Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G
Infinix Note 50s 5G

Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G Infinix Note 50s 5G

Overview

When choosing between the Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and the Infinix Note 50s 5G, buyers face a compelling trade-off across several key areas. Both phones share the same 6.78-inch OLED display, 144Hz refresh rate, and Android 15, but they diverge sharply when it comes to raw processing power, camera versatility, and charging capabilities. This comparison breaks down exactly where each device pulls ahead, helping you decide which one best fits your needs.

Common Features

  • Both phones are water resistant with an IP64 ingress protection rating.
  • Both phones share the same width of 74.5 mm.
  • Neither phone has a rugged build.
  • Neither phone can be folded.
  • Both phones feature an OLED/AMOLED display.
  • Both phones have the same screen size of 6.78 inches.
  • Both phones share a pixel density of 393 ppi and a resolution of 1080 x 2436 px.
  • Both phones support a 144Hz refresh rate.
  • HDR10 support is not available on either phone.
  • HDR10+ support is not available on either phone.
  • Always-On Display is available on both phones.
  • Both phones come with 256GB of internal storage.
  • Both phones use a 4 nm semiconductor and support 64-bit processing.
  • Both phones run Android 15.
  • Both phones support fast charging and come with a charger in the box.
  • Neither phone has a removable battery.
  • Both phones have stereo speakers but lack a 3.5 mm audio jack.
  • Both phones support 5G, dual SIM, NFC, Bluetooth 5.4, and USB Type-C.
  • Both phones have a fingerprint scanner.
  • Both phones have dual-lens main cameras with a CMOS sensor, phase-detection autofocus, continuous autofocus during video, slow-motion recording, and a built-in HDR mode.

Main Differences

  • Weight is 209 g on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 180 g on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Thickness is 8 mm on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 7.6 mm on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Height is 163.4 mm on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 164.3 mm on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Damage-resistant glass is present on Infinix Note 50s 5G but not available on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G.
  • A curved display is featured on Infinix Note 50s 5G but not on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G.
  • RAM is 12GB on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 8GB on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • The chipset is MediaTek Dimensity 8350 on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and MediaTek Dimensity 7300 on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • AnTuTu benchmark score is 1,420,000 on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 675,134 on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Geekbench 6 multi-core score is 4700 on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 2932 on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Geekbench 6 single-core score is 1536 on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 1026 on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Main camera resolution is 50 & 50 & 8 MP on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 64 & 2 MP on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Optical image stabilization is present on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G but not available on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Optical zoom is 3x on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and not available on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Front camera resolution is 32 MP on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 13 MP on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Maximum video recording is 2160p at 60 fps on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 2160p at 30 fps on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Battery capacity is 5200 mAh on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 5500 mAh on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Charging speed is 90W on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and 45W on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Wireless charging is supported on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G but not available on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • FM radio is present on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G but not available on Infinix Note 50s 5G.
  • Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) support is present on Infinix Note 50s 5G but not available on Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G.
Specs Comparison
Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G

Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G

Infinix Note 50s 5G

Infinix Note 50s 5G

Design:
water resistance Water resistant Water resistant
weight 209 g 180 g
thickness 8 mm 7.6 mm
width 74.5 mm 74.5 mm
height 163.4 mm 164.3 mm
volume 97.3864 cm³ 93.02666 cm³
Ingress Protection (IP) rating IP64 IP64
has a rugged build
can be folded

Both the Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and the Note 50s 5G share the same 74.5 mm width and identical IP64 water and dust resistance ratings, meaning neither has an edge in one-hand reachability or environmental protection. They are also equally non-rugged and non-foldable, so those factors are a wash.

Where the two diverge meaningfully is in mass and profile. The Note 50s 5G comes in at 180 g versus the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G's 209 g — a 29 g difference that is noticeable during extended use, particularly for users prone to hand fatigue or those who hold their phone for long reading or media sessions. Paired with a slimmer 7.6 mm thickness (versus 8 mm) and a slightly smaller overall volume of 93 cm³ versus 97.4 cm³, the Note 50s 5G simply feels like a more refined, pocketable slab despite being marginally taller at 164.3 mm.

