Honor’s new Pad 20 tablet brings a large 12.1‑inch 120 Hz LCD, a 10,100 mAh battery with 66 W fast charging, and a Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 SoC, all wrapped in a thin 6.29 mm chassis. Running Android 16‑based MagicOS 10, the device targets power users who need a versatile, media‑rich tablet without paying flagship prices.
Honor Pad 20 announced alongside the 600 series smartphones
Honor introduced its latest tablet, the Pad 20, at a launch event in China that also showcased the new 600 series phones. The Pad 20 is positioned as a mid‑range productivity tablet with a focus on a large, fluid display and a battery that can keep it running for a full day of heavy use.

Key specifications
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Display | 12.1‑inch LCD IPS, 3000 × 1872 px, 120 Hz refresh, up to 700 nits brightness. Soft‑Light edition offers a matte coating for reduced glare. |
| SoC | Snapdragon 7 Gen 3, octa‑core (1 × 3.2 GHz Cortex‑X2 + 3 × 2.8 GHz Cortex‑A710 + 4 × 2.0 GHz Cortex‑A510). |
| Memory / Storage | 6 GB + 128 GB, 8 GB + 128 GB, 8 GB + 256 GB, or 12 GB + 256 GB configurations. |
| Battery | 10,100 mAh Li‑Po, 66 W wired fast charging (full charge in ~70 minutes). |
| Cameras | 8 MP rear (AF), 8 MP front. |
| Audio | Six‑speaker system with dual microphones for clearer voice capture. |
| OS | Android 16‑based MagicOS 10, with enhanced multitasking (split‑screen, floating windows, and Quick Switch). |
| Connectivity | Dual‑band Wi‑Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3 (BLE), USB‑C with OTG, NFC (region dependent). |
| Dimensions / Weight | 6.29 mm thick, 525 g. |
| Colors | Gray, Green, Pink; Soft‑Light edition adds a matte finish. |
| Pricing (CNY) | 2,099 – 3,399 (≈ $310‑$500) depending on configuration. |
Why the display matters
The 12.1‑inch panel sits between the typical 10‑inch tablets and the larger 13‑inch iPad Pro class. Its 120 Hz refresh rate makes scrolling, gaming, and UI animations feel noticeably smoother than the 60 Hz panels still common in many Android tablets. The 700‑nit peak brightness, combined with the optional matte coating, ensures usability outdoors without the glare that glossy screens often suffer from.
Battery and charging: a practical power solution
A 10,100 mAh cell is unusually large for a tablet in this price bracket. At a typical draw of 7‑8 W during video playback, the Pad 20 can push past 12 hours of continuous media consumption. The inclusion of 66 W fast charging is a pragmatic choice: users can top up the battery from 0 % to 80 % in just over an hour, which is handy for commuters who only have short charging windows.
Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 – performance sweet spot
The Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 is built on a 4 nm process and offers a balanced mix of power and efficiency. The Cortex‑X2 core handles bursty tasks such as launching apps or processing AI‑enhanced camera features, while the A710 and A510 cores keep background workloads light on the battery. In benchmark tests, the chip delivers roughly 15 % higher GPU scores than the previous generation Snapdragon 7 Gen 2, which translates to smoother gaming and better support for the 120 Hz display.
MagicOS 10 and multitasking
Running on Android 16, Honor’s MagicOS 10 adds a suite of tablet‑focused features:
- Split‑Screen Plus – drag any app to the edge of the screen to snap it into a half‑size window, with automatic resizing of the other app.
- Floating Window – keep a video or messaging app in a resizable bubble while you work in another app.
- Quick Switch Bar – swipe down from the top‑right corner to see recently used apps in a carousel, making it faster to jump between tasks. These tools aim to narrow the gap between Android tablets and the more mature multitasking environment found on iPadOS.
Ecosystem lock‑in considerations
Honor’s tablets have historically used Google Mobile Services (GMS) in mainland China, but the Pad 20 ships with MagicOS 10, which integrates Honor’s own app store and cloud services. Users who rely heavily on Google apps will find full compatibility, yet the device also pushes Honor’s own ecosystem (e.g., Huawei Cloud, AppGallery, and the “Multi‑Device Collaboration” feature that lets you share clipboard and files with other Honor or Huawei devices). If you already own an Honor phone, the tablet can act as a secondary display via the Huawei Share protocol, but the experience is less seamless than Apple’s Continuity.
Pricing and market positioning
At CNY 2,099 for the base 6 GB/128 GB model, the Pad 20 undercuts many flagship Android tablets while still offering a premium display and battery. The higher‑end 12 GB/256 GB variant at CNY 3,399 positions the device against the Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE and the iPad 10, giving consumers a clear choice between a larger RAM buffer for heavy multitasking and a more affordable entry point.
Bottom line
The Honor Pad 20 is a well‑rounded tablet that packs a large, high‑refresh‑rate screen, a massive battery, and a capable Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 processor into a thin, lightweight body. Its MagicOS 10 multitasking suite makes it a practical tool for students and professionals who need a second screen without breaking the bank. While the ecosystem is still tied to Honor’s own services, the presence of full Google support means the device remains flexible for most Android users.
For the full spec sheet and official press release, visit the Honor newsroom.

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