5000 mAh on Honor X8c and 5110 mAh on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • Charging speed is 35W on Honor X8c and 45W on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • A 3.5mm audio jack is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • Stereo speakers are present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • LDAC support is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • A radio is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • 5G support is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • Bluetooth version is 5.0 on Honor X8c and 5.3 on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • A microSD card slot is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • NFC is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
  • Download speed is 390 Mbit/s on Honor X8c and 2770 Mbit/s on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global).
  • An infrared sensor is present on Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) but not available on Honor X8c.
Specs Comparison
Honor X8c

Honor X8c

Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global)

Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global)

Design:
water resistance Water resistant Water resistant
weight 174 g 190 g
thickness 7.1 mm 8 mm
width 74.6 mm 75.7 mm
height 161.1 mm 162.4 mm
volume 85.328226 cm³ 98.34944 cm³
Ingress Protection (IP) rating IP64 IP64
has a rugged build
can be folded

Both the Honor X8c and the Redmi Note 14 5G share the same IP64 water and dust resistance rating, meaning neither is fully submersible but both can handle splashes and light rain without issue. Neither has a rugged build or a foldable form factor, so they occupy the same traditional slab design category.

Where they diverge meaningfully is in physical footprint. The Honor X8c is notably slimmer at 7.1 mm versus 8 mm for the Redmi, and lighter at 174 g compared to 190 g — a 16 g difference that is genuinely perceptible during extended one-handed use or when carried in a pocket all day. The X8c is also marginally narrower and shorter, and its overall volume of 85.3 cm³ versus 98.3 cm³ reflects a meaningfully more compact chassis despite the two phones being broadly similar in screen size territory.

On design, the Honor X8c has a clear edge: it is thinner, lighter, and more compact across every physical dimension. For users who prioritize a pocket-friendly, less fatiguing daily carry, the X8c wins this category outright. The Redmi Note 14 5G's extra bulk is not disqualifying, but it offers no compensating design advantage based on the available specs.

Display:
Display type OLED/AMOLED OLED/AMOLED
screen size 6.7" 6.67"
pixel density 394 ppi 395 ppi
resolution 1080 x 2412 px 1080 x 2400 px
refresh rate 120Hz 120Hz
has branded damage-resistant glass
supports HDR10
supports HDR10+
Always-On Display
supports Dolby Vision
Has a secondary screen
has a touch screen

At their core, these two displays are remarkably alike. Both use an OLED/AMOLED panel, land at effectively identical screen sizes (~6.7″), hit 395 ppi pixel density, run at a 120Hz refresh rate, and support Always-On Display. For everyday use — scrolling, reading, watching videos — users of either phone will enjoy the same punchy colors, deep blacks, and fluid motion that OLED at this resolution delivers.

The separation comes from two specs the Redmi Note 14 5G holds exclusively. First, it carries branded damage-resistant glass on the display, which meaningfully reduces the risk of scratches and cracks from daily drops and pocket friction — something the Honor X8c lacks entirely. Second, the Redmi supports both HDR10 and HDR10+, meaning compatible streaming content (Netflix, YouTube, etc.) will render with wider dynamic range, brighter highlights, and more nuanced shadows. The X8c misses out on this, so HDR content will be tone-mapped rather than rendered natively.

The Redmi Note 14 5G has a clear display advantage. While sheer resolution and smoothness are equal, HDR10+ support elevates the media consumption experience, and the protective glass adds durability that matters over the lifetime of the device. Neither factor is negligible, and together they make the Redmi the stronger pick for display-conscious buyers.

