I haven't had a 10-series Xperia in-hand since the Sony Xperia 10 Mk V in 2023 and in my blog review from July that year, I reflected that the 10 Mk V certainly had an audience - though probably not with me. It was a lovely device for the right user, but with no wireless charging, no Always on Display, no HDMI-Out support and more, the 5-series was much more for me. The landscape has somewhat changed since then however, as the last 5- Series Xperia was launched in 2023 (and you can read my review of the Sony Xperia 5 Mk V via this link) but the only other option for the Sony faithful since then has been the much more expensive and sophisticated 1-series.
So my thoughts here will be slightly shifted because, well, there's now not that choice - it's expensive and better-featured 1-series or mid-range (at best) 10-series and nothing between. I do still have the 5 Mk V here, so that will be useful in terms of comparison too, but the 10 Mk VII will much more appropriately be compared with previous 10-series models. The most obvious change since the last generation, incidentally, is something Sony did with the 6th generation of the 1-series, moving away from the 21:9 letterbox screen and more into what most others were doing, providing a less tall, but wider 19.5:9 ratio screen. So yes, this is the first time it's been done on a 10-series phone.
I did have hands-on for a while with the Sony Xperia 1 Mk VI, so saw the difference in the screen ratio there, but it was an altogether bigger phone - so this will be the first time I've seen that screen ratio on one of the Xperia lines' smaller devices. It would have been nice to see it on a 5-series device, but I guess Sony know what they want to do, and their audience, so I don't think there's much chance of that for the foreseeable. Image here, showing the difference between the 10 Mk VII and 5 Mk V with thanks to GSMArena.
But anyway, the big question for me will be about whether or not the battery is good enough to get through the day with a 3rd Party Always on Display app and whether on not I can hide my 3rd Party Qi Coil under the case nicely. So, brace yourself Salmon - lower expectations again, from the heights of the 1-series and invisibility of the 5-series, and let's see if it remains another 'not for me' phone.
The first thing that hit me when opening the (empty apart from the phone and legal papers) box was the stunning turquoise colour. It really is a smashing shade and so much more preferable to the dull-sounding charcoal (black-into-grey) and white. It's cheerful, vibrant and fun-looking and I can't imagine why anyone would not choose it over the others! But yes, as usual with Sony, there's nothing else in the box except for claims of eco-friendly materials used, the same for the plastics that the phone are largely made of - instead of the aluminium and more glass of the grander Xperia models. On first handling, particularly with this colour, it reminds me of colourful phones of years gone by - many from Nokia and there was that iPhone 5c thing too.
Plastic is OK with me at this price-point. A price-point of £399 (though deals will snag it cheaper almost always). This price raises eyebrows amongst the tech-savvy, pointing out that for this price buyers can get 'so much more' from other brands, certainly from China-based OEMs. More features, better components, faster chipsets, more RAM - 'better' everything, except for the Sony name of course. Sony knows their audience, as I say, and they know they have people who are staunchly brand-loyal and would much rather pay a bit more than elsewhere, feeling reassured and confident about what they are buying. In terms of supply and demand, there's very limited scope in America for people to buy Xperia phones, so they know that they are limiting their audience to other regions - which must be reflected in their bottom-line pricing too. Anyway, we'll see if the extra cash is worth it. Well, at least, for me! Incidentally, I picked mine up second-hand for much less than this RRP so do jump around online for options.
When you take out the SIM Card Tray you can clearly see the effort that has gone in for the IP65/IP68 rating for ingress. There's a rubbery loop around the door which offers huge confidence that it's sealed, tight, when pushed in with a finger. The payoff for this is that it's a bit tougher than previous Xperia models to get the thing open! The 'fingernail' slot seems to be smaller to me, so don't cut your nails too short! Inside is the nanoSIM card slot on one side and microSD Card slot on the other. This unit does not seem to be Dual SIM but the phone does support eSIM if a second is needed. The microSD Card slot will support up to 2TB Cards and is playing very nicely with my 1TB version. The card on which I keep pretty much all my data as there's only 128GB storage onboard of course, as usual for anything outside of the 1-series. There was apparently a 5 Mk V with 256GB but I never saw one - probably just in Japan. Once all my data/media is on the card and initial indexing is done by various apps, it works just like the internals storage really, so that can be kept for system resources with plenty of breathing space.
