Huawei’s Mate 80 series is selling fast. The flagship lineup has now crossed 7.5 million units, according to Huawei Central, citing data from smartphone market analyst @RDObservation. That’s a strong number for a brand that, just a few years ago, was widely expected to fade out of the premium segment entirely.
The milestone matters because Huawei spent years fighting through U.S. sanctions that cut off its access to advanced chips and Google services. Its return to competitive flagship hardware has been gradual, but the Mate 80 numbers suggest the brand has regained real momentum with Chinese consumers.
Premium Android phones are a fiercely competitive space in China right now. Apple, Samsung, Xiaomi, and OPPO are all pushing hard at the high end. Huawei sitting alongside them with 7.5 million units sold is a signal that its recovery is more than symbolic.
A few things help explain why the Mate 80 series is resonating so well in the market:
- Huawei has leaned into domestic chip technology, using its own Kirin processors built with Chinese manufacturing
- The brand carries strong loyalty among older, more affluent buyers in China who associate it with national pride
- The Mate line has always been positioned as a productivity-focused flagship, and that identity has remained consistent
That said, 7.5 million units across a full series is not a number to over-read. Apple regularly sells that many iPhones in China within days of a launch. But for Huawei, given where it was just a few years ago, this rate of sales shows the company has rebuilt a serious position at the top of the market.
The bigger question now is whether Huawei can sustain this pace. Supply chain constraints remain a real issue, and the gap in chip performance compared to Qualcomm’s latest silicon is still measurable. But consumer appetite, at least for now, appears strong enough to keep the Mate 80 series competitive well into the year.
