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Xiaomi Redmi 4A vs Redmi 4X: which should you buy?

Xiaomi’s Redmi 4X is here, but with near identical specs to this year’s other release, the Redmi 4A, it may be difficult to make the final call on which phone to buy.

So here’s a breakdown of just how these two phones differ.

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The price

As the newer (and slightly better-specced) phone, the 4X comes in at R2799 — R800 more expensive than the 4A, which launched at R1999.

But is the extra cost worth it?

The looks

As far as appearances go, the phones are pretty much the same. They both have around a 70% body-to-screen ratio, and both come in gold and black/”dark grey” — though the 4A does offer a rose gold option.

The feel

The 4A was produced as an affordable option, and it tells before even switching the phones on. At 131.5g, the ultra-light phone is fragile in your hands — and one wrong move could prove fatal. The 4X feels sturdier at 150g — and the Gorilla Glass provides an extra bit of protection for the accident-prone.

The hardware

The 4X has a malfunctioning rear-mounted fingerprint scanner

The 4X has a rear-mounted fingerprint scanner, but it’s not a very good one. Though it reads prints quickly, the scanner responds to any warm objects rubbing against it with the right amount of pressure. If the phone detects five unknown “fingerprints”, it locks the user out and asks for a pattern, PIN, or password — effectively rendering the scanner useless.

The 4X comes kitted with a Snapdragon 435, and the 4A with a Snapdragon 425. This means that the X has double the possible download speed, but the discrepancy shouldn’t change much for the average user.

The camera

The Redmi 4A’s camera software is almost exactly the same as the 4X

The phones’ cameras are nearly identical, and the only stand-out feature on the X is its HDR capabilities. Both phones have 13MP front cameras, finicky autofocus, and 1080p@30fps video — but the 4A’s HDR did little more than brighten images, while the X’s HDR heightened quality and added vibrance.

The software

Both phones run on Xiaomi’s MIUI 8, which looks like Apple’s iOS but offers the customisation capabilities of Android. The operating system’s biggest strength is its theme store that offers plenty of options for the phone’s skin.

Both phones come installed with standard gallery, music and weather apps, as well as a compass and scanner.

The battery

One of the biggest advantages of the Redmi 4X is its bigger battery — though the 4A’s isn’t bad itself.

The 4A’s non-removable 3120mAh battery survived Gearburn’s video playback test (that involves looping a video nonstop with WiFi on and brightness on max) for almost eight hours — which is very impressive, as many phones max out around six.

Even more impressive? The 4X lasted around 13 hours — meaning it could last days on regular stop-start use. The massive 4100mAh battery only took around four hours to charge.

Redmi 4A vs 4X camera
left right

Redmi 4x 1

Redmi 4a V 4x

Redmi 4x 2

Redmi 4a V 4x 1

Redmi 4a Hdr

Redmi 4x Hdr

Redmi 4a Low Light

Redmi 4x Low-light

Redmi 4a Landscape

Redmi 4x Landscape

Redmi 4x Pano

Redmi 4x Front-facing

Verdict?

There’s no doubt that the 4X is a better phone — but whether it’s worth the extra R800 is up to you.

If you need super long battery life, or you drop your phone often, or you want an HDR feature that improves pictures, then perhaps it will be.

If not, the 4A is a very capable phone that will do nearly everything else the 4X does.

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