Redmi Note 9 Pro Max and Redmi 8A Dual to cost more
Pricey affair
Xiaomi has announced an increase in the price of a couple of phones under the Redmi brand. The smartphones that are affected by the latest round of price hike are Redmi 9 Pro Max and Redmi 8A Dual.
The Chinese smartphone maker had increased the prices of various devices for multiple reasons including the hike in GST announced by the central government. Just a few days back we saw the prices of some variants of Poco X2, Redmi Note 8, Redmi 8, and Redmi 8A Dual going up marginally.
This time the company has decided to make the Redmi 8A Dual 3GB RAM and 32GB storage variant costlier by Rs. 300 while the Redmi Note 9 Pro Max 6 GB RAM and 64 GB storage variant will now retail at Rs. 16,999 and the Redmi Note 9 Pro Max 6 GB RAM and 64 GB storage variant will be sold for Rs. 18,999.
- Alleged Poco M2 Pro get BIS certification; Indian launch imminent
- Buying a Poco X2? You need to pay a bit more now
- Mysterious Poco device briefly listed on Xiaomi’s website
The new prices are as follows:
Model | Variant | Old Price | New Price |
---|---|---|---|
Redmi 8A Dual | 2 GB RAM - 32 GB Storage | Rs. 7,499 | No change |
Redmi 8A Dual | 3 GB RAM - 32 GB Storage | Rs. 7,499 | Rs. 7,799 |
Redmi 8A Dual | 3 GB RAM - 64 GB Storage | Rs. 8,999 | No change |
Redmi Note 9 Pro Max | 6 GB RAM - 64 GB Storage | Rs. 16,499 | Rs. 16,999 |
Redmi Note 9 Pro Max | 6 GB RAM - 128 GB Storage | Rs. 17,999 | Rs. 18,999 |
Redmi Note 9 Pro Max | 8 GB RAM - 128 GB Storage | Rs. 19,999 | No change |
We have reached out to the company to understand the reason behind the recent price hike, however, till the filing of this report we have not received a clarification. According to a previous report, few Chinese smartphone brands were forced to import assembled devices from China. Though companies like Xiaomi and Oppo have their factories in India which are used to assemble their smartphones, however, due to restrictions post the lockdown, these factories were operating at reduced manpower.
Since the lockdown eased, the demands for smartphones went up and to fulfil these demand companies had to import the smartphones. As per the rules, importing of assembled smartphones comes with an additional 22% import duty, prices of smartphones were bound to go up. While some brand had decided to absorb the additional costs, Xiaomi, which operated on very thin retail margins, may have decided to pass this on to the customers.
If this is the actual reason behind this hike, then we can expect brands like Oppo and Realme to follow suit.
Get daily insight, inspiration and deals in your inbox
Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.
- Best phones under Rs 15,000 in India for June 2020
Via: NDTV
Jitendra has been working in the Internet Industry for the last 7 years now and has written about a wide range of topics including gadgets, smartphones, reviews, games, software, apps, deep tech, AI, and consumer electronics.
Got an Intel Core Ultra 200S CPU? These are the patches you need to help gaming performance – with one more update coming in January 2025
Apple set to build a server chip to service its own AI and may have sacrificed the company's fastest ever chip to achieve this; report suggests a strategic tie-in with $850bn Broadcom
Government employees are still using Kaspersky despite the ban