From a pure design standpoint, the Note 50s 5G holds a clear edge: it is lighter, thinner, and more compact, which typically translates to better day-to-day comfort without any trade-off in water resistance or structural protection. The extra weight and bulk of the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G are likely trade-offs for hardware housed inside — but judged solely on design, the Note 50s 5G is the more ergonomic choice.

Display:
Display type OLED/AMOLED OLED/AMOLED
screen size 6.78" 6.78"
pixel density 393 ppi 393 ppi
resolution 1080 x 2436 px 1080 x 2436 px
refresh rate 144Hz 144Hz
has branded damage-resistant glass
supports HDR10
supports HDR10+
Always-On Display
supports Dolby Vision
Has a secondary screen
has a touch screen

On paper, the displays of the Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and the Note 50s 5G are virtually identical: both sport a 6.78″ OLED/AMOLED panel at 1080 x 2436 px resolution, a sharp 393 ppi pixel density, a fluid 144Hz refresh rate, and an Always-On Display. For the vast majority of users, these two screens will look and feel indistinguishable in everyday use — colors will pop equally, scrolling will be equally smooth, and standby glanceability is the same on both.

The sole differentiator here is that the Note 50s 5G carries branded damage-resistant glass while the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G does not. This is a practical durability advantage: scratch and crack resistance from certified glass coatings meaningfully reduces the likelihood of surface damage from keys, drops onto rough surfaces, or daily pocket wear. It is the kind of spec that rarely matters — until it does.

Given that all display quality metrics are tied, the Note 50s 5G has the edge in this category purely due to its damage-resistant glass. Neither device supports HDR10, HDR10+, or Dolby Vision, so there is no advantage to chase on the color pipeline side. If display longevity and screen survivability matter to you, the Note 50s 5G is the safer pick.

Performance:
internal storage 256GB 256GB
RAM 12GB 8GB
AnTuTu benchmark score 1420000 675134
Chipset (SoC) name MediaTek Dimensity 8350 MediaTek Dimensity 7300
GPU name Mali G615 MC6 Mali G615 MC2
CPU speed 1 x 3.35 & 3 x 3.2 & 4 x 2.2 GHz 4 x 2.5 & 4 x 2 GHz
Geekbench 6 result (multi) 4700 2932
Geekbench 6 result (single) 1536 1026
GPU clock speed 1400 MHz 1047 MHz
Has integrated LTE
RAM speed 8533 MHz 6400 MHz
semiconductor size 4 nm 4 nm
Supports 64-bit
DirectX version DirectX 12 DirectX 12
Has integrated graphics
Uses big.LITTLE technology
CPU threads 8 threads 8 threads
Uses HMP
maximum memory amount 24GB 16GB
DDR memory version 5 5

The performance gap between these two devices is substantial. The Note 50 Pro Plus 5G is powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 8350 — a flagship-tier chip — while the Note 50s 5G runs on the MediaTek Dimensity 7300, a mid-range SoC. This difference is reflected sharply in benchmarks: the Pro Plus scores 1,420,000 on AnTuTu versus the 50s 5G's 675,134 — roughly 2.1x higher. Geekbench 6 multi-core scores tell the same story at 4,700 vs 2,932, meaning the Pro Plus handles parallelized workloads — gaming, video processing, multitasking — with considerably more headroom.

The GPU divide is equally telling. The Pro Plus packs a Mali G615 MC6 clocked at 1400 MHz, while the Note 50s 5G uses a Mali G615 MC2 at 1047 MHz — fewer cores and a lower clock, which translates to a meaningful drop in graphics throughput for demanding 3D games or GPU-accelerated tasks. RAM further widens the gap: the Pro Plus ships with 12 GB of RAM at 8533 MHz and supports up to 24 GB via virtual RAM expansion, versus 8 GB at 6400 MHz with a 16 GB ceiling on the 50s 5G. Faster RAM reduces latency in app switching and sustains performance under load.

The Note 50 Pro Plus 5G wins this category decisively. Both phones share the same 4 nm process node and architectural features like big.LITTLE and HMP, but the Dimensity 8350 is simply a more powerful chip across CPU, GPU, and memory bandwidth. For users who game heavily, edit media, or expect their device to stay snappy over several years of use, the Pro Plus is in a different league here.

