Xiaomi has officially unveiled Xiaomi 17 Ultra, and as expected, the company is once again betting that camera hardware, not AI buzzwords, is what will separate its flagship from the pack. Prices start at RMB 6,999 (roughly $970) and climb to RMB 8,999 for the fully loaded Leica Edition, putting the phone firmly in ultra-premium territory.
Headline feature is imaging. Xiaomi calls it a new generation of its “Night God” system, and for once, that doesn’t sound like pure marketing fluff.
17 Ultra’s main camera uses a 1-inch sensor with LOFIC ultra-high dynamic range technology, paired with a bright f/1.67 aperture. Xiaomi claims this helps control overexposure in extreme lighting, particularly at night, a long-standing weakness even among flagship phones.

Telephoto camera is where things get more interesting. Xiaomi pairs a 200MP 1/1.4-inch sensor with a 75–100mm optical zoom range, topped off with Leica APO certification. That’s unusually ambitious for a periscope lens and signals Xiaomi’s continued focus on long-range photography rather than computational tricks alone.

Ultra-wide duties fall to a 50MP sensor with macro support, while the front camera is also 50MP — overkill on paper, but consistent with Xiaomi’s “no weak links” approach.
Xiaomi 17 Ultra Leica Edition goes beyond software branding. It adds a dual-tone body, a physical zoom ring, exclusive camera features, dual satellite communication, a security chip, and even a collector-style gift box. There’s also the unmistakable Leica red dot, for those who want their phone to look as serious as its camera specs.
It’s a reminder that Xiaomi increasingly treats its Ultra models as lifestyle products, not just spec showcases.
Up front, the phone features a 6.9-inch LTPO OLED display with a 1–120Hz adaptive refresh rate and a flat-display design, a subtle but welcome move away from aggressively curved screens.
Inside, it’s powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 Elite Edition, paired with LPDDR5X memory and UFS 4.1 storage. There are no surprises here, but also no compromises.
6,800mAh battery stands out, especially combined with 90W wired and 50W wireless charging. Xiaomi is clearly prioritizing endurance this generation, even as phones continue to grow larger and heavier.
At over 220 grams, the Xiaomi 17 Ultra isn’t pretending to be subtle. It’s big, heavy, expensive, and unapologetically focused on photography. The curved center display might look impressive, but it’s unlikely to change how people actually use the phone. Cameras, however, might.
Xiaomi isn’t trying to out-Apple Apple, or out-Samsung Samsung. Instead, it’s carving out a niche where hardware ambition still matters, especially in mobile photography.
Whether that’s enough to justify the price hike will depend on how much users value optical performance over software polish.