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Honor Magic V5 Review | Ubergizmo

Foldables are now fully part of the smartphone landscape. They are no longer experimental, no longer fragile tech showcases meant only for early adopters. In 2026, the real question is simple: can a foldable completely replace your primary phone without experiential compromise? The HONOR Magic V5 (official page) makes a very strong case that it can.

This device refines what HONOR has been building for years. It is thinner, equipped with a larger battery, rated for improved durability, and powered by a powerful processor.

Foldables are no longer experimental, no longer fragile tech showcases

Our review unit comes with 16GB of RAM and 512GB of internal storage, paired with a 5,820 mAh silicon-carbon battery. Import pricing currently ranges between $1,600 and $1,700, placing it directly against the Galaxy Z Fold7 and the Vivo X Fold5. At this level, expectations are not modest. They are uncompromising. The Magic V5 meets them.

Design: A Foldable That Stops Feeling Like One

Next to an iPhone Pro Max

The most surprising thing about the Magic V5 is psychological rather than technical. When closed, it feels like a normal phone, and I can measure that by looking at how often I use it folded up: I have no hesitation using it one-handed. The one thing that I wish was integrated is an in-screen fingerprint reader as the one to the side isn’t ideal when using one hand.

External screen vs iPhone Pro Max

At 217 grams and under 9 mm at its thinnest folded point, it does not feel like a gadget that happens to fold. It feels like a premium flagship, and a huge part of this is due to the premium materials. Several people we know picked it up without realizing it was foldable. When they discovered it opened, there was genuine surprise.

Magic V5 open (right)

That reaction is revealing: early foldables always felt like devices two phones stacked on top one another (which they were). This one fades into the background. This sensation has now moved into the tri-fold world.

For people who are worried about large phones, its footprint is slightly smaller than ultra-large slab phones. It probably feels easier to manage than a Galaxy S Ultra-class device. The leather-textured rear panel improves grip and resists fingerprints.

Open it, and the effect reverses. The 7.95-inch display reveals an extremely thin profile of roughly 4.3–4.6 mm unfolded: most people are still shocked when they see this for the first time. It looks almost impossibly slim. Because the weight spreads across a larger surface, it feels lighter than one expects.

The hinge is firm and controlled. It does not swing open loosely, yet it moves smoothly and can hold partial angles for media viewing.

Living With a Foldable: Does the Novelty Wear Off?

The real test of a foldable is whether you actually use the inner display weeks later, past the initial “wow” factor. In our usage, the answer is yes, especially if you are often using it seating, for example if you travel by train or plane a lot. Also, the large screen makes it an excellent in-car GPS device if you don’t have a car built-in large screen.

Roughly two-thirds to three-quarters of the time, my device was used open. It means unfolding becomes instinctive when appropriate (waiting, seating, when used with a BT keyboard…).

Over time, that dual-mode behavior becomes completely natural

Browsing long articles feels more natural. Email becomes easier to scan. Slack conversations feel less cramped. Social media feeds display more context at once and photo experiences on Instagram are 3X better.

Watching video on the larger screen is more comfortable and you don’t even have to use Landscape mode. You have the same experience as “standard phone” full-screen landscape mode, while using unfolded Portrait mode, with all the GUI elements, video controls visible.

Does it require two hands? Yes. Unfolding and using the large screen is inherently a two-handed action. This device encourages intentional use. When you want quick interactions, the outer display behaves like a normal smartphone. When you want depth, you open it. Over time, that dual-mode behavior becomes completely natural.

Displays: Large, Bright, and Responsive

The inner 7.95-inch AMOLED display runs at 120 Hz and feels extremely responsive. In direct sunlight testing, we measured approximately 810 nits. The outer 6.43-inch AMOLED display reached around 1010 nits.

These are solid numbers. More importantly, brightness management is stable and predictable outdoors. Could it be better? Sure! It’s never wrong to be “too bright” as certain outdoor situations may be extremely bright. But we’ve tested this in the sunshine and it was just fine.

The user interface remains consistently fluid. We used the “adaptive refresh” which maxes out at 120 Hz but slows down for static images to preserve the battery. The Magic V5 maintains smooth animations and responsive touch behavior. Latency feels low, and transitions are clean.

I really like that HONOR includes a dedicated Quick Layout button for split-screen multitasking. That small design choice reduces friction dramatically. You do not need to memorize gestures or retrain muscle memory if switching from another ecosystem. The foldable experience can be magnified if you can quickly and easily split-screen two apps. The Magic V5 nails it.

The Display Crease Reality

Crease anxiety remains one of the biggest concerns for new foldable buyers. Here is the honest answer: Yes, the crease exists. No, it does not matter in daily use.

When the screen is off and light hits it at an angle, you can see it. When reading white backgrounds, you might notice a slight reflection if you deliberately tilt the device. When swiping across the center, you can faintly feel it with your finger.

The crease does not matter

But during normal use, it is unnoticeable. It does not distort text. It does not interrupt video playback. It does not break immersion. Foldable panels have matured significantly since 2019. This is no longer a fragile or visually distracting compromise. It is simply part of the technology, and people should not worry about this.

Software Maturity: Foldables Have Grown Up

One important difference between early foldables and today’s generation is software maturity. App scaling is no longer a gamble. Most major applications behave properly on the inner display. Layout adjustments feel to fully take advantage of the format rather than stretched (ex: E-Trade).

Email clients benefit from expanded list views. Calendar apps display more context. Browsers feel closer to tablet-class experiences. Productivity apps like Slack and document editors become genuinely useful rather than novelty driven. It is a known quantity, stable and practical thanks to Google’s work on the Android OS layer.

