TheSamsung Galaxy S9 is, for many consumers, the go-to Android phone. Some people
think Samsung isAndroid. But you are reading this, so you know
otherwise. The Huawei P20 is a pleasingly accomplished, comparatively
affordable alternative to the S9.
Here we compare the
two to help you choose which is the best smartphone for you.
Price and
availability
The Samsung Galaxy S9
retails for £739/$719.99 while the Galaxy S9+ is £869/$839.99. You can
buy from Samsung in the UK
or Samsung in the US .
Carphone Warehouse in
the UK
also has the phones on several monthly contracts here.
The Huawei P20 is
aggressively priced in comparison. It sells for £599, while the P20 Pro is
£799. Carphone Warehouse stocks both here on contract as well as SIM
free.
Design and build
The Galaxy S9 looks
very similar to the S8, which is no bad thing. A glass and metal sandwich, it
has incredibly slim top and bottom bezels – with no notch – and a fingerprint
sensor on the rear. It feels quite fragile though and the black version in
particular picks up a lot of fingerprints.
The S9 is slightly
larger and has two rear cameras as opposed to one.
The Huawei P20 is also
glass and metal in construction but has a distinctive notch in the display for
the earpiece and front facing camera. It’s roughly the same dimensions as the
S9 though and is 1.2mm slimmer.
It has a front facing
fingerprint sensor, but lacks a headphone jack, something the S9 keeps.
The P20 Pro is larger
than the regular P20 and adds a third camera to the set-up which allows for
more detailed and zoomed images.
The Galaxy S9 and S9
Plus come in several colours, not all of which are available in all regions.
Those colours are midnight black, lilac purple and coral blue.
The P20 and P20 Pro
are available in two impressive gradient finishes called twilight and pink
gold, with blue, black and a lesser spotted champagne gold which is only for
the regular P20.
Both phones are risky
to use without a case given they are mostly glass, but the colours are often
very striking choices. The notch on the Huawei P20 phones might also put you
off, but you can actually hide it with a software setting.
Features and
specifications
Here’s an overview and comparison of the specs
of both S9 and both P20 phones:
|
Samsung Galaxy S9
|
Samsung Galaxy S9 Plus
|
Huawei P20
|
Huawei P20 Pro
|
Price
|
£739
|
£869
|
£599
|
£799
|
Operating system
|
Android 8.0 with Samsung Experience
|
Android 8.0 with Samsung Experience
|
Android 8.1 with EMUI
|
Android 8.1 with EMUI
|
Display
|
5.8in Quad HD + Curved Super AMOLED, 18.5:9
(570ppi)
|
6.2in Quad HD + Curved Super AMOLED, 18.5:9
(529ppi)
|
5.4in 2444×1080 18.7:9 LCD
|
6.1in 2444×1080 18.7:9 OLED
|
Processor
|
Snapdragon 845 (US) or Exynos 9810 (EMEA)
|
Snapdragon 845 (US) or Exynos 9810 (EMEA)
|
Huawei Kirin 970
|
Huawei Kirin 970
|
GPU
|
Adreno 630 (US) or Mali-G72 MP18 (EMEA)
|
Adreno 630 (US) or Mali-G72 MP18 (EMEA)
|
Mali-G72 MP12
|
Mali-G72 MP12
|
RAM
|
4GB
|
6GB
|
4GB
|
6GB
|
Storage
|
64/128/256 GB
|
64/128/256 GB
|
128GB
|
128GB
|
Primary cameras
|
12Mp camera, f/1.5
|
12Mp dual-camera, f/1.5, dual-OIS
|
20Mp and 12Mp dual (monochrome f/1.6, colour
f/1.8)
|
20Mp monochrome and 12Mp colour dual (f/2.2
OIS in 12Mp)
|
Selfie camera
|
8Mp
|
8Mp
|
24Mp
|
24Mp
|
Connectivity
|
Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 5.0, NFC, GPS
|
Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 5.0, NFC, GPS
|
Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 4.2, NFC, GPS
|
Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 4.2, NFC,
GPS
|
SIM card
|
Single or dual SIM
|
Single or dual SIM
|
Dual SIM
|
Dual SIM
|
|
3000mAh, 15W Adaptive Fast Charging, fast
wireless charging
|
3500mAh, 15W Adaptive Fast Charging, fast
wireless charging
|
3400mAh, Fast charging, no wireless charging
|
4000mAh, Fast charging, no wireless
charging
|
USB
|
USB-C
|
USB-C
|
USB-C
|
USB-C
|
MicroSD
|
Support up to 400GB
|
Support up to 400GB
|
No
|
No
|
Water resistance
|
IP68
|
IP68
|
IP53
|
IP67
|
Dimensions
|
147.7 x 68.7 x 8.5
|
158.1 x 73.8 x 8.5
|
149.1 x 70.8 x 7.7 mm
|
55 x 73.9 x 7.8 mm
|
Weight
|
163g
|
189g
|
165g
|
180g
|
Of all four phones,
only the regular P20 has an LCD display. The other three have more vibrant OLED
displays which can get brighter and also show deeper blacks. Despite this, the
5.8in screen on the P20 is still very good and content looks great.