The SIM Card Tray incidentally is on the side, top-left, which I think is a 10-series thing. Most Xperia units that have come through my hands have this on the bottom, left. There's an XPERIA branding on that same side, low down, embossed, which feels like a nice touch in the same colour, rather than an advert. Easily missed. There are various microphones around the phone's edges and up-top that 3.5mm audio-out socket, which I'll come to later. On the right, there's the first appearance of a shutter button on a 10-series Xperia. It's not the 2-stage focusing button that grander Xperia phones have, but you can invoke the camera app (even with screen off) by long-pressing it (or turn that off in settings). Once the camera is open, you can short-press it to take a photo or long-press it to switch to video-shooting mode. Or, in photo mode, you can set it to start recording a video with a long-press. Or turn the long-press off (which is what I have done). Wherever else you are in the phone, a short press will take a screenshot - which is really handy. Or you can turn that off. The button is much higher up the side than on 1/5-series models, apparently because the 10-series is aimed much more at people who are likely to be shooting in portrait. Apparently. Says a lot!
On that same right side there's a very slightly indented power button which doubles up as a capacitive fingerprint scanner, which is quick and easy to set up. By default it's touch to unlock (which is why I think it's slightly recessed to avoid accidental touches). If you don't want that to be the case, then tough luck! There is no 'press to unlock' option here that 1 and 5 series Xperia have. But it works well for me here as-is. I guess you can just not register any fingerprints then 'press any button' to wake the screen then use a pattern or PIN instead. Or not, if you're feeling brave! Above this button is the volume rocker which works well. The volume rocker and shutter button are coloured the same as the phone and the power button, black. Down the bottom we have a USB-C slot, central. On the back, the camera-bar has been turned through 90-degrees since the last model and is now spookily similar to the Pixel phones running across most of the width in a 'long pill' shape. Great for putting down on a surface - and even provides, like with Pixels, a 'finger ridge' (for those not using a case that levels the back) and for styling, much like the XPERIA on the side, there's a similarly embossed SONY on the 'long pill' to the right of the cameras.
The front of the phone is flat. The plastic edges coming around from the 'trough' that the phone's works sit inside are slightly proud of the surface of the glass which might help with not getting the Gorilla Glass Victus 2 micro-scratched (or worse)! And then, there are those bezels. Sizeable all-round but particularly, by preference in design for Xperia, top and bottom - where sensors, selfie-camera and speakers have room to breathe. I've always been OK with this on Xperia phones. The modern trend is to go as bezelless as possible of course, but I like the space for fingers, avoiding accidental screen-touches.
It's a really nice phone in the hand. The plastic is just fine for me (and I'd argue anyone) staying away from the risks of dents and breakages of metal or glass. I know it saves them money, but I think it works well and keeps the weight down - here to 168g. You hardly know you're carrying it. Overall, the dimensions are 153mm tall x 72mm wide x 8.3mm fat - and that feels very much in proportion. The 19.5:9 ratio screen is the big change here from previous models' 21:9 and I think it was the right decision. On the bigger 1-series, I wasn't so sure as it made it jolly much wider than the models before, but here, it feels right. More space in the width for typing than my narrow 5 Mk V and as for consuming content at 21:9 - well, most of it is 16:9 still anyway, frankly. With media created in different formats, nobody is ever going to get it perfectly right. As for scrolling through data and social media feeds benefiting from the taller 21:9 I really haven't noticed that to be much different (in practice). I come away from this wishing that my 5 Mk V was 19.5:9 too.
As for the screen tech, it's a dinky, Triluminos 6.1" OLED, same as last year's phone but, as I say, shorter and wider with that shifted ratio. It's a perfectly good 1080p with a generous 422ppi and for the first time on a 10-series, has a refresh rate of 12oHz. Can't say that I particularly notice the difference still (and have mine on 60 to save battery) but yes, for those with younger, sharper eyes, they'll no doubt be pleased with the smoother flow. This is either on or off, by the way - no fancy auto-mode! The panel is bright, colourful and vibrant as we'd expect from Sony. The tech figures show nearly 700 nits on manual and just over 1,000 in auto. Looks great to me and unless one is basking in the daytime sun in Alice Springs, outside is good too! Worth noting that this is a hike up from the brightness levels found in the previous models in the line.
