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Best Phones Under 80000 in Pakistan 2026: Top Picks for Every Buyer

Best Phones Under Rs. 80,000 in Pakistan 2026

The Rs. 80,000 bracket is one of the most competitive in Pakistan’s smartphone market. You get genuine AMOLED displays, fast charging, capable cameras, and in some cases 5G — without crossing into flagship territory. Whether you are shopping on Daraz, walking through Hafeez Centre in Lahore, or visiting a mobile shop in Saddar Karachi, this guide covers every strong option available right now at PTA-approved prices.

All prices listed are for PTA-approved sets. Grey market phones may look cheaper upfront but carry hidden PTA tax costs — more on that below.

Quick Comparison Table

Phone Price (PKR) RAM / Storage Battery Display Main Camera
Samsung Galaxy A16 62,999 6GB / 128GB 5,000mAh 6.5-inch AMOLED 50MP
Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 68,500 8GB / 256GB 5,110mAh, 67W 6.67-inch 120Hz AMOLED 50MP
Realme 14 Pro 75,999 8GB / 256GB 5,200mAh, 80W 6.83-inch 120Hz AMOLED 50MP AI
Vivo V40 79,999 8GB / 256GB 5,500mAh, 80W 6.78-inch curved AMOLED Dual 50MP
Samsung Galaxy M35 59,999 6GB / 128GB 6,000mAh 6.5-inch Super AMOLED 50MP
Samsung Galaxy A17 5G 67,499 6GB / 128GB 5,000mAh 6.5-inch PLS LCD 50MP

The Best Phones Under Rs. 80,000 — Full Reviews

1. Samsung Galaxy A16 — Rs. 62,999

The Galaxy A16 sits at a sweet spot in this range. You get a 6.5-inch AMOLED panel with accurate colours and solid brightness — comfortable for outdoor use even in the harsh Karachi sun. The 50MP main camera handles daylight well and produces usable low-light shots. Samsung’s six-year OS update promise is a genuine long-term advantage over Chinese alternatives at this price. The 5,000mAh battery covers a full day of moderate use without stress.

Best for: Buyers who want Samsung software reliability and long update support at under Rs. 65,000.

2. Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 — Rs. 68,500

Xiaomi’s Redmi Note 14 punches hard for Rs. 68,500. The 6.67-inch 120Hz AMOLED display is one of the smoothest in this segment and makes a visible difference during social media scrolling and gaming. The 50MP camera’s night mode is genuinely capable, and the 5,110mAh battery with 67W fast charging means you can go from near-empty to 80 percent in about 40 minutes — important when load shedding has disrupted your overnight charge. MIUI can feel ad-heavy out of the box but is manageable once you configure it.

Best for: Buyers who want the fastest-charging phone in this range and a top-tier AMOLED display.

3. Realme 14 Pro — Rs. 75,999

The Realme Narzo 60 showed that Realme takes the mid-range seriously in Pakistan, and the Realme 14 Pro continues that. At Rs. 75,999 you get an 6.83-inch 120Hz AMOLED, an AI-assisted 50MP camera system, and an 80W charger in the box that fills the 5,200mAh battery in well under an hour. The build quality is a step above what Realme offered two years ago. If you want the largest screen in this group and the fastest same-brand charging, this is the one.

Best for: Media watchers and heavy users who want the largest display and fast charging together.

4. Vivo V40 — Rs. 79,999

The Vivo V40 is the premium pick of this list. Its 6.78-inch curved AMOLED display gives a phone that genuinely looks like it costs more than Rs. 80,000. The dual 50MP camera setup — developed in collaboration with Zeiss — performs well in portrait photography and low light. The 5,500mAh battery with 80W charging is the largest in this group with fast replenishment. If portrait photos and build quality matter most to you, the Vivo V40 earns its place at the top of this bracket.

Best for: Portrait photography lovers and anyone who wants a premium-feel device at just under Rs. 80,000.

