The OnePlus 15 is the phone to buy if you hate charging your phone
Allison Johnson ăť 2025-11-13 ăť www.theverge.com
Have you ever laid down for the night, only to realize your phone charger is across the room? And then thought to yourself, âNah, Iâm not going to get up and plug it inâ?
And then known without a shadow of a doubt that you wonât regret that decision tomorrow â that your phone will last comfortably into the next evening without dipping into low power mode? No? Well, thatâs because you havenât used the OnePlus 15.
Like its close relative from Oppo, the $899 OnePlus 15 comes with a battery capacity so enormous it will challenge any power user to drain it in a day. Thatâs thanks to its silicon-carbon battery, a tech being adopted quickly outside of the US that allows for thinner, high-capacity batteries compared to lithium ion.
The OnePlus 15 has other things going for it: a great screen and top-notch performance, for starters. And there are things I like less, like OxygenOSâ creeping tendency toward bloatware. Itâs not like, Samsung-bad yet, but itâs a far cry from the OnePlus of five or six years ago. As I see it, this is a phone for the battery anxious. And given the recent trend toward âlighter, thinner phone but with worse battery,â this âhuge battery capacity, but a regular-sized phoneâ feels like a winning proposition.
OnePlus 15
$899
$899
The Good
- Easily a two-day battery for almost any kind of user
- Big, sharp screen
The Bad
- OxygenOS is looking a little cluttered these days
- Silicon-carbon battery may limit device longevity
- Proprietary super-fast wireless charging feels increasingly irrelevant
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When I first set up the OnePlus 15, I took its 7,300mAh battery capacity as a challenge. Display resolution, always-on display, screen timeout, performance â I set everything to their most battery-draining settings. Across two days with no overnight charge and nearly nine total hours of screen-on time, the battery was down to only 32 percent. If Iâd tried that with any other flagship phone sold in the US, I would have had a dead battery halfway through the second morning, if not sooner. Thatâs astonishing.
There is some bad news: Silicon-carbon batteries tend to degrade faster than their lithium-ion counterparts, which is why US manufacturers have been hesitant to adopt them. OnePlus claims the battery will retain over 80 percent of its overall health through the first four years. Likewise, the company guarantees OS upgrades for four years and security updates for an extra two years beyond that.
That feels like an entirely reasonable commitment on OnePlusâ part, but also, I wish technology was moving toward batteries with better long-term longevity, not shorter. Most people who buy this phone will probably choose to move on within four years anyway, and I know plenty of people with phones that have lithium-ion batteries that havenât held up in that time frame. Iâd hope that a phone like this could be passed on to a family member or donated and used by someone else when its first owner is done with it. OnePlus offers a repair service in the US, but there is no specific battery replacement option, and turnaround is slow â 12 to 15 workdays, according to the website. Donât expect the kind of same-day battery swaps you can get with Apple or Samsung phones.
Iâm sorry to say that this phoneâs âindustry-first 1.5K 165Hz displayâ is largely wasted on me. This is a nice screen, for sure! Itâs plenty sharp, though I wish it got a touch brighter in direct sunlight, if Iâm being picky. But Iâm not sure I could tell you the difference between a 120Hz screen and this 165Hz display in a blind comparison. I tried it with Real Racing 3, one of a handful of games that supports the top refresh rate, and yeah, it looks nice. Over the course of a 20-minute session, the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 warmed slightly, but I didnât see so much as a stutter.
OnePlus was one of the last to ditch curved edges and adopt the flat sides the rest of the industry has embraced. I, for one, welcome the change; flat edges feel a little more secure in my hand. OnePlus fans are less enthused about another update: changing the beloved alert slider to an action button called the âPlus Key.â Itâs a move ripped right out of Appleâs playbook, right down to the menu screen where you can assign different functions to the button.
By default, it serves as a shortcut to the âMind Space,â where you can dump screenshots and voice memos so AI can catalog and tag them for later reference. Itâs giving Pixel Screenshots or Nothingâs Essential Space. Interestingly, Gemini Assistant on the OnePlus 15 can access information youâve saved to the Mind Space. This only works consistently when you specifically prompt Gemini to search Mind Space, though, which makes it a little less compelling. And I like the idea of a place to put things that would otherwise just exist in endless Chrome tabs, but my dozen open Chrome tabs are evidence of just how hard it is to drop old habits and form new ones.
