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Oppo Reno 13 Pro two-minute review
Before even picking up the test unit for this Oppo Reno 13 Pro review, I was ready to draft a headline comparing it to the recent Google Pixel 9a – after all, I spent much of my Reno 12 Pro review comparing that phone to the Pixel 8a, as their similar release window and price makes them natural Android rivals.
Last year, the victory easily went to Oppo, but in a surprise and potentially appeal-ruining blunder, the company has shot itself in the foot with the Reno 13 Pro.
First, some context: the Reno series of smartphones is the mid-range offering from Chinese manufacturer Oppo, and the 13 Pro is 2025’s top-end member of the family. It arrives alongside a non-Pro model, the Oppo Reno 13, and an even cheaper equivalent in the form of the Oppo Reno 13F. For all the flashy features of Oppo’s expensive Find X8 Pro or folding Find N5, I’ve long preferred its Reno models, given how often they’ve shaken up the mid-range Android market.
Unfortunately, that preference streak ends here: the Oppo Reno 13 Pro has seen a surprising increase in price over its predecessor – I’m not talking mere pennies, but a whopping £150 in the UK and AU$300 in Australia. Oppo sells full-blown phones in its A series that cost less than that price hike!
It’s hard, then, to compare the Reno 13 Pro to the Google Pixel 9a (which hasn’t seen a similar price hike this year), given that the Oppo device is significantly more expensive. This year’s victory goes to Google, it seems.
As a butchered Spider-Man quote goes, with great financial cost comes great expectations, and some of the budget trappings of the Reno family feel bizarre in a phone that’s now only a spitting distance from the Samsung Galaxy S25 in terms of price.
For instance, Reno phones are almost always stuffed with pre-installed bloatware, unwanted third-party apps, and games at first boot-up. That’s still the case in the 13 Pro, despite its shiny new price tag. Similarly, the lack of a microSD card is a notable omission for a phone that you may feasibly expect to use for professional work.
Lots of my issues with the Reno 13 Pro stem from this price-related disappointment, but in most departments, it’s a great phone – it’d just be a Google Pixel-killer if it were cheaper.
In the camera department, for instance, the Reno 13 Pro has perhaps the best zoom capabilities of any mid-range phone, boasting 3.5mm optical zoom and three 50MP snappers (plus one 8MP ugly duckling). It brings some useful modes and features, too, including the novel underwater photography mode. If you like going swimming with your phone – and if you do, why? – this will be an interesting device for you.
The Reno 13 Pro is also really powerful, fast to charge (it boasts wireless charging), has a big and high-res display, and benefits from some of the best water resistance of any mobile on the market (as you’d hope, given the underwater photography feature).
There’s no doubt about it – this is a good smartphone. However, it could have been a great one if it wasn’t for the meaty price hike. I can see that high number putting some buyers off, and if you’re one of them, I don’t blame you. Thankfully, the Reno 12 Pro is still being sold in most places.
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: price and availability
- Sells for £649 / $1,299 (around $830)
- Big price hike over Reno 12 Pro
- Available UK and AU, not US
Like most Oppo phones, the Reno 13 Pro rolled out slowly across the world, with this model first arriving in late 2024. In the UK and Australia, it went on sale in April 2025, but it hasn’t been released in the US yet – and based on precedent, it likely never will.
You can pick up the phone for £649 / $1,299 (around $830), so it’s at the upper end of the mid-range Android phone market. The non-Pro model costs £499 / AU$899 (around $640), while the Reno 12 Pro went for £499 / AU$999 (around $640), so there’s a serious price jump between generations.
That price hike is quite a surprise, and it ruins the Oppo’s ability to honestly rival the Google Pixel 9a, which starts at $499 / £499 / AU$849. Long have the Reno Pro mobiles trounced their Pixel a-series contemporaries by offering better specs at a similar price, but that streak ends with the Reno 13 series, as it’s no longer comparable in terms of price.
And before you ask: the standard Reno 13 misses out on some of the best features of the Pro, like its zoom camera, big display, and wireless charging, so it’s not a viable Pixel rival.
