
Infinix • ₦108,000
Tecno • ₦108,400
The Realme P4 Power 5G is now more than a pre-launch rumour. Realme announced it in India on January 29, 2026, and the official spec sheet confirms the headline feature: a 10,001mAh typical battery with 80W Ultra Charge support. For Nigerian buyers who deal with long commutes, heavy hotspot use, unstable power supply, and frequent power-bank charging, this is exactly the kind of phone that deserves attention.
The important caveat is availability. As of May 31, 2026, the Realme P4 Power 5G is verified on Realme India and other Realme regional pages, but we did not find an official Realme Nigeria product page or a confirmed local Nigerian launch notice. That means Nigerian buyers should treat it as an import-first device until local retailers publish confirmed stock, warranty terms, and exact variants.
The P4 Power 5G is for people who put battery life ahead of having the thinnest phone, the best zoom camera, or the most premium flagship chipset. It makes the most sense for dispatch riders, students, creators, field workers, traders, gamers, and anyone who uses mobile data or hotspot for many hours a day.
It is also a good fit if you currently carry a 10,000mAh power bank everywhere. Realme includes 27W reverse charging, so the phone can top up earbuds, another phone, or small USB-C accessories. That does not make it a full replacement for every power bank, but it changes the daily carry calculation for many users.
If you are comparing battery-first phones, also read Ogabassey’s OnePlus Nord CE 6 battery comparison and the Xiaomi Redmi Turbo 5 Max battery guide before deciding.
| Feature | Realme P4 Power 5G | Why it matters in Nigeria |
|---|---|---|
| Battery | 10,001mAh typical, 9,750mAh rated | Built for multi-day use and long power outages |
| Charging | 80W Ultra Charge, 55W PPS compatibility listed | Fast refill is important because the battery is huge |
| Chipset | MediaTek Dimensity 7400 Ultra 5G | Mid-range 5G performance with better efficiency than older 4G chips |
| Display | 6.8-inch 1.5K AMOLED, 144Hz, up to 6,500-nit local peak brightness | Useful for gaming, streaming, and outdoor readability |
| Cameras | 50MP Sony OIS main camera, 8MP ultrawide, 16MP front camera | Good main-camera spec, but not a camera-first flagship |
| Durability | IP66/IP68/IP69 ratings on published specs | Better protection than many mid-range phones, though not a license for careless water use |
| Software | Android 16-based Realme UI 7.0 reported at launch | Modern software baseline; confirm update promise by region before importing |
The battery is the main reason to consider this phone. Realme says it uses silicon-carbon battery technology and claims long-term battery-health advantages under lab assumptions. Independent coverage also highlights the unusual balance of a 10,001mAh battery in a phone reported around 9.08mm thick and about 219g. That is heavier than many mainstream phones, but not as bulky as older rugged battery phones.
The Realme P4 Power 5G spec sheet lists broad 4G and 5G band support, including LTE bands 3, 7, 20, 28 and 5G NR bands n78, n41, n28 and others on the Malaysia specification page. This is encouraging for Nigerian 4G and 5G use because Nigerian 5G deployments commonly rely on mid-band spectrum such as n78, while 4G coverage often depends on bands such as 3, 7, 20 and 28.
However, buyers should still check the exact imported model number and region. Realme variants can differ by market, and network features such as VoLTE, VoWiFi, carrier aggregation, 5G access, and call quality depend on both the phone firmware and the Nigerian network. If you buy an import, ask the seller to confirm the supported bands, return window, and whether the device is sealed and Google Play certified.
Realme’s India pricing started around Rs. 27,999 for the 8GB/128GB model, with higher prices for 8GB/256GB and 12GB/256GB variants. At late May 2026 INR-to-NGN exchange rates, that base Indian price converts to roughly the low-₦400,000 range before shipping, duties, seller margin, warranty handling, and exchange-rate spread. A Nigerian street or online import price around the mid-₦400,000 to ₦600,000 range would therefore be plausible, but it should not be treated as official until a Nigerian retailer lists confirmed stock.
The draft’s earlier ₦550,000 estimate is still within a believable import-price band, but the article should not present it as official Realme Nigeria pricing. The better buying question is this: if the P4 Power lands near the price of strong mid-range phones, its battery and display may justify the premium. If it climbs into flagship-killer pricing, compare camera quality, warranty, and software support more carefully.
The first trade-off is size and weight. Around 219g is manageable for a large battery phone, but it is still noticeable in a pocket and during one-handed use. Add a case and tempered glass and the phone will feel larger than normal mid-range models.
The second trade-off is camera flexibility. A 50MP OIS main camera is useful, and the 8MP ultrawide is welcome, but the P4 Power is not built around flagship imaging. If your priority is portraits, zoom, low-light video, or social-media camera consistency, compare real sample photos before buying.
The third trade-off is import support. Without an official Nigerian listing, warranty claims may depend on the seller. Ask for a written warranty, confirm return terms, and avoid paying flagship money for a unit with no local service path.
If you want similar battery-first thinking but not necessarily 10,001mAh, compare the P4 Power with other large-battery Android phones from Xiaomi, OnePlus, Tecno, Infinix, and Vivo. Ogabassey’s Vivo X200T performance and battery review is useful if you want stronger all-round performance, while the Redmi Turbo 5 Max article is useful if battery capacity is your main filter.
Choose the Realme P4 Power 5G if battery life, fast charging, reverse charging, IP-rated durability, and a high-refresh AMOLED display are your top priorities. Choose a different phone if you want official Nigerian retail support, a lighter body, stronger camera hardware, or guaranteed local after-sales service.
The Realme P4 Power 5G is a real and unusually practical 2026 battery phone, not just a spec-sheet fantasy. Its 10,001mAh battery, 80W charging, 144Hz AMOLED display, Dimensity 7400 Ultra chipset, broad band support, and IP-rated body make it one of the most interesting phones for Nigerian power users.
The sensible recommendation is to wait for confirmed Nigerian stock if warranty matters to you. If you are comfortable buying imports, insist on the correct variant, sealed packaging, clear return terms, and proof of network compatibility. At a fair import price, the P4 Power 5G could be one of the best battery-first Android phones for Nigeria in 2026.
We found official Realme India and regional product pages, but no official Realme Nigeria product page as of May 31, 2026. Treat Nigerian availability as unconfirmed unless a trusted local retailer lists real stock and warranty terms.
Battery life depends on brightness, network quality, gaming, hotspot use, and refresh rate. For many users, the capacity should comfortably outlast standard 5,000mAh phones, but exact two-day or three-day claims should be treated as usage-dependent rather than guaranteed.
The published regional spec sheet lists major 5G bands including n78 and n41, plus broad 4G support. That is promising, but buyers should confirm the exact model and carrier behaviour before importing.
It is reported around 219g, so it is heavier than many slim phones but unusually reasonable for a 10,001mAh device. If you prefer compact phones, try a similarly sized device in hand before buying.
