Xiaomi Mi 9T/Redmi K20 review

GSMArena team, 28 June 2019.

MIUI10 and Pie

The Xiaomi Mi 9T boots the latest MIUI 10 ROM based on Android 9 Pie. While lightweight and intuitive, MIUI is no vanilla Android, so it will take a couple of hours for the purists to get the handle of it.

Xiaomi Mi 9T review

The Mi 9T supports Always-on display and you can schedule it or leave it on/off all the time. There are various themes you can choose from and make it yours.

Always-on screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Always-on screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Always-on screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Always-on screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Always-on screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Always-on screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review
Always-on screen

You can unlock the screen via the improved under-display fingerprint scanner. The reader is very easy to set up and works surprisingly fast. The accuracy is superb, too, and overall it's great for your daily unlocking.

You can also set up face unlock in addition to it - it's equally fast as the Mi 9T wakes up the moment you pick it up. Note that the face unlock option may not be available in all regions.

Xiaomi Mi 9T has a Dark mode - it will switch all system colors from white to black and this way you can save some battery juice by making the best use of the power-efficient AMOLED screen. Note that not all apps support the dark mode, but the majority do.

Dark mode - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Dark mode - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Dark mode - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Dark mode - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Dark mode - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Dark mode - Xiaomi Mi 9T review
Dark mode

The Mi 9T also comes with various live wallpapers including the cool 24-hour wallpaper - it changes depending on the time of day and is quite nice, indeed.

Wallpapers - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Wallpapers - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Wallpapers - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Wallpapers - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Wallpapers - Xiaomi Mi 9T review
Wallpapers

There is no app drawer in MIUI so all your apps are just sitting there on your homescreen, but you can still add them to folders. Of course, you can always install a third-party launcher if you really miss the app drawer.

Here are the default home screens on Mi 9T. There's a weather widget in the upper right corner across from a large clock widget. There is a Quick Card pane, the leftmost one. It contains different cards with relevant information - recent apps, step counter, notes, calendar events, the weather, and favorites, among others. You can configure what shows up here, or you can disable this altogether.

Lockscreen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Homescreen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Homescreen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Tools - Xiaomi Mi 9T review  - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Quick Card - Xiaomi Mi 9T review
Lockscreen • Homescreen • Homescreen • Tools • • Quick Card • Settings

The task switcher felt a bit awkward at first, but we've grown to like it. It shows all of your recent apps in two columns. Tap and hold on a card for the split-screen shortcut, or just swipe it left or right to close it.

Recents and Split Screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Recents and Split Screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Recents and Split Screen - Xiaomi Mi 9T review
Recents and Split Screen

Themes are supported on the Xiaomi Mi 9T, but the app appears only when the phone is set to a supported region, say India.

Themes - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Themes - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Themes - Xiaomi Mi 9T review
Themes

MIUI also offers a Security app. It can scan your phone for malware, manage your blacklist, manage or restrict your data usage, configure battery behavior, and free up some RAM. It can also manage the permissions of your installed apps and allows you to define the battery behavior of selected apps and applies restrictions only to the apps you choose.

MIUI also offers proprietary Gallery, Music, and Video player. In some regions, the music and video app include paid streaming options. FM radio app is available, too.

Security app - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Security app - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Gallery - Xiaomi Mi 9T review Music - Xiaomi Mi 9T review File Manager - Xiaomi Mi 9T review FM radio - Xiaomi Mi 9T review
Security app • Security app • Gallery • Music • File Manager • FM radio

In some markets, the pre-installed applications by Xiaomi will show ads, which is how Xiaomi's is compensating for the relatively low prices of its devices. We're reviewing a global version of the Mi 9T and we didn't see any ads at all.

Performance and benchmarks

The Xiaomi Mi 9T employs the Snapdragon 730 chip - the most powerful upper midrange SoC from Qualcomm. It's built on an 8nm production process and features an octa-core CPU in a 2x2.2 GHz Kryo 470 Gold (Cortex-A76 based) & 6x1.8 GHz Kryo 470 Silver (Cortex-A55 based) configuration plus an Adreno 618 GPU. There's a single memory tier of 6GB of RAM.

Xiaomi Mi 9T review

The Snapdragon 730 may have just two high-performance A76-derived cores, but those were enough to put it ahead of the competition which uses the older generation cores. The single-core score is amazing, as is the multi-core performance and both can only be bested by the flagship S855 chip. The Snapdragon 730 offers enough processing superiority over the Mi 9 SE's S710 (A75-based) to make a difference.