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: specs
Header Cell – Column 0 | Header Cell – Column 1 |
---|---|
Dimensions: |
162.8 x 76.6 x 7.6mm |
Weight: |
195g |
Screen: |
6.83-inch FHD (1272 x 2800) 120Hz AMOLED |
Chipset: |
Mediatek Dimensity 8350 |
RAM: |
12GB |
Storage: |
512GB |
OS: |
Android 15, ColorOS 15 |
Primary camera: |
50MP, f/1.8 |
Ultra-wide camera: |
8MP f/2.2 116-degree |
Telephoto camera: |
50MP, f/2.8 3.5x optical |
Front camera: |
50MP, f/2.0 |
Audio: |
Stereo speakers |
Battery: |
5,800mAh |
Charging: |
80W wired, 50W wireless |
Colors: |
Black, lilac |
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: design
- Thin and light Android phone
- Comes in lilac or black
- IP69 protection
While the Oppo Reno 13 Pro doesn’t redefine the mid-range Android look that every manufacturer seems to trot out on autopilot these days, it does perfect it to a tee.
This is a thin and light device: its dimensions are 162.8 x 76.6 x 7.6mm, and it weighs just 195g, so it feels slender despite its big screen. The bezel is tiny, as is the front-facing camera cut-out, so the screen feels like it takes over the entire front of the device.
The back of my lilac model has a gently textured shine which blossoms in light (I didn’t test the other version, a black model). I like the look, even if most people will hide it in a case straight away.
The phone is so thin that you’d be forgiven for being surprised that it even has space for a USB-C charging port on the bottom – and there was apparently no room for a 3.5mm headphone jack or anywhere to put a microSD card.
On the right edge of the Reno 13 Pro, you’ve got a power button and volume rocker. Both were easily within reach for me, as was the in-screen fingerprint scanner, which worked reliably. The back of the phone has a camera bump for the three lenses and a fairly large flash module. It sticks out enough that the phone has no hope of staying flat on a table.
A pretty rare spec that Oppo has utilized in the Reno 13 Pro is IP69 protection. This standard has the same total dust protection that phones with the more common IP68 rating have, and also the same ability to survive being immersed in water for half an hour, but it has an additional assurance against high-pressure water jets and steam. Most devices that have an IP69 rating are intended to be used alongside medical or food preparation, and so few people will need it in their smartphone, but it’s certainly a nice layer of protection to have.
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: display
- 6.83 inches, 1272 x 2800 resolution
- Gorilla Glass 7i provides protection
- 120Hz refresh, high max brightness
The Oppo Reno 13 Pro has a 6.83-inch screen. That’s big, even by mid-range Android standards, and it’s one of the largest displays you’ll find on a phone without moving into Ultra or Pro Max territory.
The resolution is 1272 x 2800 or FHD+, which is pretty standard on smartphones these days. The refresh rate goes up to 120Hz, though by default it’s on an automatic mode that changes it based on your use, and I’d recommend sticking to this for battery life reasons.
Like its predecessor, the Reno 13 Pro has an AMOLED display with a nice, high 1,200 nits max brightness, support for HDR10+, and a color gamut of over a billion colors. Those are important specs for games and TV shows to look good on a mobile, for sure, and this device ticks all the boxes in that department.
Continuing the ‘protection’ theme from the Design section, the glass of the screen is Corning Gorilla Glass 7i. The unique selling point of this panel is that it’s more durable and scratch- and drop-proof, something which I (accidentally) tested quite a bit during the review period.
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: software
- Android 15 with Oppo’s ColorOS 15 over the top
- Bloatware problem
- Familiar interface to Android users
As with most of its contemporary Android phones, the Oppo Reno 13 Pro comes with Android 15 pre-installed. Oppo has promised that the phone will get at least 3 years of updates, a restrained number in the ‘Android updates arms race’, but it’s better than nothing.
Layered over the top is Oppo’s Android fork, ColorOS, or ColorOS 15 to give it the full name. This version’s unique features include a plethora of pre-installed tools with the suffix ‘AI’ slapped at the end, like an image clarity upscaler and deblurring, plus a few other features you’ve seen before, like AI summaries, AI text replies, and text-to-speak from web pages. The last of that number is, at least, a handy accessibility feature.
Mostly, though, this is an Android fork that’ll feel familiar if you use any other manufacturers’ equivalent – I don’t use an Oppo as my day-to-day device, but the Reno 13 Pro’s software still felt easy to jump straight into; I knew where all the features, customizations, and settings were.
Usually in the software section of Oppo reviews, I start by complaining about the bloatware; the fact that I wanted to vary my structure up doesn’t mean that it’s not a huge problem here. When you boot up the phone, you’re faced with an ungodly number of pre-installed Oppo apps, third-party services, and random games. Cue ten minutes of frantic deleting if you want your new smartphone to feel yours.
Bloatware is an infuriating but stalwart aspect of cheap and mid-range mobiles, but when you’re paying a premium price for a phone, you’re allowed to expect better.