Performance:
internal storage 512GB 512GB
RAM 8GB 12GB
AnTuTu benchmark score 321000 470000
Chipset (SoC) name Qualcomm Snapdragon 685 4G MediaTek Dimensity 7025
GPU name Adreno 610 IMG BXM-8-256
CPU speed 4 x 2.8 & 4 x 1.9 GHz 2 x 2.5 & 6 x 2 GHz
Geekbench 6 result (multi) 1510 2291
Geekbench 6 result (single) 473 884
Geekbench 5 result (multi) 1787 1890
Geekbench 5 result (single) 442 690
GPU clock speed 1260 MHz 900 MHz
Has integrated LTE
RAM speed 2133 MHz 2750 MHz
semiconductor size 6 nm 6 nm
Supports 64-bit
DirectX version DirectX 12 DirectX 12
Has integrated graphics
Uses big.LITTLE technology
Has NX bit
maximum memory bandwidth 17 GB/s 51.2 GB/s
OpenCL version 2 2
maximum memory amount 16GB 16GB
DDR memory version 4 5

The chipset gap here is substantial. The Honor X8c runs on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 685, while the Redmi Note 14 5G is powered by a MediaTek Dimensity 7025 — and the benchmark numbers tell a decisive story. The Redmi's AnTuTu score of 470,000 versus the X8c's 321,000 represents roughly a 46% lead, and Geekbench 6 confirms the pattern: the Redmi nearly doubles the X8c in both single-core (884 vs 473) and multi-core (2291 vs 1510) results. In practice, this translates to snappier app launches, smoother multitasking, and noticeably better handling of demanding workloads like gaming or video editing.

The memory story reinforces this gap. The Redmi ships with 12 GB of DDR5 RAM running at 2750 MHz against the X8c's 8 GB of DDR4 at 2133 MHz — and the maximum memory bandwidth difference is dramatic: 51.2 GB/s vs 17 GB/s. Higher bandwidth means the Redmi's processor feeds on data far faster, which benefits anything from gaming frame rates to image processing. The X8c's Adreno 610 GPU also clocks higher on paper at 1260 MHz, but GPU architecture and driver maturity matter more than clock speed alone, and the overall system-level performance gap firmly favors the Redmi.

Both phones share the same 6 nm fabrication node and 512 GB internal storage, so efficiency and space are level ground. But on raw performance, the Redmi Note 14 5G holds an unambiguous advantage — it is a meaningfully faster device across CPU throughput, memory speed, and overall system benchmarks, making it the stronger choice for users who push their phones hard.

Cameras:
megapixels (main camera) 108 & 5 MP 108 & 8 & 2 MP
wide aperture (main camera) 2.2 & 1.8f 1.7 & 2.2 & 2.4f
Has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) main camera
megapixels (front camera) 50MP 20MP
has built-in optical image stabilization
video recording (main camera) 1080 x 30 fps 1080 x 30 fps
Has a dual-tone LED flash
number of flash LEDs 1 1
has a BSI sensor
has a CMOS sensor
has continuous autofocus when recording movies
Has phase-detection autofocus for photos
supports slow-motion video recording
has a built-in HDR mode
has manual exposure
has a flash
optical zoom 0x 0x
has manual ISO
has a serial shot mode
has manual focus
has a front camera
Has laser autofocus
Shoots 360° panorama
has manual white balance
shoots raw
has touch autofocus
has manual shutter speed
can create panoramas in-camera
wide aperture (front camera) 2.1f 2.2f
Has a front-facing LED flash
has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) front camera
supports HDR10 recording
supports Dolby Vision recording
has a front-facing camera under the display
Has a RGB LED flash
has 3D photo/video recording capabilities

The rear camera systems share a 108 MP primary sensor as their anchor, but diverge in two meaningful ways. The Redmi Note 14 5G adds a third lens — an 8 MP ultrawide and a 2 MP auxiliary — giving it more compositional versatility than the X8c's dual setup. More importantly, the Redmi's main lens opens to f/1.7 versus the X8c's f/2.2, a significant difference in aperture that allows considerably more light to hit the sensor. In low-light or indoor shooting, that wider aperture translates directly into brighter, less noisy images without relying on longer exposures.

The selfie side flips the script. The Honor X8c features a 50 MP front camera against the Redmi's 20 MP, and with a marginally wider aperture of f/2.1 vs f/2.2. For users who prioritize high-resolution selfies or frequently crop and reframe front-facing shots, the X8c holds a notable advantage here. Both cameras share the same feature set otherwise — OIS, phase-detection autofocus, slow-motion, HDR mode, and manual controls are present on both — so the comparison narrows to these hardware differentiators.

