I’ve been using the Redmi Note 15 Pro as my daily phone for a bit, and here’s the vibe: it’s built like it’s ready for a bad day (or a clumsy owner), it lasts forever on a charge, and the screen is ridiculously bright. It also has a couple “yep, that’s a midranger” moments—mostly when you push performance.
Design And Durability: Titanium Vibes, Tank Energy
First impression: it looks clean and modern, and it feels solid in-hand—though it’s not exactly light at 210g. Colors are fun (Titanium Color, Glacier Blue, Mist Purple, Black), and the phone is fairly slim at 7.96mm.

The headline feature here is durability. This thing is rated IP66/IP68/IP69/IP69K for dust and water resistance—basically, it’s far more protected than most phones people casually toss into backpacks with keys and bad intentions. And the display is covered with Gorilla Glass Victus 2.
Display: Big, Bright, And Addictive

The Redmi Note 15 Pro’s screen is a 6.83-inch 1.5K AMOLED (2772 × 1280) with 120Hz refresh rate.
In real use, it’s the kind of display that makes you pick up your phone “just to check something” and then you wake up 40 minutes later watching videos you didn’t mean to start.


Brightness is the flex: up to 3200 nits peak. Also worth noting: it supports 3840Hz PWM dimming and has TÜV certifications aimed at comfort.
If you’re sensitive to flicker, it’s still smart to try it in person, but Xiaomi’s clearly trying to do the “less eye strain” thing here.
Performance: Smooth Day-To-Day, Not A “Max Settings” Monster
Redmi Note 15 Pro runs on the MediaTek Dimensity 7400-Ultra with LPDDR4X + UFS 2.2 storage options. In normal life—messages, social apps, browsing, camera, multitasking—it feels snappy enough. The 120Hz panel helps a lot with the “feels fast” factor.
Where you feel the ceiling is heavier gaming or sustained performance stuff. If you’re the type who plays demanding games at high settings and expects buttery frame rates, this might not be it.
Cameras: 200MP Sounds Wild, The Results Are Mostly Great

The main camera of the Redmi Note 15 Pro is 200MP with OIS, using pixel-binning (16-in-1) to produce more usable shots in most situations.
In daylight, it’s very easy to get photos that look sharp, punchy, and social-media-ready. The OIS helps keep shots steadier, and you can crop/zoom without everything turning into a watercolor painting immediately.
The 8MP ultrawide is fine, and selfies come from a 20MP front camera, which is solid for everyday use—good enough that you won’t dread opening the front cam by accident.
You also get a bunch of AI editing tools—remove reflections, erase objects, expand images, sky swaps, and more—plus Google Gemini and Circle to Search baked into the experience.
Here are some photos taken on the Redmi Note 15 Pro:






Battery And Charging: The Real Main Character
This is the part that made me stop caring about minor flaws: 6580mAh is huge, and it shows. In normal use, it’s the kind of battery life where you forget where you left your charger. Heavy use still feels comfortable. Light use feels like cheating.
Charging is 45W, which is quick enough to be convenient, even if it’s not “blink and it’s full.” And you can do 22.5W reverse charging, which is genuinely handy when a friend is at 3% and acting dramatic about it.
Audio, Connectivity, And The Little Stuff
You get dual speakers with a “400% volume boost” mode for louder scenarios. It gets plenty loud for videos and casual music, and it’s a nice “daily enjoyment” upgrade people overlook.
Connectivity is strong on paper: Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, NFC, and dual SIM options including eSIM depending on how you set it up. Security is covered with an in-display fingerprint sensor plus AI face unlock.
Software: Good Features, A Little Cluttered
The Redmi Note 15 Pro runs Xiaomi HyperOS. The features are genuinely useful (especially the AI tools), but the overall feel depends on your tolerance for preloaded apps and occasional “why is this here?” moments. If you like a super-clean Android experience, you’ll probably spend your first hour uninstalling and tweaking.
Verdict: Who Should Buy The Redmi Note 15 Pro?
If you want a phone that feels tough, lasts forever, and gives you a big, bright, premium-looking display—this is a really easy one to like. The camera is strong where it counts (main lens), the durability ratings are unusually high for the price bracket, and the battery life is the kind you notice every day.
If your top priority is raw performance (especially gaming), or you want the cleanest software experience with zero fuss, you may find better fits elsewhere.
At S$419, the Redmi Note 15 Pro is a “daily driver champion.” Not perfect, but wildly practical—and honestly kind of hard to put down once you get used to the battery and that screen.