I was expecting the speakers to be a bit rubbish, to be honest, but actually, I am pleasantly surprised. They are stereo and both forward-facing, one at each end, common now to all Xperia phones. I'm comparing the sound output with my 5 Mk V (tweaked with whatever tools are available on either phone). Incidentally, the 10 Mk VII doesn't have Dolby Atmos baked in like more expensive Xperia phones, but for my tests here and these tools, I employed-if-available - so as to make the listening experience meaningful as to what you'd get in the real world. It does, however, have some audio settings of its own from Sony - 360 Reality Audio and 360 Upmix (which you really need to use specific music apps/services to make the most of, some behind a paywall) and DSEE Ultimate which "upscales compressed music using AI". I found that generally the speakers sounded better with that toggled on. Slightly more body and richness to the output, but not more volume.
So, the results, for my ears, are closer than I feared they might be distant. Yes, the 5 is louder by, maybe, 25%, and the quality (once tweaked, as above) is richer and there's more bass by, say, a similar amount - or maybe a bit more. There's no sign, or even hint, of 'tinny' on my 5 but yes, on maximum volume, there is a hint with the 10 with certain music sources, certain mp3 media files that I use. Introduce Wavelet to narrow the gap perhaps? Usually, the payoff with this excellent app is that you get better quality with a reduced volume - but strangely here that is not the case. There is a very slight improvement in quality across tracks but not the usual hike this app brings - tested with various settings, the best EQ being 'Dark'. As I say, I was really not expecting the speakers to be this good and overall, I think that the vast majority of target users will be delighted and impressed. Yes, there are much better out there (and even in here!) but it's better than many for sure and perfectly usable. What you don't get, that the grander Xperia models do, is Dynamic Vibration which we at Phones Show Chat have reported on and wow'd about over the years. Many dismiss it as a gimmick, but we like it and think it makes for immersive and bass-like enjoyment of (particularly) video than without. All smoke and mirrors, no doubt, but I'll vote for jolly psychology!
The 3.5mm audio-out port again, I tested against the 5 Mk V and using my Sony XM4 headphones, wired, obviously! I started off with the 10 and again with tweaking, it sounded really, really bass-orientated and bonkers loud. Stupid loud! Nobody could safely listen at maximum volume, I'd content. But the quality, of course, also down to the headphones, is rip-roaringly fab! Switch to the 5 and I'd say that the only real difference was that it's bonkers, stupid, nutty loud! So yes, the volume for me seems to get even higher, but the quality sounds pretty level on both. I think I've damaged my ears now! I'll have a lie down in a dark room! Tested also with non-Sony gear - my Marshall headphones and even simple, cheap earbuds - and I really don't think anyone would need to consider a more expensive Xperia in this department. Bluetooth is the same bonkers-loud and fabulous on, well, both of these phones with various Bluetooth-enabled earphones and headphones. Again, nobody could complain about the sound here.
Another reason for getting a more up-to-date Sony Xperia is that all the units I have here are outdated now with no Android OS updates left to come - and even the most-recent 5 Mk V is stuck on Android 15 with quarterly Security Patches now, the last of which being this autumn. Sony seem to have upped their game a bit now moving from a paltry 2 OS updates and 3 years of Security to 4 OS and 6 security. So double. (See how I worked that out?!) A much better prospect, meaning that this 10 Mk VII will get Android 19 and security to September 2031, having launched in September 2025. Hurrah! It's currently on Android 16 April 2026 Security in the first week of May. Sony are good at keeping to their promises of updates and they're much swifter to push them out, usually, than many others.
