At first glance, the Realme 15T looks like it fell out of Apple’s design lab. Flat edges, glossy camera bump, and bezels slim enough to trick you into a double take. But this isn’t an iPhone—it’s Realme’s new sub-₹20,000 budget phone. And instead of chasing pure specs or gimmicks, it’s trying to win over buyers with a mix of bold design choices and an almost absurdly large battery.
The result is a phone that feels both familiar and a little strange. Familiar, because the influence is obvious. Strange, because Realme has somehow packed a 7000mAh battery into a device that’s thinner and lighter than plenty of midrange phones with far smaller cells.
Yes, it looks like an iPhone. That’s the first thing anyone will notice. But Realme hasn’t gone full copy-paste here. The Flowing Silver color option shows some effort—the plastic back uses a layered printing process that creates marble-like swirls, meaning no two units look exactly alike. It’s still plastic, but it doesn’t feel cheap.
What’s more surprising is the size and weight. At 7.89mm and 183 grams, the 15T undercuts expectations. You’d think “7000mAh” and picture a bulky brick. Instead, it feels downright normal in hand. The aluminum alloy around the camera bump adds a touch of durability, while the frame itself is a fiber-glass plastic mix.
The front has its own party trick: bezels just 1.73mm thin on the sides. That’s something you don’t usually see under ₹20,000. The display is covered with Dragontrail Star D+ glass—not Gorilla Glass, but good enough to handle scratches from keys and coins. And for a budget phone, the water and dust protection is overkill: IP66, IP68, and IP69 ratings. You still shouldn’t dunk it in a pool, but rain and dust won’t be an issue.
The rear module looks like it houses three cameras, but only two are real. There’s a 50MP Omnivision main sensor and a 2MP monochrome add-on. No ultrawide, no telephoto.
Performance is about what you’d hope for in this price range. Daylight shots are sharp, colors pop without going overboard, and the dynamic range is stronger than expected—you won’t lose the sky when shooting a bright landscape. Low light is fine if you stick to Night Mode, and portraits have decent edge detection.
The missing ultrawide lens stings a little, especially when competitors are offering more versatile setups. On the flip side, the 50MP selfie camera is unusually strong. Shots have natural-looking skin tones and plenty of detail, while video recording goes up to 1080p at 60fps with electronic stabilization.
This is where the 15T flexes. The 7000mAh battery is the headline, and it earns it. Two days of regular use isn’t just marketing—it’s achievable. If you’re light on social media or streaming, you might even push to three. It’s the kind of phone that lets you forget your charger at home for a weekend.
Charging is handled by a 70W brick in the box, which fills the phone in about 75 minutes. That’s quick for such a massive cell, though not class-leading. Reverse wired charging is a nice touch—you can top up your earbuds or even play power bank for a friend.
The Realme 15T isn’t subtle. It looks like an iPhone, brags about a massive battery, and still manages to stay slim and light. That combination alone makes it stand out in India’s brutally competitive sub-₹20,000 space.
But this isn’t a perfect package. The lack of an ultrawide camera limits flexibility, and the design leans heavily on Apple’s homework. Still, what Realme has pulled off here feels ambitious: a budget phone that doesn’t scream compromise, especially if battery life is your top priority.
If you’re tired of charging your phone every night and don’t mind your device borrowing some design cues, the Realme 15T might be the budget phone to beat in 2025.