This category is a genuine trade-off rather than a clean win. The Redmi Note 14 5G is the stronger all-around shooter thanks to its triple-lens versatility and the real-world low-light advantage of its f/1.7 main aperture. The Honor X8c counter-punches with a significantly higher-resolution front camera. Buyers who shoot more selfies will lean toward the X8c; those who prioritize rear camera capability in varied lighting will find the Redmi more capable.

Operating system:
Android version Android 15 Android 14
has clipboard warnings
has location privacy options
has camera/microphone privacy options
has Mail Privacy Protection
has theme customization
can block app tracking
blocks cross-site tracking
has on-device machine learning
has notification permissions
has media picker
Can play games while they download
has dark mode
has Wi-Fi password sharing
has battery health check
has an extra dim mode
has focus modes
has dynamic theming
can offload apps
Has customizable notifications
has Live Text
has full-page screenshots
supports split screen
gets direct OS updates
has PiP
Can be used as a PC
Has sharing intents
has a child lock
Supports widgets
Is free and open source
Has offline voice recognition
has voice commands
Tracks the current position of a mobile device
is a multi-user system
has Quick Start

The software landscape between these two is largely uniform — both run Android, support the same broad feature set including dark mode, dynamic theming, split-screen, Picture-in-Picture, on-device machine learning, and a full suite of privacy controls. Given how closely matched the feature lists are, the two meaningful differentiators deserve close attention.

The more significant one is the Android version. The Honor X8c ships with Android 15 while the Redmi Note 14 5G launches on Android 14. A newer OS version means the X8c arrives with the latest security patches, privacy refinements, and system-level improvements out of the box — and it starts its support lifecycle one generation ahead. Neither phone receives direct OS updates according to the specs, which makes starting on a newer version all the more relevant. The second difference is the X8c's ability to offload apps — a feature absent on the Redmi — which frees up storage by removing unused apps while preserving their data, useful on devices where storage management matters.

The Honor X8c has the edge in this category. Android 15 out of the box is a tangible advantage in terms of security and longevity, and app offloading adds a practical convenience the Redmi lacks. The Redmi Note 14 5G is not deficient in any meaningful way, but on software, the X8c simply starts from a stronger position.

Battery:
battery power 5000 mAh 5110 mAh
has wireless charging
Supports fast charging
charging speed 35W 45W
has a removable battery
has a battery level indicator
has a rechargeable battery

Battery capacity is essentially a wash here. The Redmi Note 14 5G packs 5110 mAh against the Honor X8c's 5000 mAh — a 110 mAh difference that is negligible in real-world endurance terms. Both phones will comfortably cover a full day of use for most users, and neither offers wireless charging or a removable battery.

Where a modest but genuine gap exists is charging speed. The Redmi supports 45W fast charging versus the X8c's 35W, a 10W advantage that adds up in practice. At these wattages, the Redmi will recover meaningfully more battery in a short top-up — useful in the common scenario of grabbing 15–20 minutes on the charger before heading out.

The Redmi Note 14 5G holds a narrow edge in this category. The capacity difference is too small to matter, but the faster 45W charging is a real daily convenience advantage over the X8c's 35W. It is not a decisive win, but for users who frequently charge on the go, the Redmi is the more practical choice.

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

Audio is one of the most lopsided categories in this comparison. The Redmi Note 14 5G brings a 3.5mm headphone jack, stereo speakers, LDAC Bluetooth audio, and a built-in FM radio — the Honor X8c has none of these features.

Each omission on the X8c carries real consequences. No headphone jack means wired listeners must rely on a USB-C adapter or go fully wireless. No stereo speakers means all audio — media, calls, games — comes from a single mono driver, producing a flatter, less immersive sound stage compared to the Redmi's dual-speaker setup. The absence of LDAC is particularly notable for wireless audio enthusiasts: LDAC supports up to 990 kbps Bluetooth transmission, enabling near-lossless audio quality with compatible headphones — something the X8c cannot offer at all. The FM radio, while niche, adds a dependency-free listening option the X8c entirely lacks.