5. Samsung Galaxy M35 — Rs. 59,999

The Galaxy M35 is the value anchor of this guide. At Rs. 59,999 it is the most affordable pick here, and the 6,000mAh battery is the largest of any phone on this list — a real advantage for buyers in cities with frequent load shedding. The Super AMOLED display is bright and sharp. Camera performance in daylight is good; low-light results are acceptable. If battery life is your single biggest concern, the M35 is hard to beat.

Best for: Anyone who needs maximum battery backup, especially in areas with irregular power supply.

6. Samsung Galaxy A17 5G — Rs. 67,499

The Samsung Galaxy A17 5G is the only 5G phone in this guide under Rs. 70,000. Pakistan’s 5G rollout is still limited, but Islamabad and parts of Lahore and Karachi are seeing early commercial coverage. If you plan to keep this phone for three or more years, buying 5G-capable now means you are ready when coverage expands. The display is a PLS LCD rather than AMOLED, which is the main trade-off versus the competition at this price.

Best for: Future-proofing buyers in major cities who want 5G capability without crossing Rs. 70,000.

Organised by Use Case

Best for Camera

Vivo V40 (Rs. 79,999). The Zeiss-tuned dual 50MP setup produces the most consistent portrait and low-light results in this price band.

Best for Battery Life

Samsung Galaxy M35 (Rs. 59,999). A 6,000mAh cell outclasses every other phone here and is the right call for buyers in cities with regular load shedding.

Best for Gaming

Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 (Rs. 68,500). The 120Hz AMOLED display, combined with 8GB RAM and 67W fast charging, makes it the most capable gaming phone in this bracket for the money.

Best Value Overall

Samsung Galaxy A16 (Rs. 62,999). AMOLED display, a reliable 50MP camera, six years of OS updates, and Samsung’s after-sales service network make it the safest all-round buy in this guide.

Rs. 60,000 vs Rs. 80,000 — Is the Extra Rs. 20,000 Worth It?

This is the question most buyers in Lahore and Karachi ask before finalising their purchase. Here is the honest answer:

  • Going from Rs. 60,000 to Rs. 80,000 mainly buys you better camera hardware, faster charging, and a more premium build. The day-to-day experience — calling, social media, streaming — is similar across all phones in this guide.
  • If photography matters to you, the jump from the Galaxy M35 to the Vivo V40 is justified. The camera difference is visible.
  • If you primarily use the phone for calls, WhatsApp, YouTube, and general browsing, the Galaxy M35 or Galaxy A16 will serve you just as well as anything at Rs. 79,999.
  • The Rs. 20,000 difference buys a meaningful camera and charging upgrade, not a life-changing performance gap.

Pakistan Context: Buying Smart in 2026

Daraz vs Hafeez Centre vs Local Shops

Daraz is convenient and often runs sales that bring prices below street rate. However, check the seller rating carefully and confirm the listing says PTA-approved — not just “official” or “box packed.” Hafeez Centre in Lahore and Saddar’s mobile markets in Karachi offer hands-on inspection before you buy, which matters for a device you will use daily. Smaller cities like Multan, Faisalabad, and Peshawar have authorised brand outlets for Samsung, Xiaomi, and Vivo that are worth visiting for warranty assurance.

PTA Approval and the Grey Market Risk

Grey market phones at this price bracket can appear Rs. 8,000 to Rs. 15,000 cheaper. That gap closes fast once you factor in PTA mobile device registration tax. Pakistan’s PTA now blocks unregistered IMEI numbers within 60 days of a SIM being inserted. For phones in the Rs. 60,000 to Rs. 80,000 category, PTA registration tax can range from Rs. 10,000 to over Rs. 18,000 depending on the declared import value. You can estimate your exact tax using the PTA tax calculator available on PakistaniLiving before making any purchase decision.

The safe rule: always ask for the official box with a PTA-approved sticker and verify the IMEI on the PTA Device Identification Registration and Blocking System (DIRBS) portal before paying.