The chipset employed here is the SnapDragon 6 Gen 3 (4nm) which, yes, up against the 5 Mk V shows a little lag here and there, particularly on meaty tasks like processing 100 app updates, the setup procedure, copying data from the PC and so forth, but if it's not doing any heavy-lifting, day-to-day, ordinary tasks that the target buyer will be doing, it really is perfectly good and fine. I threw Asphalt 9 at it and yes, alright, there may have been a judder here and there, but nothing to be upset about. It depends on what's going on in the background too, as with 8GB RAM some stuff can, eventually, be shut down. I'm being picky but once or twice, switching between social media apps I've noticed that some of them have had to start up again - and during that process of firing up and getting going, yeah, maybe, a judder or two. But once in flow, it really is fine. Again, for target audience, they probably wouldn't even notice. The SD 6 Gen 3 is compared on testbenches with the MediaTek Dimensity 7300, in the Nothing Phone (2a) Plus I have here, or some mid-range Oppo/Vivo devices. Or Samsung's Exynos 1480 which is used in, for example, their A55. It's not the fastest out there, it is good for low power consumption, which we'll come to now in terms of battery. Sony’s UI is so light that the mid-range chip actually punches above its weight. On a Samsung or a Xiaomi, that chip would be gasping for air under the weight of the skin. On the Xperia, it’s perfectly good and fine - precisely because the software stays out of the way.
The battery is yet another 5,000mAh one which Sony love so much to use in Xperia phones, regardless of their size, power or market position. Which is good for these mid/lower-end devices and chipsets, as depicted above. It charges at 30W with the appropriate cable and plug and in my tests I've been able to get a full charge from flat in just over an hour and half. A part charge, say to 50% takes about 40 minutes or so. Sony have not gone off like others with Silicon-Carbon or super-fast charging speeds, prioritising rather their 4-year battery health promise. It shouldn't drop below 80% health until after 4 years of 'daily use'. In my 10% Reading Test I have got decent results of about two and a half hours - not the best, but far from the worst - and my average daily use test, well into Day 2 if needed with about 40% left at bedtime. As long as I don't have my Always on Display app on...
...if employed however, and I've played with a lot of them, I have found the best (with least impact on battery) to be AOD XPath by aodlink set to a simple readout of basic information and brightness to about 33%. YMMV but I have tested about half a dozen other apps and this is the best I can get. The hit is about 5% per hour, so it depends on whether or not that's worth it for you. You can always set it to go off in the pocket to extend life - and grab yourself a Moto Watch Fit. Kinda 'dumb' as it maybe, it keeps you well informed, takes less of a hit on battery with Bluetooth on than a WearOS watch - and here, means that you can keep the phone in the pocket more. With the screen off. There's no wireless charging here, sadly, so short of adding a 3rd party coil to the back for a tenner, which is a bit messy and annoying when it half covers the lovely turquoise back, it's wired only.
I've run the phone through the usual connectivity tests and can report that 5G and 4G work well in my decently-covered location, for phone calls by voice, VoIP and data. No drop-outs and good data when needed away from WiFi/routers. Speaking of which, I've tested 3 networks for that and again, they come up trumps - no issues at all - and WiFi 6e is supported. Maybe all this down to that really good EE cellular network and good domestic/commercial fibre-optics, but I do think we have entered an era where connectivity is good and can be relied on. Yes - of course, that won't be true everywhere for everyone, but for me, yes! Bluetooth v5.4 here works reliably and well, as I said above, but also in terms of range and stability. Bluetooth just gets better! GPS for tracking in various apps I've tested and again, good signal, good hold and good fixes. NFC works like a charm too, paying in shops with Google Wallet and hooking up with other hardware, as tested. USB-C OTG cable connection is solid, even if there's no Display Port output, HDMI-Out as there is on 1 and 5 series Xperias. So it's the 2.0 version only - but to be honest, latency over wireless sharing and sending is so good these days it's probably no wonder OEMs are saving the pennies and not including it.
