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Huawei Honor 8 review: A smooth, dual-camera phone for less

This well-crafted, midprice handset takes good photos with its double cameras, while saving you big bucks.

Jessica Dolcourt Senior Director, Commerce & Content Operations
Jessica Dolcourt is a passionate content strategist and veteran leader of CNET coverage. As Senior Director of Commerce & Content Operations, she leads a number of teams, including Commerce, How-To and Performance Optimization. Her CNET career began in 2006, testing desktop and mobile software for Download.com and CNET, including the first iPhone and Android apps and operating systems. She continued to review, report on and write a wide range of commentary and analysis on all things phones, with an emphasis on iPhone and Samsung. Jessica was one of the first people in the world to test, review and report on foldable phones and 5G wireless speeds. Jessica began leading CNET's How-To section for tips and FAQs in 2019, guiding coverage of topics ranging from personal finance to phones and home. She holds an MA with Distinction from the University of Warwick (UK).
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Jessica Dolcourt
3 min read

Huawei's Honor 8 is an Android 6.0 phone with extras good enough to make you notice, and a build that's comfortable to hold and use in one hand. The extras in question? Two cameras on the back and a customizable button right below them that doubles as the fingerprint reader.

7.8

Huawei Honor 8

The Good

Huawei's Honor 8 is a slick little package that combines good photos from a dual-lens camera with a useful customizable button and a fingerprint reader. And it's easy to use one-handed.

The Bad

Battery life falls short and knuckle gestures are gimmicky. It's a smudge magnet.

The Bottom Line

The Huawei Honor 8 is a likable midprice phone with some extra perks, but its short battery life holds it back.

The Honor 8's glossy, reflective coating channels Samsung's Galaxy S7 phone design (and smudges easily with finger grease), but at heart it's essentially a rebranded Huawei P9 that costs less than the original, and well under two premium dual-camera phones: the LG V20 and iPhone 7 Plus.

Huawei's Honor 8 has liquid-smooth looks

See all photos

In the US, you can pick up the 32GB variant for $400 and the 64GB version for $450. Australian prices are still to come, but the US prices convert to roughly AU$525 and AU$590. In the UK, only the 32GB version is available, for £370 direct from Huawei, or from Amazon, where it's bundled with a free Amazon Fire TV Stick worth £30. If you want to buy it as part of a phone contract, Three has the exclusive.

The fast, accurate fingerprint reader may seem a little small if you're used to a larger target like the Huawei-made Nexus 6P, but since more of my finger covers a smaller scanner than a larger one, I felt like I got more hits than misses. This reader also doubles as a customizable button, which I programmed to launch the camera; I liked it a lot. Less successful are knuckle gestures. I guess Huawei figures sometimes your fingers aren't free, but your knuckles are? Anyway, you can customize it so making gestures on your screen with your knuckles act as a shortcut. Draw a "C" to launch the camera, for instance. However, this felt gimmicky and unnatural.

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Enlarge Image
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The fingerprint reader doubles as a button you can customize to open apps like the camera.

Josh Miller/CNET

Two 12-megapixel cameras on the back -- one monochrome, one RBG -- create the dual-camera system that LG and Apple also use. But that doesn't mean photos come out the same, and a lot of that has to do with each phones' software. While we have a shootout planned for when we have all three phones side-by-side (still waiting on the V20), what I can say now is that the Honor 8 takes good pictures in a variety of scenarios: Indoor, outdoor, low-light, selfies (with beauty mode if you like).

You can get sharper and more consistent photos on more expensive phones, but this is the only one at this price that promises any sort of depth-of-field. To some extent, this depth-of-field promise (which artfully blurs the background) is a little flawed because the software doesn't always blur out sharp edges when you're standing in front of a more complex background. Stand in front of the sky, however, and your chances of getting the photo you want shoots up.

You may not recognize the Huawei-made processor, but in day-to-day use, it felt snappy. At times, it did lag when stressed with too many tasks, though it's certainly not the only phone to temporarily slow under strain. Battery life was the weakest link, with an average of about 8.5 hours in three looping video tests. That's 2 hours shy of the similarly priced Alcatel Idol 4S and 3 hours less than the ZTE Axon 7. Our current favorite phone for the price, the OnePlus 3, lasted 6 hours longer than the Honor 8.

That's too bad, because battery life really is the only major flub in a phone that otherwise gives you terrific value for the price. It's a phone you can live with, as long as you can live with charging up more often.


Huawei Honor 8OnePlus 3Alcatel Idol 4SZTE Axon 7
Display size, resolution 5.2-inch; 1,920x1080 pixels5.5-inch; 1,920x1080 pixels5.5-inch; 2,560x1,440 pixels AMOLED5.5-inch; 2,560x1,440 pixels
Pixel density 423 ppi401ppi534 ppi538ppi
Dimensions (Inches) 5.7x 2.8x0.29 in6.01x2.94x0.29 in6.06x2.97x0.28 in6x3x0.34 in
Dimensions (Millimeters) 145x71x7.5 mm152.7x74.7x7.35 mm153.9x75.4x6.99 mm151.8x75x8.7 mm
Weight (Ounces, Grams) 5.4 oz; 153 g5.57 oz; 158 g5.26 oz; 149 g6.53 oz; 185 g
Mobile software Android 6.0.1 MarshmallowAndroid 6.0.1 MarshmallowAndroid 6.0.1 MarshmallowAndroid 6.0.1 Marshmallow
Camera 12-megapixel (dual)16-megapixel16-megapixel20-megapixel
Front-facing camera 8-megapixel8-megapixel8-megapixel8-megapixel
Video capture 1080p4K4K4K
Processor 2.3GHz octa-core HiSilicon Kirin 950 processor2.2GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 8201.8GHz + 1.4GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 6522.2GHz quad-core Snapdragon 820
Storage 32GB/64GB64GB32GB64GB, 128GB (varies by region)
RAM 4GB6GB3GB4GB, 6GB
Expandable storage Up to 128GBNoneUp to 200GBUp to 128GB
Battery 3,000 mAh (nonremovable)3,000mAh (nonremovable)3,000mAh3,000mAh (nonremovable)
Fingerprint sensor Back coverHome buttonBack coverBack cover
Connector USB Type-CUSB-CMicro-USBUSB-C
Special features Dual-cameras, customizable rear buttonNotifications toggle, dual-SIM, Dash ChargingBoom Key (programable key), Dual 3.6-watt JBL speakers, Quick Charge 2.0, NFC, Reversible OS, Dual-SIM optionDual-SIM option
Price off-contract (USD) $400 (32GB), $450 (64GB)$399$400$400
Price (GBP) £370 (32GB only)£329£385Converts to £345
Price (AUD) Converts to AU$525 (32GB), AU$590 (64GB)Converts to AU$530AU$470Converts to AU$605
7.8

Huawei Honor 8

Score Breakdown

Design 9Features 8Performance 8Camera 8Battery 6