The Redmi Note 14 5G wins this category decisively. It covers every dimension of the audio experience — wired, wireless, speaker, and broadcast — while the Honor X8c is left without a meaningful feature to offer in return. For anyone who cares about audio quality or flexibility, the Redmi is the clear choice.

Connectivity & Features:
release date January 2025 January 2025
has 5G support
Wi-Fi version Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac)
SIM cards 2 SIM 2 SIM
Bluetooth version 5 5.3
has an external memory slot
Has USB Type-C
USB version 2 2
has NFC
download speed 390 MBits/s 2770 MBits/s
Has a fingerprint scanner
has emergency SOS via satellite
has crash detection
is DLNA-certified
has a gyroscope
supports ANT+
Has a heart rate monitor
has GPS
has a compass
supports Wi-Fi
Has an infrared sensor
has an accelerometer
has a cellular module
Has a barometer
has an HDMI output
Uses 3D facial recognition
Has an iris scanner
Stylus included
supports Galileo
Has motion tracking
Has optical tracking
Has a built-in projector

The connectivity gap between these two phones is wide and consequential. The Redmi Note 14 5G supports 5G, while the Honor X8c is limited to 4G LTE — a fundamental difference that affects not just current speeds but future-proofing as 5G networks continue to expand. This is reflected starkly in peak download speeds: 2770 Mbits/s for the Redmi versus 390 Mbits/s for the X8c. Beyond cellular, the Redmi also includes NFC — enabling contactless payments and quick device pairing — which the X8c lacks entirely, and a newer Bluetooth 5.3 versus the X8c's Bluetooth 5.0, offering marginally better connection stability and efficiency.

Storage flexibility is another Redmi advantage: it includes an external memory slot for expandable storage, while the X8c offers no such option, making the Honor's 512 GB a hard ceiling. The Redmi also adds an infrared sensor, which allows it to function as a universal remote for TVs and home appliances — a small but genuinely useful feature the X8c omits. Both phones share Wi-Fi 5, dual SIM, USB-C 2.0, GPS, gyroscope, accelerometer, and fingerprint scanner, so the shared foundation is solid.

The Redmi Note 14 5G wins this category convincingly. Its advantages — 5G connectivity, NFC, expandable storage, a newer Bluetooth version, and an infrared sensor — stack up across multiple dimensions of real-world utility. The Honor X8c has no offsetting connectivity advantage to counter with, making the Redmi the stronger choice for users who want a more connected and versatile device.

Miscellaneous:
has a video light
Has sapphire glass display
Has a curved display
Has an e-paper display

The miscellaneous specs for these two phones are identical across every data point provided. Both have a video light, neither features sapphire glass, a curved display, or an e-paper screen. There is simply nothing here to separate them.

This is a complete tie. No advantage exists for either phone based on the available data in this category.

Comparison Summary & Verdict

After a thorough look at both devices, it is clear that each phone targets a different type of user. The Honor X8c stands out for its notably slimmer and lighter build, its higher-resolution 50MP front camera, and the advantage of shipping with Android 15 out of the box — making it a compelling pick for selfie enthusiasts and users who value a pocketable form factor. The Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global), on the other hand, pulls ahead in nearly every performance metric, offering more RAM, a significantly faster chipset, 5G connectivity, NFC, stereo speakers, a 3.5mm headphone jack, LDAC audio, a microSD card slot, and faster 45W charging. If raw capability and connectivity breadth matter most to you, the Xiaomi is the stronger all-rounder.

Honor X8c
Buy Honor X8c if...

Buy the Honor X8c if you prioritize a lighter, slimmer design, a high-resolution 50MP selfie camera, and want the latest Android 15 experience out of the box.

Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global)
Buy Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) if...

Buy the Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G (Global) if you need 5G connectivity, stronger overall performance, NFC, stereo speakers, a headphone jack, and expandable storage in one package.