OnePlus is walking away from the US and European markets. The brand and its parent company Oppo announced jointly that OnePlus will no longer launch new devices in either region, ending a run that once made it one of the most talked-about names in Android phones.
The companies are calling it a ‘strategic focus’ shift, though neither has been specific about where, or even whether, OnePlus will continue selling phones going forward. What’s clear is that Oppo is absorbing OnePlus’s capabilities, technologies, and product direction. OnePlus co-founder Peter Lau recently returned to Oppo as chief product officer, which signals how tight the integration is becoming.
None of this is exactly shocking. The signs have been building for a while. The OnePlus Open 2 foldable was delayed and then quietly canceled. Oppo’s own flagship lineup has been getting more attention and more resources. The two companies have shared hardware, software, and suppliers for years, so the corporate overlap was already significant.
For anyone still using a OnePlus phone in the US or Europe, the company says existing owners are covered. According to its spokespeople, user rights are guaranteed, including after-sales support, software updates, and existing service channels. That’s worth knowing, because the transition isn’t instant.
One change that is coming fairly soon: Oppo’s ColorOS will replace OnePlus’s OxygenOS on OnePlus devices across Europe and North America over the coming months. OxygenOS had long been one of the brand’s biggest selling points, particularly among Android enthusiasts who liked its clean, close-to-stock feel. Moving to ColorOS is a meaningful shift, and it’s likely to frustrate some loyal users.
As for Oppo itself, the picture in North America remains unchanged. The brand has no plans to launch phones in the US market, so there’s no replacement coming for OnePlus on that front. Europe is a different story. Oppo Europe CEO Elvis Zhou confirmed that Europe is still a priority market, and the company has been actively building out its European presence, including:
- A recently relaunched UK online shop with a wider product range
- Plans to grow its local teams across Europe
- A bigger push to get flagship phones in front of European buyers
The Find X9 Ultra was arguably Oppo’s biggest European launch to date, though buying one directly has not always been straightforward, even with dedicated European and UK sales portals in place.
This move reflects a broader trend in the Android market. Chinese phone brands have struggled to build lasting traction in Western markets, caught between brand recognition issues, US trade pressures, and the dominance of Samsung and Apple at the high end. OnePlus came closer than most to cracking that code, but the window has clearly closed. Whether Oppo can do better in Europe, without the OnePlus name to lean on, is the real question now.