Cameras:
megapixels (main camera) 50 & 50 & 8 MP 64 & 2 MP
wide aperture (main camera) 1.9f 1.8f
Has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) main camera
megapixels (front camera) 32MP 13MP
has built-in optical image stabilization
video recording (main camera) 2160 x 60 fps 2160 x 30 fps
Has a dual-tone LED flash
number of flash LEDs 2 2
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 3x 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) 2.2f 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

Camera versatility strongly favors the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G. Its triple-lens setup — 50 + 50 + 8 MP — paired with 3x optical zoom gives it a dedicated telephoto capability that the Note 50s 5G simply lacks, as the 50s 5G's secondary 2 MP lens offers negligible practical value and it has no optical zoom whatsoever. Optical zoom matters because it preserves image quality when shooting distant subjects, whereas digital zoom degrades detail. Add built-in OIS on the Pro Plus and you get stabilized handheld shots and smoother video — a feature entirely absent on the 50s 5G.

The video gap is equally notable. The Pro Plus records at 4K@60fps versus the 50s 5G's 4K@30fps ceiling — double the frame rate, which produces significantly smoother footage for action scenes or fast-moving subjects. The Note 50s 5G counters with a marginally wider main aperture of f/1.8 versus the Pro Plus's f/1.9, a difference too small to be meaningful in real-world low-light performance, and a dual-tone LED flash for more natural-looking flash photography — a minor but genuine advantage in artificial light scenarios. On the front, the Pro Plus's 32 MP selfie camera towers over the 50s 5G's 13 MP, a difference that will be visible in detail and cropping flexibility.

The Note 50 Pro Plus 5G wins the camera category clearly. Across zoom range, stabilization, video frame rate, and selfie resolution, it outclasses the Note 50s 5G on nearly every meaningful axis. The 50s 5G's dual-tone flash is a nice touch but not enough to offset the breadth of advantages the Pro Plus holds.

Operating system:
Android version Android 15 Android 15
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

This is a rare clean sweep: the Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and the Note 50s 5G run identical software configurations across every single spec in this group. Both launch on Android 15, both carry the same privacy controls — including location, camera, and microphone permissions — and both support the same productivity and usability features such as split-screen multitasking, Picture-in-Picture, dynamic theming, offline voice recognition, and on-device machine learning.

Notably, neither device gets direct OS updates from Google, meaning updates are routed through Infinix, which can introduce delays. This applies equally to both, so it is not a differentiator — but it is worth flagging for users who prioritize timely security patches. Similarly, neither supports Wi-Fi password sharing or focus modes, and neither can be used as a PC replacement.

With no divergence across any data point in this category, the operating system comparison is a complete tie. A buyer choosing between these two devices will have an identical software experience on both — the decision comes down entirely to the hardware differences covered in other categories.

Battery:
battery power 5200 mAh 5500 mAh
has wireless charging
Supports fast charging
charging speed 90W 45W
comes with a charger
has a removable battery
has a battery level indicator
has a rechargeable battery

These two devices take opposite approaches to battery, and the trade-offs are genuinely interesting. The Note 50s 5G packs a slightly larger 5500 mAh cell versus the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G's 5200 mAh — a 300 mAh difference that, in practice, offers a modest but real edge in raw endurance, particularly relevant given the 50s 5G's lighter, less power-hungry mid-range chipset drawing from that larger reserve.

Flip to charging, though, and the Pro Plus reasserts itself. Its 90W wired fast charging is double the Note 50s 5G's 45W — meaning the Pro Plus can go from near-empty to full in roughly half the time of the 50s 5G, which matters enormously for users who charge in short bursts throughout the day. More significantly, the Pro Plus adds wireless charging, a convenience feature the Note 50s 5G entirely lacks. Being able to drop a phone on a pad without fumbling for a cable is a daily quality-of-life upgrade that is hard to overstate once you are accustomed to it.

This category is a genuine trade-off rather than a clean win. The Note 50s 5G edges ahead on raw capacity for users who prioritize all-day endurance and charge once at night, while the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G is the stronger pick for flexibility — its faster wired charging and wireless charging support offer more ways to top up quickly. Users who are often near a charger will likely prefer the Pro Plus; those who need to stretch a single charge as long as possible may lean toward the 50s 5G.

