Honor 400 Pro Lunar Grey

Trends

Trends
“Pitched as a near-perfect all-rounder for buyers who want a flagship feel without the flagship price. Strengths: a comfy curved IP68/IP69 build, a triple camera that punches above its class, a display that ticks every box, dependable battery, very fast 100W/50W charging and good speakers, plus six years of updates. Gripes: the 800-euro MSRP feels steep for a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, and there is only a virtual proximity sensor. Easy to recommend at the discounted price. (per GSMArena)”
“A well-equipped upper-mid-range pick for value seekers who want strong system performance, long battery life with fast wired and wireless charging, a capable camera kit and IP69 durability, backed by six years of updates. The lab found downsides: the phone runs hot under load with high power draw versus newer rivals, wobbly buttons on the test unit, no always-on display and low-frequency PWM flicker at 60Hz. Solid value, but the chip and camera leave room to improve. (per Notebookcheck)”
“Framed as an AI-packed almost-flagship for bargain hunters who want most of a premium phone for far less. It delivers solid performance, a capable AI-enhanced camera and a brilliant screen, sitting in a compelling in-between tier with fewer compromises than mid-rangers. Pros are the balanced overall package and clever AI photo tricks; the main quibbles are MagicOS UI niggles and the judicious trade-offs you accept versus a true flagship. A well-rounded buy with little to flat-out complain about.”
Paraphrased sentiment from owner discussions across Reddit, forums and YouTube. Follow each link for the original thread.
Across 15+ owner posts the lean is mixed-to-positive. Recurring praise: snappy lag-free performance, bright display, loud speakers, fast 66W charging (~45 min) and a strong 200MP main camera several owners rate best-in-midrange. Battery is called dependable (often 1.5-2 days) but some wish it were larger, citing the smaller global cell vs the Chinese version. (per GSMArena)
Read the discussion on GSMArena Forums →Common questions about this product, answered.
What's the real battery size and how fast does the Honor 400 Pro charge?
The Honor 400 Pro packs a 5,300mAh silicon-carbon battery (the catalogue's '600mAh' is a typo). It supports up to 100W HONOR SuperCharge wired and 50W wireless charging. With the 100W charger HONOR cites roughly 53% in 15 minutes and a full charge in about 38 minutes, and GSMArena's lab testing confirms genuinely fast top-ups. Note: like most 2025 flagships it ships without a charger in many markets, so you may need a compatible USB-C PD/100W brick to hit peak speeds. — PriceJive
What cameras does the Honor 400 Pro have - is it really 200MP?
Yes. The rear system is a 200MP OIS main sensor (1x-2x), a 50MP OIS telephoto for 3x optical-quality zoom (usable to ~6x), and a 12MP ultrawide with autofocus for macro. The front houses a 50MP selfie camera plus a 2MP depth sensor. In practice the 200MP main and 50MP tele give you crisp daylight detail and genuine reach, which reviewers (GSMArena's camera tests) rate as a strong point versus rivals at this price. The single 200MP figure in the listing is the main lens, not the whole setup. — PriceJive
Is the Honor 400 Pro waterproof, and does it support 5G, dual-SIM and eSIM?
It carries both IP68 and IP69 ratings, so it resists dust and survives immersion plus high-pressure/high-temperature water jets - among the toughest ratings on a phone (still avoid deliberate dunking, as liquid damage isn't covered by warranty). It is a 5G handset and supports dual-SIM, including eSIM. Ignore any 'Dual Sim: No' flag in the listing - HONOR's own specs confirm dual-SIM with eSIM, so you can run two numbers (e.g. a data plan plus your main line). — PriceJive
Can I add a microSD card, and what does the 512GB / 6.7-inch screen actually give me?
No - the Honor 400 Pro has no microSD slot, so storage is fixed. The good news is this unit is the 512GB / 12GB RAM model, ample for years of photos, apps and offline media without expansion. The screen is a 6.7-inch OLED at 1280x2800 with a 120Hz refresh rate for smooth scrolling and gaming, and HONOR rates peak brightness up to 5,000 nits, so it stays readable in bright SA sunlight. It also uses high-frequency PWM dimming to ease eye strain at low brightness. — PriceJive