Load Shedding and Battery Considerations

Buyers in Lahore’s suburban areas, interior Sindh, and smaller Punjab cities frequently deal with four to eight hours of load shedding daily. In this context, battery capacity is not just a convenience feature — it is a practical necessity. The Samsung Galaxy M35’s 6,000mAh cell and the Vivo V40’s 5,500mAh with 80W charging are the strongest options for managing unpredictable power access. Fast charging matters as much as raw capacity: a 45-minute charge window during a power restoration is enough to top up an 80W-compatible phone significantly.

Carrier Band Support

All phones in this guide support the frequency bands used by Jazz, Zong, Telenor, and Ufone on their 4G LTE networks in Pakistan. The Samsung Galaxy A17 5G adds 5G band compatibility. If you are on Zong’s network in Islamabad or Lahore, which has the most developed 5G trial coverage, the A17 5G is the only phone here positioned to use it.

Budget Options Worth Knowing

If Rs. 80,000 is your ceiling but you are open to spending less, several strong phones sit further below this range. The Samsung Galaxy A15 (Rs. 39,999) and Samsung Galaxy A14 (Rs. 39,999) are reliable mid-range options that cover the basics well. The Samsung Galaxy A24 (Rs. 39,999) adds a better AMOLED display at the same price. For Realme buyers, the Realme C53 (Rs. 34,999) is the most affordable starting point in the brand’s local lineup. If you want to spend around Rs. 40,000 on a Samsung with a slightly different feature balance, the Samsung Galaxy A05 and Samsung Galaxy A05s (both Rs. 39,999) are available options to compare.

Bottom Line

For most Pakistani buyers in 2026, the Samsung Galaxy A16 at Rs. 62,999 is the safest recommendation in this guide. It combines an AMOLED display, a capable camera, six years of software updates, and Samsung’s local warranty and service network. If your priority is camera quality and you can stretch to Rs. 79,999, the Vivo V40 is the clear step up. Battery-first buyers should go straight to the Samsung Galaxy M35. And if you are in a 5G coverage zone or plan to be in the next two to three years, the Samsung Galaxy A17 5G at Rs. 67,499 is the only future-proofed choice below Rs. 70,000 in this list.

Whatever you choose, buy PTA-approved from a verified seller. The savings on a grey set rarely survive the DIRBS registration costs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which phone under Rs. 80,000 is best in Pakistan in 2026?

The Vivo V40 (Rs. 79,999) offers the best overall package at the top of this bracket with its curved AMOLED display and Zeiss dual-camera system. For value at a lower price, the Samsung Galaxy A16 at Rs. 62,999 is the most balanced choice.

Should I buy a grey market phone to save money in Pakistan?

No. Grey market phones in the Rs. 60,000 to Rs. 80,000 range often come with PTA registration taxes of Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 18,000 or more, which eliminates most of the apparent saving. Unregistered phones are also blocked by DIRBS within 60 days. Always verify PTA approval before purchasing.

Is Daraz a safe place to buy phones under Rs. 80,000?

Daraz can be safe if you buy from a verified official brand store or a high-rated seller who explicitly lists the phone as PTA-approved. Avoid third-party sellers with limited ratings or vague product descriptions. Cross-check the IMEI on the PTA DIRBS website after receiving the phone.

Does load shedding affect which phone I should buy?

Yes. If you live in an area with four or more hours of daily load shedding, battery capacity and fast charging speed should rank high in your decision. The Samsung Galaxy M35 (6,000mAh) and Vivo V40 (5,500mAh with 80W charging) are the strongest choices for managing irregular electricity access.

About Luqman

A passionate technology writer and digital researcher,Luqman specializes in simplifying complex tech trends into practical, user-focused insights. With a strong interest in smartphones, emerging gadgets, and digital ecosystems, Luqman delivers well-researched, unbiased content tailored for everyday users. From product deep-dives to buying guides, the goal is simple: help readers make smarter, more informed decisions in a fast-changing tech landscape.

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