Security is handled by the usual Android baseline stuff, PIN or Password, pattern etc. There's also that aforementioned capacitive fingerprint scanner which works first time, every time. There's no face unlock (like all Xperias to date) but sadly there's also no lift to wake or nudge to wake or tap to wake or double-tap to wake or shake to wake or whack to wake at all! You need to press a button to wake the screen or touch the fingerprint scanner. Tap to wake can be added with an app, like most things with Android. I've been testing various AoD apps (as above) and the main problem is that they tend to drain the battery, OLED or not, faster than I'm happy about, as mentioned. They also seem to interfere with the simple route-in via the fingerprint scanner - they want the screen to be tapped first, then finger on the scanner - making for a double-action always. I am beginning to think that I should abandon my festish for an AoD and live without it. Following on from what I was saying about the Moto Watch Fit, armed with Moto's app, it works perfectly well if set up properly - with an AoD on the wrist and Notifications too (as there is no notifications that pop up on the phone at all - without an AoD app - or at least the Lock Screen live) that I can find. When the phone's screen is off, the phone really is on life-support only, though to be fair it does push notifications out to the watch (without any signs of life on the phone)!
The software is the lovely, clean, near-vanilla version of Android that we've come to appreciate from Sony. No bells and whistles much, virtually no sign of any AI, a real old-fashioned experience. All that M3E stuff that Google has been working on and re-worked Notification Shade icons and more - nope, Sony ignores all that and goes its own way! Which is now refreshing to be honest. An oasis in a sea of OEMs copying bleedin' Apple in whatever way they can regardless of whether the ideas are crap or not! Everyone jumping on AI like much of it isn't just a bunch of gimmicks and toys. There's a sense in which Sony, taking a bit of a middle road, is just right. Enabling users to use core Google tools like Gemini, whatever is in Google Photos for all, and Circle to Search - but drawing the line on bolt-on tools which enable content creation for the lazy and ignorant, for example. Layers upon layers of so-called 'smart' functions have made their way onto today's phones - and for what? Techy folk to have a play with them, amusing themselves and friends down the pub, then never to be seen again? (Not the friends - the functions!)
There's the usual stock feeling layout of pages right, Google's Discover/feed to the left (if you want it), App Drawer with a swipe-up which can be arranged by name or whatever order you fancy with an editor, Notification Panel with a swipe-down and nice, blocky icons, pull down again for more, a Status Bar with the good old basics like clock and icons - and a battery percentage readout in numbers without a stupid pill or bubble behind it and lots more which many will called 'dated' but I say fine! Side Sense makes an appearance, but to be honest, I never use it! You can put a marker on the edge of the screen and assign actions to it which open up a bar with apps on it for quick access. Straight out for the Side Sense 'Dashboard' which is all-but the same as pulling down the Notification Shade, an App Launcher, yes, which is no quicker really than having apps on one's home screens on in the app drawer - and Multi-window where apps can be dragged for 'split screen' top and bottom. I can't imagine why anyone would want to do this on such a tiny screen. I get it to some degree on, say, a big foldable phone or tablet - but this? By the time you've fiddled about executing the function and getting it set up and realising that you need a magnifying glass to continue, you could have just found some other ways to do what you want to do. Probably on a bigger device!
Anyway, Wallpaper and Style is present with Themed Icons (or not), the Colour Contrast setting which arrived on Android 16 to assist with those finding it easier to focus on screen elements and an App grid option for anything between 4x6 to 5x8. Then there's Lock Screen clocks to choose from, just like other Xperia phones - except here there are only two and they are stuck in the Lock Screen and don't make it out to an AoD. Which it doesn't have. Did I mention that?! Strangely, but maybe in keeping with the retro vibe, 3-button navigation is on by default, but there is a prompt during setup to change it. There's also a bunch of apps - some of them Google core apps funnily enough, which the user needs to tick or not to install or not, again, during setup. Oh yes - there's also FaceBook and LinkedIn installed and uninstallable. As usual. Force Stop and Disable is your friend. To be fair, that's pretty much all that irks. The only other ones seem to be the useful Sony Music Player and Sony Pictures Core (for their TV users), both clean uninstallable, if you want to. Somehow it doesn't seem so bad if they're Sony's own apps. It's 3rd party dross that's annoying.
In the Gestures settings, there's an item called Smart Call Handling. If you turn this on, it means that when someone calls, you can just lift the phone to your ear and have the call auto-answered so you're ready to speak, screen-on. So, if it can do that, how much more would it take for a simple lift-to-wake to work, I wonder! That's basically what it's doing anyway! So yes, these frustrations are mine, coming from a higher-end Xperia I realise. Most users wouldn't even think about this stuff, no doubt, not start whining - and get on to enjoying the phone!