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: cameras
- 50MP main, 50MP telephoto and 8MP ultra-wide cameras, 50MP for selfies
- Iffy AI features
- Small but appreciated improvements over predecessor
The debate about whether the Reno 13 Pro still counts as a mid-range phone notwithstanding, Oppo has consistently dominated the market for inexpensive camera phones, and it’s continued its lead with this new model.
Specs-wise, the Reno 13 Pro is mostly the same as its predecessor: you’ve got a 50MP main camera, an 8MP ultra-wide camera, a 50MP telephoto camera, and a 50MP selfie camera. The main improvement is in that second snapper: it now has a 3.5x lens, and given how rare any kind of zoom lens is on a budget phone, that’s an achievement.
Zoom lenses are primarily used to close the distance from a far subject without relying on digital zoom, which simply crops an image and loses resolution quickly. But they’re also popular for photographers thanks to the depth-of-field they create on closer subjects, and the Reno 13 Pro is great for photography like that as a result.
Smaller but noticeable differences abound in the Reno 13 Pro: images are just as bright and bold as you’ve come to expect from a Reno, but there’s a little more detail in darkness, a little less grain in low-light areas, and a little more dynamic range to differentiate similar colors. The presence of something called a ‘color spectrum sensor’ may help in this area, or it could be better optimization and post-processing.
A few rough edges affect image quality slightly, and the more I used the Oppo, the more it became evident that this wasn’t quite a Samsung Galaxy or iPhone rival. The autofocus was rather unreliable, while Portrait mode returned mixed results in the bokeh department and zoomed-in images could sometimes lack quality.
I’m always excited to see the new photography modes introduced in camera phones, and the Oppo Reno 13 Pro didn’t let me down. It has an underwater mode which lets you utilize the mobile’s water protection for shots in the sea or a swimming pool (or in any other body of liquid, I suppose). It deactivates the on-screen button, so you have to use the volume rocker to take photos or videos, and when you’re done, it vibrates the phone to remove moisture. It’s a novel feature, and while it’s terrifying to dunk your phone into any kind of liquid, it did seem to do the job when I stuck my review sample in a container of water.
Beyond that, there’s the standard assortment of photo modes: standard, Portrait, night, and panorama. Video recording goes up to 4K/60fps and video modes include slow-mo, time-lapse, and dual-view.
The phone’s Photos app brings a few AI modes to help remove background people, remove reflections, and enhance clarity. The main one is obviously AI eraser, an answer to Google’s equivalent feature, but I wasn’t impressed by the results in the Oppo – it often failed to remove people, and when it succeeded, it did so by creating an obviously artificial background that looked worse than the offending photobombers.
Oppo Reno 13 Pro camera samples
Oppo Reno 13 Pro: performance and audio
- Mid-range Dimensity 8350 chipset
- 12GB RAM, 512GB Storage
- No headphone jack, Bluetooth 5.4 and stereo speakers
The Oppo Reno 13 Pro comes with the MediaTek Dimensity 8350 chipset, a nice solid mid-range chipset that marks a pronounced improvement over its already-decent predecessor.
Multi-core benchmark tests for the new Reno on Geekbench returned an average score of 4042, which is over twice as high as the scores achieved by the 12 Pro’s Dimensity 7300 Energy – that’s less an iterative update and more a much better chipset.
As a result, the Reno 13 Pro is a dab hand at gaming and handling photo editing apps. It’s not the most powerful phone on the market, with some budget gaming phones getting scores in the 6000s, but it’ll do everything you need it to with aplomb.
The version of the Reno 13 Pro on sale in the UK and Australia has 12GB RAM and 512GB storage; in some regions, you can also get 16GB and anything between 256GB and 1TB storage, but not in the regions we cover.
Briefly mentioning audio: there’s no 3.5mm headphone jack, but the Reno 13 Pro supports Bluetooth 5.4. The on-board stereo speakers aren’t amazing, but they’re par for the course for phone speakers.
- Performance score: 3.5 / 5
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: battery life
- Big 5,800mAh battery
- Lasts for about two days of use
- 80W wired charging, 50W wireless
The Oppo Reno 13 Pro boasts a bigger battery than its predecessor, in line with market shifts that are making the 5,000mAh power packs of yesteryear look svelte. Instead, the 13 Pro has a 5,800mAh power pack, which roughly lasted for a day and a half during my testing, or two days if I used the phone sparingly.