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

At their core, both devices share the same audio foundation: stereo speakers for immersive media playback, no 3.5 mm headphone jack, and no high-resolution Bluetooth codecs such as aptX, LDAC, or any of their variants. For wireless audio enthusiasts who rely on lossless or high-fidelity Bluetooth transmission, neither phone delivers — both are limited to standard codec support, which is a shared limitation rather than a differentiator.

The one point of divergence is the built-in FM radio, which is present on the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G and absent on the Note 50s 5G. This is a niche but genuinely useful feature in markets or situations where data connectivity is unreliable — emergencies, rural areas, or simply catching a local broadcast without consuming mobile data. For users who never touch FM radio, it is irrelevant; for those who do, it is an exclusive advantage the 50s 5G cannot replicate.

Overall, the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G holds a narrow edge in this category solely due to its FM radio inclusion. Beyond that single feature, the audio profiles of both phones are identical — and neither stands out as an audiophile-grade device given the absence of high-res wireless codec support on both.

Connectivity & Features:
release date March 2025 April 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), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax)
SIM cards 2 SIM 2 SIM
Bluetooth version 5.4 5.4
Has USB Type-C
USB version 2 2
has NFC
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

Across the vast majority of connectivity and feature specs, these two phones are mirror images — both support 5G, Bluetooth 5.4, NFC, USB Type-C, dual SIM, GPS with Galileo, an infrared sensor, and the same suite of motion sensors. For most users, day-to-day connectivity will feel identical on either device.

The single differentiator worth noting is Wi-Fi. The Note 50s 5G supports Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) in addition to Wi-Fi 4 and 5, while the Note 50 Pro Plus 5G tops out at Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac). Wi-Fi 6 brings meaningful real-world benefits in congested environments — dense apartment buildings, offices, or public spaces with many connected devices — offering better throughput, lower latency, and more efficient multi-device handling. It is not a night-and-day difference for casual browsing, but for users with a Wi-Fi 6 router who transfer large files or stream high-bandwidth content at home, the 50s 5G will make better use of that infrastructure.

Given how closely matched these devices are, the Note 50s 5G takes a narrow edge here purely on Wi-Fi 6 support. It is a single spec advantage, but it is a forward-looking one — as Wi-Fi 6 routers become increasingly standard, the Pro Plus's omission of this standard will become progressively more noticeable over the device's lifespan.

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

This is a compact category with limited data points, and only one spec separates the two devices. Both share a video light and neither features sapphire glass or an e-paper display — leaving the curved display on the Note 50s 5G as the sole differentiator.

A curved screen is primarily an aesthetic and ergonomic choice. The gently sloping edges create a sleeker, more premium look in hand and can make swiping in from the sides feel more natural. The trade-off is that curved displays are generally more prone to accidental edge touches and can be harder to protect with standard flat-glass screen protectors. The Note 50 Pro Plus 5G's flat display, by contrast, is more case-friendly and easier to protect, but offers a less distinctive visual profile.

Whether the curved display of the Note 50s 5G is an advantage or a drawback depends entirely on personal preference — those who value aesthetics and in-hand feel will appreciate it, while users who prioritize practicality and repairability may prefer the Pro Plus's flat panel. Based strictly on the provided data, neither outcome is objectively superior, making this category effectively a tie resolved by taste.

Comparison Summary & Verdict

After reviewing the full specification breakdown, both phones serve different types of users. The Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G is the clear choice for power users, offering the significantly faster MediaTek Dimensity 8350 chipset, 12GB of RAM, a triple-camera system with optical zoom and OIS, 90W fast charging with wireless charging, and FM radio. On the other hand, the Infinix Note 50s 5G appeals to those who prefer a lighter and slimmer design, a larger 5500 mAh battery, damage-resistant glass, a curved display, and Wi-Fi 6 support, all at a likely lower price point. Neither phone is a universal winner; your priorities will determine the right pick.

Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G
Buy Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G if...

Buy the Infinix Note 50 Pro Plus 5G if you want top-tier performance, a versatile triple camera with optical zoom and image stabilization, and faster 90W wired plus wireless charging.

Infinix Note 50s 5G
Buy Infinix Note 50s 5G if...

Buy the Infinix Note 50s 5G if you prefer a lighter and slimmer phone with a curved display, damage-resistant glass, a larger battery, and Wi-Fi 6 connectivity.