The Galaxy S9’s screen
is also 5.8in, but with a slightly different aspect ratio. Both S9s have tall
18.5:9 displays while the P20s both have 18.7:9. You won’t notice the
difference save for the notch.
The S9 Plus has 6.2in
of display and the P20 Pro slightly less with 6.1. These two larger phones are
too big to use one0handed for most people, but the S9 and P20 in regular sizes
are just about manageable, with the benefit being most of the front of the
phone is screen.
The S9 series uses the
Snapdragon 845 in the US
but most of the rest of the world gets the Exynos 9810, Samsung’s own
processor. Performance is comparable and generally excellent as it’s a top of the
line chip whichever you get.
The Kirin
970 in both P20 phones is Huawei’s equivalent of the 845, and it gives an
excellent experience. It also has added ‘AI’ capabilities built in.
The camera set ups
across all phones are quite different. The S9 has one, the S9 Plus and P20 have
two while the P20 Pro amazingly has three. All are capable shooters, though the
S9 Plus or P20 Pro are the ones to go for if you are a camera nut.
The P20 Pro has the
best set-up, with a 40Mp camera that allows for ridiculously detailed shots,
and even the smaller P20 can capture incredible low-life photos.The P20 Pro
lets you optical zoom up to 5x, unprecedented in a phone whereas the S9 Plus
lets you do 2x.
You might prefer the
P20 phones if you like taking selfies – they have 24Mp front facing cameras
compared to the S9 and S9 Plus with just 8Mp. Megapixels are everything, but
Huawei does have the edge here
You shouldn’t be
concerned about the RAM differences on each phone unless you are an incredibly
heavy user. The regular models of P20 and S9 have 4GB, and the P20 Pro and S9
Plus have 6GB.
More worth considering
are the storage options. The S9 and S9 Plus is available in 64/128/256GB, but
not in all regions. For example, in the UK the S9 is available in 64GB and
the S9 Plus in 128GB.
But single SIM S9
models have a microSD card slot for expansion up to 400GB. Alternatively you
can get a dual SIM model if you don’t mind losing the expansion.
The Huawei P20 and P20
Pro are simpler – it’s just 128GB, and neither have microSD slots. 128GB is a
lot of storage though, and you’ll even be fine with 64. All the P20 phones are
dual SIM, too.
Although Huawei puts
USB-C headphones and a 3.5mm headphone jack adapter in the box, there is no
headphone jack on the P20s. The S9s both have headphone jacks, and are IP68
water resistant to boot. The P20 is only IP53 (splashproof) and the P20 Pro is
IP67 – less than the S9 phones, but more than waterproof enough.
All the S9 and P20
phones charge via USB-C and are fast charge compatible. Only the S9s have
wireless charging, and fast charging at that. The P20s lack it, but then again
that might be why they are cheaper as this feature adds cost.
Software
The Galaxy S9 and S9
Plus and the Huawei P20 and P20 Pro all have Android Oreo out of the box.
Samsung adds its Samsung Experience (formerly TouchWiz) skin over the top and
Huawei its EMUI skin.
Both are versions that
change the look of stock Android dramatically. It’s up to personal preference
as to which you prefer – EMUI looks a lot like Apple’s iOS.
Neither are horrendous
but if you’re an Android fan, you’ll probably prefer Samsung. Having said that,
the latest version of EMUI is the best ever, and runs attractively and slick on
the P20 and P20 Pro.
The S9 and P20 phones
all have Google Assistant, and with the S9s you also get Bixby, which plainly
is not very good. Huawei is wise to not have created its own assistant here,
and the physical Bixby button on the S9 and S9 Plus is annoying.
Huawei adds more AI
features than Samsung though. The cameras on the P20s have camera modes that
auto select the best shooting conditions for you, though at the moment that’s
about as helpful as they get. There is potential, though.
And you can even ‘turn
off’ the notch on the P20 phones by blocking out the top of the display with a
black software bar.
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