Every year there is one phone that camera reviewers cannot stop talking about, and in 2026 that phone is not from Apple or Samsung. It is the Oppo Find X9 Ultra, a phone most American shoppers have never held and cannot walk into a store and buy. Yet since its global rollout in May, reviewer after reviewer has landed on the same conclusion: this is arguably the best camera ever put inside a smartphone, full stop.
That is a bold claim in a year already stacked with strong flagships. Here is what makes the Find X9 Ultra different, how it actually compares to the phones most people already own, and why buying one in the United States is more complicated than it should be.
A Five Lens System With Two 200MP Sensors
Most flagship phones pick one camera to show off and let the rest fill supporting roles. Oppo built the Find X9 Ultra around the idea that two lenses deserve the spotlight. The main camera uses a 200MP Sony sensor measuring 1/1.12 inch, among the largest sensors in any phone sold today, paired with a second 200MP sensor dedicated entirely to 3x telephoto shots. A 50MP ultrawide and a 50MP periscope lens capable of 10x optical zoom round out the rear array, alongside a dedicated True Color camera that Oppo uses to correct white balance and skin tones in real time.
Putting a 200MP sensor on both the main lens and the mid range telephoto is not something any other 2026 flagship has done, and it shows in the numbers reviewers keep citing: a 1/1.28 inch sensor on that telephoto lens alone is larger than the main camera sensor in Samsung’s own camera focused flagship lineup. The whole system carries Hasselblad branding, complete with the brand’s signature orange shutter button accent and color science tuning that Oppo has refined across several generations of Find X phones.
How It Actually Compares to the iPhone and Galaxy S26 Ultra
Numbers on a spec sheet only matter if they translate into better photos, and side by side testing backs up most of Oppo’s claims. Against the Galaxy S26 Ultra, reviewers consistently point to richer, more natural color output from the Find X9 Ultra, along with a clear advantage in daylight zoom detail thanks to that oversized telephoto sensor. Samsung still holds an edge in long range zoom stabilization and video tracking, so neither phone is a clean sweep.
Against the iPhone 17 Pro Max, the split is more about philosophy than raw hardware. Oppo wins comfortably on sensor size, resolution, and zoom versatility. Apple answers with a more consistent video pipeline, smoother ProRes workflows, and the kind of software polish that comes from years of the same processing pipeline. Video shooters who live inside the Apple ecosystem will likely still prefer the iPhone. Photographers who care most about stills and zoom range have real reasons to look at Oppo instead.
Beyond the Cameras: A Genuinely Strong Everyday Phone
It would be easy to build a phone entirely around its cameras and let everything else fall behind, but the Find X9 Ultra does not cut corners elsewhere. The 6.82 inch LTPO OLED display now runs at up to 144Hz, brighter and smoother than last year’s model, with HDR10+ and Dolby Vision support baked in. Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 handles performance duties, the same chip family powering most of this year’s other flagships, so day to day speed is not a weak point.
Battery life is where the Find X9 Ultra quietly separates itself from the pack. Oppo bumped the cell to 7,050mAh, a meaningful jump from the 6,100mAh in last year’s X8 Ultra, and paired it with 100W wired charging that takes the phone from empty to full in around 45 minutes. Wireless charging tops out at 50W, faster than most competitors even manage over a cable. The body itself blends vegan leather with metal trim, giving it a grippy, distinctive feel that stands apart from the glass slabs most flagships have settled on.
The Catch: Buying One in the US Is Not Simple
Here is the part that matters most for American readers. Oppo does not officially sell its Find X flagship line in the United States, and there is no indication that is changing for the X9 Ultra. That means no Apple Store style retail presence, no direct carrier partnerships, and no official US warranty or support line to call if something breaks.
Buyers who want one anyway are relying on importers and international retailers, with prices for the 12GB plus 512GB model landing somewhere between roughly $1,650 and $1,900 depending on the seller. That puts it in the same price bracket as a fully loaded Galaxy S26 Ultra, without the reassurance of local warranty coverage or guaranteed compatibility with every US carrier’s 5G bands. It is a phone worth knowing about even if you never buy one, since it shows where camera hardware is headed, but it is not a casual purchase the way picking up the rest of this year’s biggest phone releases would be.
Is It Worth Chasing Down?
If you are the kind of person who reads camera spec sheets for fun and already knows how to navigate an import purchase, the Find X9 Ultra is one of the more interesting phones to come out in years. It is not the only manufacturer making that kind of bet either. Vivo took a similarly aggressive approach with its own dual 200MP camera phone, and together the two devices suggest Chinese phone makers are pulling ahead of Apple and Samsung specifically on camera hardware, even while trailing in software polish and US market access.
For most people in the US, the smarter move is still a phone you can walk into a store and buy with full carrier and warranty support behind it. But if camera quality is the one spec you refuse to compromise on, and you are comfortable with the extra hassle of importing a device, the Find X9 Ultra earns its reputation as the camera phone every other manufacturer will be measured against for the rest of the year.