Performance: Flagship

Powered by the Snapdragon 8 Elite and paired with 16GB of RAM, the Magic V5 delivers strong real-world responsiveness. App launches are quick. Multitasking is stable. UI transitions are smooth.

This is not marketed as a gaming-focused device, and that is appropriate. It is built for productivity and media consumption. Within that scope, performance is excellent.

App continuity between folded and unfolded states works in most scenarios. However, a few apps still restart/refresh when transitioning, but this is a developer optimization issue rather than a hardware limitation. For daily flagship usage, performance is confident and stable.

Battery: Incredible Capacity and Speed

The huge 5,820 mAh silicon-carbon battery is one of the most impressive achievements in this device.

Fitting that capacity into such a thin chassis is a real engineering accomplishment. Foldable users tend to rely heavily on the inner display, which consumes more power due to its size. That larger battery meaningfully supports extended sessions. In real-world use, the endurance is reliable and predictable.

Add to that the charging that supports 66W wired and 50W wireless. There is no charger included in the box, so you will need a compatible (= Honor branded) adapter to reach maximum charging speeds. For a device this thin, battery life is a competitive advantage.

Cameras: Competitive Without Apology

Foldables once required camera excuses, not anymore. The Magic V5 delivers a practical focal range anchored by a 23 mm equivalent primary camera, supplemented by 13mm Ultrawide and 70mm zoom. In everyday shooting, the image quality is competitive with other flagship Android devices and recent iPhones.

Low-light performance is good, though thicker flagship phones with bigger camera housing can produce night scenes with shorter exposures. Larger cameras always have an inherent advantage, it’s just physics. The Magic V5 balances exposure well without aggressively extending shutter times.

HDR behavior is reliable: one practical test we use involves photographing extremely bright trade show televisions. These scenarios stress extreme dynamic range. The Magic V5 handled them well, preserving highlight detail without washing out the scene. This is exactly where a premium foldable should land: no obvious weaknesses.

Finally, the photo visual experience simply can’t be matched by phones with smaller displays. There’s nothing one can do about that. Browsing your photos on a foldable is just a phenomenal experience.

The Magic V5 camera housing allows for a larger internal volume

Durability and Risk

The device is rated for 500,000 folds and carries IP58 and IP59 protection. On paper, durability is strong. However, thinness introduces its own considerations. The greatest risk is not dust or water, although water is a serious risk for all phones. Drop and impacts are the real danger. A drop on a thin foldable phone introduces different stress dynamics compared to a thicker slab phone.

Using a case is advisable, but doing so slightly reduces the thinness advantage. That is the trade-off. If you prioritize long-term durability, protection is sensible. Foldables are no longer extremely fragile, but they still demand a bit more attention.

AI: Aim for Pragmatism

HONOR integrates its on-device proprietary LLM “MagicLM” alongside call translation, contextual shortcuts, and assistant improvements. Real-time call translation is particularly notable. Latency is low, often under half a second. Both text and audio translations appear quickly enough to assist during live conversations.

I tried it between English and French, and it was decent enough to help you in a real situation. These features feel genuinely useful rather than just gimmicks and checkboxes. AI here supports practical workflows and don’t chase novelty too much. It’s the thing you’ve been promised for many years, but now it has become quite practical, even though not perfect.

Audio, Connectivity, Biometrics

The inclusion of an infrared blaster is always welcome, and it remains surprisingly useful in travel scenarios in hotels and guest houses. Stereo speakers are loud and clear, suitable for podcasts and casual media consumption. I use it daily to listen to Podcasts.

The side-mounted fingerprint reader is accurate and generally great. However, it is ergonomically imperfect when switching hands. An under-display solution would feel more neutral, but performance itself is reliable. I realize the technical difficulties associated to having an in-screen fingerprint reader, but from a consumer perspective, that would be the best solution.

Wi-Fi 7 and 5G support ensure modern connectivity standards. This wasn’t a concern about connectivity at any point during the review. If you import a phone from another region, check the 5G bands that are supported by both the unit you’re getting and the carrier you intend to use it with. This is valid for all phones.

Competition and Positioning

The Magic V5 competes directly with the Galaxy Z Fold7 and the Vivo X Fold5 in pricing and design philosophy. We do not consider the Pixel Fold a direct competitor in this context. Its thickness places it in a different ergonomic category. For this price range, you must demand a design that competes with the Magic V5. We are in the ultra-thin premium foldable tier here.

Availability spans Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia Pacific markets, giving it broad international reach.

Conclusion

The HONOR Magic V5 shows the foldable market has matured. We have finally reached a thickness level that makes this phone “feels” like a regular phone when folded. Upon unfolding, the magic remains powerful and this is the attractive part of these phones.

The MagicV5 disappears in your pocket. It impresses when opened

The V5 disappears in your pocket. It impresses when opened. It delivers flagship performance, strong battery endurance, competitive cameras, and a refined multitasking experience. This is no longer a niche device that only interests enthusiasts. It is a legitimate premium smartphone that anyone who can afford it should consider. Personally, I would like to see such a foldable phone that is even bigger (S-Ultra like) when folded, and would be a monster when unfolded.

Highs

  • Ultra-thin, normal phone feel when folded
  • Large inner display that magnifies visual experience
  • Impressive battery capacity
  • Competitive premium camera system

Lows

  • Side-mounted fingerprint reader is less ergonomic for one-handed use
  • A few apps still refresh/restart when switching folded ↔ unfolded
  • Brightness is good but not class-leading

Rating + Price

  • Rating: 9.1/10
  • Price: ~$1600
  • Available on Amazon

Filed in Cellphones >Reviews. Read more about and .

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