Vivo isn’t slowing down anytime soon. Barely six months after the V50 dropped, the brand’s already prepping its successor — the Vivo V60. And while you might think this is just another rushed refresh, the upgrades here say otherwise.
The V60 is shaping up to be a sharper, smarter, and more stylish midranger. There’s a faster chip, a beefier battery, and most interestingly, a dedicated telephoto camera — a feature you usually don’t see in this price band. We haven’t done a deep dive yet, but here’s a quick take on what’s new and worth talking about.
At a glance, the V60 doesn’t scream for attention — and that’s kind of the point. The loud camera bump from the V50 has been swapped out for a slick, flat module inspired by the Vivo X200 FE, complete with Zeiss branding and the Aura Light ring. It blends into the back far more elegantly.
You’ve got three colour options — Auspicious Gold, Moonlit Blue, and Mist Gray — and our matte gold unit manages to stay smudge-free while looking quietly premium. The chrome-finish frame adds just enough flair without tipping into tacky territory, and the soft curves make it an easy hold.
Despite now housing a 6,500mAh battery, the V60 doesn’t feel chunky. It’s still slim and light enough for everyday use. And the quad-curved display up front makes it look way more expensive than it is. Plus, with IP68 and IP69 ratings, it can handle dust, splashes, and accidental dunks — just don’t get too bold with it near a pool.
Inside, the V60 packs Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 — a legit step up from the 7 Gen 3. You’re getting better CPU and GPU performance, and more efficiency overall. It's the same chip found in the Realme 15 Pro, which handled pretty intense tasks without breaking a sweat in our testing.
That, paired with a 6,500mAh battery, should easily carry you through a heavy-use day. We haven’t run our full drain tests yet, but on paper, it’s one of the biggest jumps in the V-series yet.
On the software side, it’s running Funtouch OS 15 over Android 15, with a few AI extras thrown in. You’ve got AI Captions for auto-transcribing, AI Magic Move for smart editing, and Google Gemini baked right in. They’re small features, but they do make the experience feel a bit more 2025-ready.
This time around, Vivo’s playing the triple-camera card. There’s a new 50MP main sensor (Sony IMX766), an 8MP ultrawide (meh), and the real highlight — a 50MP telephoto lens (Sony IMX882). For this price range, that’s a flex.
Zoom shots at 3x and 10x look impressively clean, and even 100x isn’t the usual blurry mess. Zeiss’s colour tuning shines through in portraits, with strong edge detection and realistic skin tones. Vivo’s also tossed in 85mm and 100mm portrait presets, plus Stage Portraits at 10x for a more dramatic feel.
The front 50MP selfie shooter also pulls its weight, capturing natural skin tones and crisp detail. You can shoot video at 4K 30fps with OIS, and there’s a Wedding Vlog mode that auto-edits clips into a quick reel — fun, but would’ve been better with more manual controls.
The official India launch is set for August 12, and if Vivo follows last year’s playbook, we can expect a base price between ₹35,000 and ₹40,000. With launch offers in the mix, it could slip just under ₹35K — and that would be huge.
Its biggest rivals? The Realme 15 Pro and Oppo Reno 14. Both bring style and performance, but the V60 edges ahead with that oversized battery, more polished design, and that all-important telephoto cam.
The V60 doesn’t try to reinvent the V-series — it just makes everything smoother. Better battery, better zoom, and smarter performance wrapped in a sleek design. If Vivo nails the pricing, this could be one of the most complete midrange phones this year.