After launching the phones earlier this month, Huawei has today released the Huawei P10 and P10 Plus in Australia today.

Huawei has partnered with Optus, Virgin Mobile and Vodafone for the launch of the P10 with the Black model available at all three carriers, while the Blue is exclusive to Optus and Vodafone gets the exclusive on the Gold colour option. While you can get the P10 on a range of plans from all three carriers, you can also purchase the phone outright for just $899 – a bargain for a phone with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of on-board storage.

The larger P10 Plus is heading to retail channels only in the Graphite Black colour option for $1,099 from Harvey Norman and JB Hi-Fi, with the possibility of being available at some other retailers as well.

There’s a similarities between the P10 and P10 Plus, with both devices utilising the HiSilicon Kirin 960 SoC but when it comes to RAM and storage there’s differences. The P10 clocks in with 4GB of RAM and has 64GB of storage, while the P10 Plus gets 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage. The P10 uses a 5″ FullHD (1080P resolution) display, while the P10 Plus jumps up to a larger 5.5″ QHD (2560×1440) resolution display. Obviously the P10 Plus with its larger form factor packs in more battery, with a 3,750mAh battery it’s 500mAh larger than the 3,200mAH battery in the P10.

Both devices come with the same dual 20 MP + 12 MP camera sensor setup that includes Leica optics, phase detection and laser autofocus and a dual-LED flash, there is one difference between the two. The P10 Plus has a slightly better lens on it, with an f/1.9 aperture compared to the f/2.2 aperture on the P10 – this should make a difference in low-light shots and we’ll be testing this out.

Want a spec comparison? We’ve got you:

 Huawei P10Huawei P10 Plus
Release dateMarch 2017March 2017
Screen size5.1-inch5.5-inch
Screen technologyIPS LCD
Resolution1,920 x 1,0802,560 x 1,440
PPI431
Rear camera20MP mono + 12MP RGB20MP mono + 12MP RGB
Front camera8MP
ChipsetKirin 960Kirin 960
Core config
  • 4 x 2.4 GHz
  • 4 x 1.8 GHz
  • 4 x 2.4 GHz
  • 4 x 1.8 GHz
Ram4GB6GB
Storage64GB128GB
MicroSDYes, up to 256GBYes, up to 256GB
Battery3,200 mAh3,750 mAh
Battery removable
ConnectorUSB CUSB C
Headphone PortYesYes
Headphone LocationBottomBottom
Speaker ConfigurationBottomBottom
NFCYesYes
Android OSAndroid 7.0Android 7.0
Vendor skinEMUI 5.1EMUI 5.1
Dimensions145.3 x 69.3 x 7 mm
Weight145g
Colours
  • Dazzling Gold
  • Prestige Gold
  • Mystic Silver
  • Rose Gold
  • Ceramic White
  • Graphite Black
  • Dazzling Blue
  • Green
  • Dazzling Gold
  • Prestige Gold
  • Mystic Silver
  • Rose Gold
  • Ceramic White
  • Graphite Black
  • Dazzling Blue
  • Green

If you want to read Chris’ thoughts on the P10 you can read his review of the P10 right here. If you’ve been waiting for the P10 or P10 Plus to arrive in Australia today is the day. So, the big question is: Are you getting one?

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    Tom Sekulic

    Forrest Gump: My momma always said, “Life was like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna get.” Same with Huawei.
    https://www.engadget.com/2017/04/20/richard-yu-statement-on-huawei-p10-storage-gate/

    ozbertino

    I have the Huawei P9, takes awesome daylit outdoor and landscape shots and so very easy to take really great black and white shots. Have had it nearly a year and have not had a single hardware problem. Only ‘problem’ is it is still on Android 6, EMUI 4 and Sept 2016 security update. Huawei are really crap at software and firmware updates. Was considering the P10+ but decided to go with Samsung S8+ as my main phone. Have Microsoft 950xl as my 2nd phone because I’m a fan (it isn’t easy) of W10M. Now have to decide whether to… Read more »

    Really

    The Poll says it all really – Buy an S8 or G6 now or wait for the next Pixel heck even the HTC 11 looks good.

    If your are on a budget get an Oppo (slower processor but those who would notice are buying Pixels and OnePlus) – Huawei is in a bit of a no man’s land – missing out on some of the “flagship” features but not different enough from mid range phones to stand out.

    Nicky A

    I just retired my Huawei Nexus 6P after only 1 year because of fastly deteriorating battery life, i don’t think I’d get a Huawei again