POCO C81 hits India: Can ₹10,999 buy you 3-day battery?

POCO’s C81 series lands on Flipkart starting at ₹10,999, bringing a massive 6,300 mAh battery to budget buyers.

Navi Mumbai | editorial@unboxdailyhq.com

The Essentials

  • POCO has dropped the C81 and C81x in India, focusing on extreme battery life for under ₹11,000.
  • The phones go on sale April 27 via Flipkart, starting at an aggressive ₹10,999 for the 64GB variant.
  • With a 6.9-inch 120Hz screen and a huge battery, it’s built for heavy streaming without the “low battery” anxiety.

The Pulse

Starting April 27, Flipkart will be the exclusive home for the POCO C81 and its sibling, the C81x. In a market where most budget phones settle for 5,000 mAh, POCO is pushing the envelope with a 6,300 mAh cell. This isn’t just about size; it includes a “Cold Endurance Mode” specifically designed to keep the phone alive during harsh winters in Northern India, a rare nod to local geographic needs in this price bracket.

The devices feature a large 6.9-inch HD+ display that runs at a smooth 120Hz, which is becoming the new standard for Indian consumers who prioritize video consumption and scrolling. Under the hood, the Unisoc T7250 handles the daily grind, supported by Xiaomi’s latest HyperOS 3. While the 15W charging feels a bit slow for a battery this size, the addition of 7.5W reverse charging means your phone can double as an emergency power bank for your earbuds or a friend’s dying device. It’s a pragmatic play for the value-conscious Indian user who needs their tech to work as hard as they do.

The Snapshot

FeaturePOCO C81POCO C81x
Model NameC81 (Sunset Gold)C81x (Crystal Black)
Key Specs6.9″ 120Hz, 6300mAh6.9″ 120Hz, 6300mAh
Storage64 GB64 GB
India Price₹10,999₹11,499 (Expected)
AvailabilityApril 27, 2026April 27, 2026

The Big Picture

The budget smartphone segment in India is shifting from “good enough” to “specific overkill”. While Samsung’s M-series has long dominated the battery game, POCO is now undercutting them by bringing massive capacities and high-refresh screens below the ₹12,000 mark. Globally, the race for efficiency is cooling down as brands realize that Indian users, especially in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities, prioritize longevity over razor-thin designs. This launch directly challenges the Redmi A-series and Realme’s C-series by offering more screen and more juice for the same buck.

The Inside Intel

POCO’s “C” series actually started as a rebranded experiment to see if Indian Gen-Z buyers would respond to bolder colors and aggressive pricing over traditional marketing. The C81’s “Cold Endurance Mode” is actually a trickle-down feature from high-end rugged tablets, repurposed here for the Indian budget market to prevent battery voltage drops in high-altitude regions like Ladakh or Himachal.

The UDHQ Take

The POCO C81 is a textbook example of solving one problem really well. For the Indian buyer who spends four hours a day on YouTube or transit, the 6,300 mAh battery is a genuine quality-of-life upgrade. Yes, the 15W charging speed is frustratingly slow, you’ll likely need to charge it overnight but the trade-off is 2-3 days of usage without touching a plug. The 120Hz screen is the cherry on top, making a budget phone feel significantly more responsive than its price suggests. It isn’t a gaming beast, and the camera is strictly “social media adequate” but as a daily driver for someone who hates carrying a charger, it’s hard to beat at ₹10,999. It’s a specialized tool for a specific kind of endurance.

Best for: Students and field workers in India who need a massive screen and multi-day battery life under ₹12,000.

Who Is This For: Perfect for: 18–35 year olds in Tier-2 Indian cities who prioritize long-duration media consumption over gaming performance.

The Checkout

POCO C81 Sunset Gold (64 GB) on Flipkart | POCO C81x Crystal Black (64 GB) on Flipkart

The Source

Flipkart India

Ashfaque S.
Ashfaque S.

I believe the most honest reporting comes from those who actually use the tools. I’m not a career journalist; I’m a tech and vitality enthusiast with 22+ years of industry context. I cover Tech, Health, and Sports because I’m genuinely obsessed with how things work. I keep my inner kid at the forefront, stress-testing every innovation and debating the results with my partners to ensure our community gets an unfiltered, user-first perspective.