Realme P4R Brings an 8,000mAh Battery to the Budget Tier
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Realme P4R Brings an 8,000mAh Battery to the Budget Tier

Smartphones Reporter
4 min read

Realme's P4 series keeps growing, and the new P4R splits the difference between the massive-battery P4 Power and the entry-level P4 Lite. You get an 8,000mAh Si/C cell, a 144Hz display, and a real camera upgrade, all starting at ₹19,000 in India.

Realme has been treating the P4 line like a buffet, letting buyers pick whatever combination of battery, performance, and camera suits them. Back in January, the Realme P4 Power set the tone with a frankly absurd 10,001mAh battery. Several P4 variants followed. The newest one, the Realme P4R, lands right in the middle of the family and aims squarely at people who want their phone to last days, not hours, without paying flagship money.

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A battery that does the heavy lifting

The headline number is 8,000mAh, the second-largest cell in the entire P4 series. Realme uses silicon-carbon (Si/C) chemistry here, which packs more energy into the same physical volume than a conventional graphite lithium-ion cell. That is how you fit this much capacity into a phone people can still hold comfortably.

Charging tops out at 45W and supports PPS (Programmable Power Supply), so a compatible USB-C PD charger can negotiate the right voltage instead of falling back to a slow trickle. It is not the fastest charging on the market, but on a battery this size you are not topping up often. Realme's own figures put it at roughly 12 hours of gaming, 61 hours of calls, or 169 hours of music on a single charge. Treat those as best-case marketing numbers, but even a fraction of that translates to two full days of normal use for most people.

Where the P4R sits in the lineup

In raw performance, the P4R is close to the P4 Lite rather than the Power model. Both share a 6.8-inch IPS LCD running at a smooth 144Hz, though the resolution stays at a modest 720p+. At this price, that refresh-rate-over-sharpness trade-off is common, and scrolling feels fluid even if fine text is not pixel-perfect.

Under the hood sits MediaTek's Dimensity 6300, a 5G chipset built for efficiency rather than benchmark glory. It ships with 4GB of RAM by default and a 6GB option for buyers who want a little more headroom. Storage comes in 128GB or 256GB flavors, with a microSD slot for expansion.

One quiet but meaningful upgrade hides in that storage: the P4R uses UFS 2.2, while the Lite was stuck on older eMMC chips. UFS supports parallel read and write operations, so app launches, file transfers, and system updates feel noticeably snappier. It is the kind of spec that does not make headlines but you feel every day.

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The upgrades over the Lite

Compared to the P4 Lite, the P4R adds more than just battery. Water resistance moves up to IP65 from IP64, meaning it can shrug off low-pressure water jets rather than just splashes. Realme also drop-tested the chassis from 1.8 meters, and there is an RGB notification light on the back for anyone who misses that flourish.

The cameras are arguably the second-biggest leap. The P4R carries a 50MP main sensor and an 8MP selfie camera, a clear step up from the 13MP and 5MP combo on the Lite. For an affordable phone, going from 13MP to 50MP on the primary shooter changes what the device can realistically capture in good light.

Pricing and availability

The Realme P4R is up for pre-order in India starting today through Realme India and Flipkart, with open sales beginning June 17. Three configurations are on offer:

  • 4/128GB: ₹19,000
  • 6/128GB: ₹21,000
  • 6/256GB: ₹23,000

Buyers can choose from Silver Glare, Lavender Glare, and Titanium Glare finishes.

That pricing puts the P4R noticeably above the P4 Lite, which launched at ₹13,000 for a 4/64GB unit and ₹14,000 for the 4/128GB variant. The roughly ₹5,000 premium buys you the bigger battery, better cameras, faster storage, and the sturdier build. Whether that gap is worth it depends on how much you value endurance and photography over the lowest possible sticker price.

For anyone shopping the budget Android tier in India, the P4R makes a straightforward pitch. It is not chasing performance crowns, and the 720p panel is a reminder of where the corners were cut. But an 8,000mAh battery with reasonable charging, paired with a genuinely improved camera and faster storage, is a practical package for the money. Realme clearly knows that battery life sells in this segment, and the P4R is built to win on exactly that front.

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