GeekBench 4.1 (single-core)

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 9
    3503
  • Xiaomi Mi 9T
    2537
  • Samsung Galaxy A80
    2516
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 Pro
    2404
  • Samsung Galaxy A70
    2391
  • Xiaomi Mi 9 SE
    1905
  • Samsung Galaxy A50
    1715
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7
    1650
  • Huawei P30 Lite (perf. mode)
    1576
  • Oppo F11 Pro
    1560
  • Huawei P30 Lite
    1534
  • Realme X
    1475

GeekBench 4.1 (multi-core)

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 9
    11181
  • Samsung Galaxy A80
    6934
  • Xiaomi Mi 9T
    6863
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 Pro
    6620
  • Samsung Galaxy A70
    6584
  • Oppo F11 Pro
    6020
  • Xiaomi Mi 9 SE
    6017
  • Realme X
    5915
  • Huawei P30 Lite (perf. mode)
    5549
  • Huawei P30 Lite
    5523
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7
    5411
  • Samsung Galaxy A50
    5396

The Adreno 618 GPU sounds beyond promising on paper and should be more than adequate to handle all 1080p content. Indeed, it can only be bested by the flagship Adreno 640 inside the S855 SoC, which was kind of an overkill beneath the 1080p's screen of the Mi 9.

GFX 3.1 Manhattan (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 9
    56
  • Samsung Galaxy A80
    26
  • Xiaomi Mi 9T
    24
  • Xiaomi Mi 9 SE
    24
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 Pro
    15
  • Samsung Galaxy A50
    13
  • Samsung Galaxy A70
    13
  • Huawei P30 Lite
    13
  • Huawei P30 Lite (perf. mode)
    13
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7
    13
  • Oppo F11 Pro
    12

GFX 3.1 Car scene (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 9
    35
  • Xiaomi Mi 9 SE
    14
  • Samsung Galaxy A80
    14
  • Xiaomi Mi 9T
    13
  • Samsung Galaxy A50
    8
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 Pro
    7.9
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7
    7.7
  • Oppo F11 Pro
    7.4
  • Samsung Galaxy A70
    7
  • Huawei P30 Lite
    7
  • Huawei P30 Lite (perf. mode)
    6.9

Finally, there is no real difference between the Adreno 616 inside the Mi 9 SE's S710 and the Adreno 618 within the Mi 9T.

3DMark SSE 3.1 Unlimited

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 9
    5816
  • Samsung Galaxy A80
    2543
  • Xiaomi Mi 9T
    2329
  • Xiaomi Mi 9 SE
    2218
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7
    1409
  • Samsung Galaxy A50
    1353
  • Oppo F11 Pro
    1275
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 Pro
    1220
  • Samsung Galaxy A70
    1112
  • Huawei P30 Lite (perf. mode)
    988
  • Huawei P30 Lite
    985

Some say AnTuTu never lies, and the compound test indeed put the Mi 9T on top of every other competitor. The only one that could beat it is the Mi 9.

AnTuTu 7

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 9
    372006
  • Xiaomi Mi 9T
    211915
  • Samsung Galaxy A80
    207502
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 Pro
    180754
  • Xiaomi Mi 9 SE
    180057
  • Samsung Galaxy A70
    167750
  • Oppo F11 Pro
    150218
  • Samsung Galaxy A50
    144574
  • Huawei P30 Lite (perf. mode)
    141600
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7
    139075
  • Huawei P30 Lite
    129887

The Snapdragon 730 is bridging the gap between the mid-range and the flagship classes, very successfully at that. It has one of the most powerful processors to date, and the GPU will handle whatever game you threw at it for the next couple of years to come.

Sure, the Mi 9 has the Snapdragon 855 with twice as much graphics power, but it mostly goes underutilized as it is not needed on its 1080p display. So, for most, if not all, intents and purposes you won't feel a difference between the Mi 9 and Mi 9T as far as flagship gaming is concerned.

Finally, the Mi 9T's Snapdragon 730 stays cool enough under peak performance and we didn't notice any throttling.

Reader comments

  • Anas
  • 18 Apr 2024
  • JG8

Still using my Xiaomi Mi9T since 2019 great phone, just the battery isn't as good as it was, and my original charger cable isn't working anymore, other than these minor things.. I'm very satisfied with this amazing flagship still compe...

  • onuryr
  • 20 Mar 2024
  • DW6

Still using in 2024 :)

  • Wout14
  • 02 Oct 2023
  • mGA

Still using till today my mi9t .