Speaking of software features, Iâm not crazy about the way that OxygenOS has crept toward bloat over the past few generations. I think itâs starting to show as artifacts from years past pile up and the company continues chasing new ideas. Thereâs the Shelf, a place for widgets that I never remember to use, two rows of suggested apps at the top of the app drawer, and a handful of first-party apps crowded in among the stuff Google requires OnePlus to preload.
On top of that, now thereâs a bunch of AI features vying for attention, like the AI Writer that often pops up as the first option when I tap selected text, right where my finger instantly heads to hit âcopy.â Cheeky. You can opt out of, uninstall, and disengage a lot of these things, but itâs a lot to wade through â especially if you come to OnePlus looking for a less cluttered experience than youâll get with Samsung.
Elsewhere, OnePlus is still hanging onto some of its traditions. Youâll get up to 80W fast charging with the wired charger (still!) and red cable (still!) included in the box; OnePlus also sells one that goes up to 100W. Over standard USB-PD, you get a snappy but less blistering 36W. Plugging the phone into the provided charger for 20 minutes with the provided charger when it was down to a worrying 17 percent brought it back up to 60 percent â easily a dayâs worth of power.
Wireless charging is fast too, though youâll need OnePlusâ proprietary $50 charger to get its top 50W speeds. But thereâs one thing you wonât find here: integrated magnets, a la the Qi2 wireless charging standard. Instead, the OnePlus 15 outsources the magnets to cases. With one of those cases youâll get up to 11W on a Qi2 charger. The ability to charge quickly with specific chargers isnât as appealing as being able to thwack this phone onto any old MagSafe charger, but maybe Iâm no fun.
1/15
The OnePlus 15 is the companyâs first flagship since parting ways with Hasselblad as a camera partner; itâs now using a DetailMax Engine of its own making. I think OnePlus is doing just fine on its own; white balance is well judged and leans into warm tones at all the right times. Colors are punchy without looking unrealistic. Curiously, OnePlus has opted for smaller sensors in all three rear cameras than it used in the OnePlus 13. And while it can get away with a lot in good lighting, you run up against its limitations in low light pretty quickly; trying to capture a moving subject in dusky blue light proved to be beyond its capabilities.
Overall, the OnePlus 15 feels a little incohesive. There are a lot of borrowed ideas here â Appleâs action button and maybe a hint of frosted glass throughout the UI, too. There are a few things OnePlus is carrying forward from a previous era, like its commitment to offering fast charging. And there are the AI features â some of which seem well thought-out, though others feel a bit more me-too. But put all that together and itâs a bit of a confusing picture. Thankfully, the OnePlus 15 has one great idea that overshadows the rest of them: a phone that answers the question âWhat if you didnât have to worry about battery life?â
I suspect that OnePlus thinks of this as a Phone For Gamers, even if it doesnât look much like a Phone For Gamers on the surface. The emphasis on performance and screen refresh rate, coupled with the battery longevity, seems plenty appealing to someone who runs a lot of power-hungry games. But you donât have to be a gamer to appreciate the battery life this phone provides; pretty much anyone would be happy with a device you charge less often. I would have appreciated more of an emphasis on camera hardware than an industry-leading screen, and if you would too, then you might be happier with a Pixel or a Galaxy. But for the battery anxious â gamers or otherwise â thereâs nothing else quite like the OnePlus 15. Not in the US, anyway.
Photography by Allison Johnson / The Verge
Agree to continue: OnePlus 15
Every smart device now requires you to agree to a series of terms and conditions before you can use it â contracts that no one actually reads. Itâs impossible for us to read and analyze every single one of these agreements. But we started counting exactly how many times you have to hit âagreeâ to use devices when we review them since these are agreements most people donât read and definitely canât negotiate.
To use the OnePlus 15, you need to agree to:
There are also several optional agreements that you need to get past during setup:
- Participation in Co-Creation User Programs, which includes built-in app updates, push notifications for surveys and product updates, and system stability reporting
- Assistant Voice Match
- Back up to Google Drive: âYour backup includes apps, app data, call history, contacts, device settings (including Wi-Fi passwords and permissions), and SMS.â
- Use location: âGoogle may collect location data periodically and use this data in an anonymous way to improve location accuracy and location-based services.â
- Allow scanning: âAllow apps and services to scan for Wi-Fi networks and nearby devices at any time, even when Wi-Fi or Bluetooth is off.â
- Send usage and diagnostic data: âHelp improve your Android device experience by automatically sending diagnostic, device and app usage data to Google.â
In total, thatâs six mandatory agreements and six optional agreements.
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