The phone’s charging speed is the same as last year’s model, at 80W, which is nice and fast without being too fast (and by that I mean, speedy enough that you invariably damage your battery health by using it). Also back on the Reno 13 Pro is the ability to charge other gadgets by plugging them into your phone using a USB cable – this is really handy for people who need to charge their earbuds or smartwatch on the go.
New on the Reno 13 Pro is a surprisingly fast 50W wireless charging capability. That’s a premium feature that you don’t often see in mid-range mobiles, especially at such a high speed. However, a word of warning: the camera bump means you can’t put the phone totally flat on surfaces, which meant I could wirelessly power up the device on my charger.
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: value
With the Oppo Reno 13 Pro, you’re basically getting what you pay for: decent specs at a mid-range price.
I’m sad to have to write that, though, because Oppo Reno phones usually knock it out of the park in the value section. Instead, the Reno 13 Pro gets a passing grade and nothing more.
You can get almost-as-good phones for much less, including the Reno 12 Pro. And given that bona fide flagship smartphones only cost a small amount less these days, people who aren’t on a tight budget don’t have to pay that much more to get better.
Should you buy the Oppo Reno 13 Pro?
Attributes |
Notes |
Rating |
---|---|---|
Value |
Oppo hasn’t priced the Reno 13 Pro as competitively as one would expect. |
3 / 5 |
Design |
The Reno doesn’t change the game, but it’s fairly lightweight and looks good. |
3.5 / 5 |
Display |
It’s a big display that looks good for your videos or games. |
3.5 / 5 |
Software |
There’s loads of bloatware, and only a limited number of updates are guaranteed. |
3 / 5 |
Camera |
Its improvements put the Reno 13 Pro leagues ahead of rivals. |
4 / 5 |
Performance |
You get a pretty solid processor, with lots of storage and RAM. |
3.5 / 5 |
Battery |
The Reno has a big battery and nice, fast charging speeds. |
4 / 5 |
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
Oppo Reno 13 Pro review: Also consider
If the Oppo Reno 13 Pro’s price hike has given you cause for concern, here are some other handsets you could consider.
Header Cell – Column 0 |
Oppo Reno 13 Pro |
Oppo Reno 12 Pro |
Google Pixel 9a |
Samsung Galaxy S25 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Starting price (at launch): |
£649 / $1,299 (around $830) |
£499 / AU$999 (roughly $640) |
$499 / £499 / AU$849 |
$799 / £799 / AU $1,399 |
Dimensions: |
162.8 x 76.6 x 7.6mm |
161.5 x 74.8 x 7.4mm |
154.7 x 73.3 x 8.9mm |
146.9 x 70.5 x 7.2mm |
Weight: |
195g |
180g |
186g |
162g |
OS (at launch): |
Android 15, ColorOS 15 |
Android 14, ColorOS 14.1 |
Android 15 |
Android 15, One UI 7 |
Screen Size: |
6.83-inch |
6.7-inch |
6.3-inch |
6.2-inch |
Resolution: |
1272 x 2800 |
1080 x 2412 |
1080 x 2424 |
1080 x 2340 |
CPU: |
Mediatek Dimensity 8350 |
Mediatek Dimensity 7300 Energy |
Google Tensor G4 |
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite |
RAM: |
12GB |
12GB |
8GB |
12GB |
Storage (from): |
512GB |
512GB |
128GB / 256GB |
128GB / 256GB / 512GB |
Battery: |
5,800mAh |
5,000mAh |
5,100mAh |
4,000mAh |
Rear Cameras: |
50MP main, 50MP telephoto. 8MP ultra-wide |
50MP main, 50MP telephoto, 8MP ultra-wide |
48MP main, 13MP ultra-wide |
50MP main, 10MP telephoto, 12MP ultra-wide |
Front camera: |
50MP |
50MP |
13MP |
12MP |
How I tested the Oppo Reno 13 Pro
- Review test period = 2 weeks
- Testing included = Everyday usage, including web browsing, social media, photography, video calling, gaming, streaming video, music playback
- Tools used = Geekbench 6, Geekbench ML, GFXBench, native Android stats
I used the Oppo Reno 13 Pro for about two weeks before I started writing this review.
To test it, I used it as my normal phone. That means I played games, took photos, texted, and streamed lots of music with it, while seeing how well the battery performed as I did so.
I also tried some ‘lab’ tests, which included benchmarking, charging testing, and dunking the phone in a jug of water to see if it would take photos, or immediately get wrecked.
I come to this review having spent over six years writing and testing tech for TechRadar, with plenty of Oppo phones (including the first-gen Reno) among the devices I’ve reviewed.
Read more about how we test
First reviewed April 2025
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