The cameras provided are a main 50MP f/1.9 unit with OIS and a 13MP f/2.4 wide-angle. That's it! Apart from the 8MP f2 Selfie round front. You can shoot 4K video from the main at 30fps and 1080p at 120, both with OIS too. The Selfie will do you 1080p@30. The supplied Camera App's UI is simple, very much like many other phones out there, not with the depth of the Xperia 1 or 5. It's clearly designed for casual snapping and shooting - that the vast majority of buyers/users here will be posting to their mates on social media. So that's pretty-much the pitch. Simple and straightforward for the masses, not complex for the niche photographers. The main choices are on the usual side-swiping carousel of words, horizontally, across the bottom, in portrait, or sideways, on the side, in landscape. There's a choice up-front and centre to switch between the wide-angle lens (0.7x), the main 1x and digital 2x. Worth noting that yes, the dedicated 2x optical zoom has gone from the previous model, but Sony claims that their 'in sensor zoom' makes up for it.
The rest of the controls switch orientation when the phone is turned, by the way. Bear in mind though that if you do, and want to use the shutter button, it's pushed a long way towards the middle, ending in finger gymnastics. There's a 'Bokeh' mode (presumably replacing Portrait Mode) which actually does a nice job in my tests here. Quite a bit of it seems to be 'automatic' so it will switch to Night Mode when it thinks it needs to (unless you toggle it off and force its hand). As usual with Night Modes these days, it grabs light from places that the human eye can't (at the expense of noise etc.). Dig into the menus for a bunch of other options like Soft Skin Tone Effect, Hand Shutter - take a shot with a wave, AI Super Resolution Zoom which is "digital processing that preserves more of the original image quality". YMMV with that! Gridline and sound options and so on - the usual stuff.
It's a nice and simple UI which will please the target audience and not confuse casual users like the 1 and 5 series will be guaranteed to! Then, yes, there's the shutter button on the side, as described above. Nice and useful if you're (very likely) shooting in portrait. The rest of the camera stuff and deeper dive on all things digital photography, as you will probably know by now if you read my stuff, is something I don't have much interest/expertise in - so instead of bangin' on about something I don't understand, I'll hand you over to our friends at GSMArena for their blow-by-blow, samples and analysis which starts here. Please do support them - a really useful resource with huge amounts of data scooped up over decades now.
The previous owner passed on a simple, soft, clear TPU case - which, as almost always, is the perfect way to case a phone and make it grippy-not-slippy! Also sent over was a wallet case, nice and cheap on Amazon UK and defies the fiver cost by being well-made and useful for those who wish to go that route.
The Xperia 10 Mk VII is a testament to Sony’s steady as she goes philosophy, even if the boat has been steered into slightly wider waters! By abandoning the 21:9 letterbox for a more conventional 19.5:9 ratio, Sony has made a phone that finally feels natural for typing and daily scrolling, even if it loses a bit of that unique Xperia silhouette. In many ways, this is the most 'grown-up' 10-series device yet. The leap to a 120Hz refresh rate and a significantly brighter OLED panel brings the display into the modern era, while the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 provides enough 'oomph' for the average user, despite some occasional stutters under heavy load. The addition of a shutter button is a lovely nod to the brand's heritage, even if its placement is clearly skewed toward portrait shooters.
However, the 10 VII still carries the weight of Sony’s classic compromises. The 30W charging is slow by 2026 standards and the lack of native Always on Display or Qi Charging remains a baffling omission for a device at this price-point. The camera setup is capable but uninspiring - the main sensor does the heavy lifting well, but the ultrawide feels like an afterthought.
Ultimately, if you value lightweight phones with durable build, good battery life and the trilogy of legacy features (3.5mm jack, microSD and no notch), the 10 Mk VII stands alone. It isn't a powerhouse, but with a revamped 4-year OS update promise, it’s a reliable companion that won’t demand a lifestyle change - just a bit of patience while charging. So yes, a solid, sensible mid-ranger for the brand faithful, but unlikely to lure the spec-sheet hunters away from the competition. And this turquoise is gorgeous!




























