The Motorola Edge 60 Pro is a mid-range phone whose battery results embarrass most flagships: a 6,000mAh silicon-carbon cell with 90W charging in a 186g body. Its 16:14-hour active use score in GSMArena's lab is within an hour of phones costing twice as much.
Edge 60 Pro: Display
The 6.7-inch P-OLED runs at 120Hz with a 1220 x 2712 resolution and measured 1,595 nits of maximum brightness in GSMArena's lab test, an excellent result at this price. The quoted 4,500-nit peak applies to HDR content.
PWM dimming is listed at 720Hz, well below the 3840Hz on the similarly priced Honor 400, so flicker-sensitive buyers should factor that in, and the Gorilla Glass 7i carries only a Mohs level 4 hardness rating.
Edge 60 Pro: Camera
The 50MP f/1.8 main camera has OIS, multi-directional PDAF and a colour spectrum sensor with Pantone-validated colour tuning, and the 50MP selfie camera records 4K.
GSMArena lists a triple rear camera but the secondary lens specifications are not individually itemised in the GSMArena spec table and should be confirmed before purchase. Rear video also tops out at 4K at 30fps.
Edge 60 Pro: Battery
The 6,000mAh silicon-carbon battery is the phone's defining spec, returning an active use score of 16:14 hours in GSMArena's lab and a 67:47-hour EU label endurance rating with an efficiency Class A. Charging is 90W wired.
There is no wireless charging, an omission shared with the similarly priced Honor 400, so all of that capacity refills by cable only.
Edge 60 Pro: Size, Weight and Build
At 160.7 x 73.1 x 8.2mm and 186g with an eco leather back in three Pantone shades, the Edge 60 Pro carries IP68 and IP69 sealing, protection that most mid-rangers and some flagships cannot match.
The frame is plastic rather than metal, which is where the money went instead of the battery and sealing.
Edge 60 Pro: Performance
The Dimensity 8350 Extreme with up to 16GB of RAM and UFS 4.0 storage delivers strong upper-mid-range speed, comfortably ahead of the Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 in the Honor 400.
Software is the weak point: Motorola commits to just three major Android upgrades from Android 15, half the six-upgrade window Honor offers on the 400, and a poor match for a phone whose battery is built to last years.
Edge 60 Pro: Who Should Buy
Buy the Edge 60 Pro if battery endurance per pound is your deciding metric; nothing near its price posts better lab numbers, and the IP69 sealing is a bonus for careless environments. Buyers who keep phones beyond three years should weigh the Honor 400, which trades battery capacity for double the software window and a sharper camera spec on paper. Buyers comparing monthly costs will find current network pricing in the table above.