
The Oppo Pad Mini (exclusive to China) serves as a template for what OnePlus’ mini tablet will look like.
Apple, a company that charges a premium for premium display technology, has somehow never put an OLED screen in its most pocket-friendly tablet. The iPad mini sits there in 2025 with a Liquid Retina LCD while the iPad Pro ships with a tandem OLED panel that costs as much as a laptop. That inconsistency has nagged at iPad mini fans for years, the sense that Apple’s smallest tablet is perpetually treated as a second-class citizen in its own lineup. It sells well enough to survive, but never well enough, apparently, to earn the display upgrade it deserves.
OnePlus may be about to make Apple look even more stubborn on that front. A leak from tipster Abhishek Yadav describes a compact OnePlus tablet with an 8.8-inch OLED display, 144Hz refresh rate, and Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 under the hood, paired with LPDDR5X RAM and UFS 4.1 storage. If those specs hold, OnePlus would be shipping a compact Android tablet with a display technology the iPad mini still does not have. A global launch is reportedly targeting Q3 2026, with India expected to be among the first markets. The hardware pitch is unusually straightforward: better screen, flagship guts, same general size class.
Designer: OnePlus

The spec sheet here reads like OnePlus raided the OnePlus Pad 4’s parts bin and asked engineering to compress it. That larger tablet runs a 13.2-inch IPS LCD with Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, which is a fine machine for productivity but firmly in “bag required” territory. This rumored compact model flips the script entirely, pairing flagship silicon with a form factor you can actually hold one-handed on a commute. The 8,000mAh battery and 67W charging round out a package that looks, on paper, like the small Android tablet the market has been waiting for since the Nexus 7 quietly aged out of relevance over a decade ago.

The honest caveat here is that this hardware almost certainly has a prior life. The spec profile aligns closely with the Oppo Pad Mini, a China-exclusive device that has been doing exactly this job domestically without making a dent in the global conversation. LPDDR5X and UFS 4.1 mean fast memory and storage throughput, the kind of internals that keep a tablet feeling snappy for years rather than sluggish after two software updates. A OnePlus label, a global distribution push, and software support that extends beyond China would transform what is essentially proven hardware into a legitimate mainstream contender.
Pricing remains the missing piece. OnePlus has historically been disciplined about value positioning, which is precisely what makes this device interesting beyond the spec sheet. The iPad mini 7 starts at $499. If OnePlus lands this anywhere south of that number with an OLED panel and Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 inside, the conversation around compact tablets changes in a way it genuinely has not since Apple invented the category.