Mon. Mar 30th, 2026

The loss of OnePlus in the US will sting but, sadly, won’t actually matter

The topic of The loss of OnePlus in the US will sting but, sadly, won’t actually matter is currently the subject of lively debate — readers and analysts are keeping a close eye on developments.

This is taking place in a dynamic environment: companies’ decisions and competitors’ reactions can quickly change the picture.

OnePlus is dead – probably. We’re hearing that OnePlus is shutting down much of its global operation imminently and, while it hasn’t happened just yet, it’s got us thinking about OnePlus’ presence in the US and how, sadly, its departure won’t really matter.

OnePlus is perhaps one of the most exciting brands in the past decade of Android, and also one of the most interesting entrants to the US smartphone market in that time. The brand has been responsible for some of my favorite Android phones ever, in particular the OnePlus Open and OnePlus 13, both of which I felt showed just how far behind a lot of US smartphones really are in terms of hardware.

The US smartphone market is largely a duopoly. Google Pixel has scraped together a growing pile of customers, Motorola has its niche, but this market comes down largely to Samsung and, more so, Apple. And that dominance on Apple’s side really influences the rest of the market. Everyone feels as though they’re just focused on trying to compete with Apple, both in getting people to switch from Apple or, more accurately, prevent their own buyers from switching to the iPhone. That plays a big role in developing new devices.

OnePlus, though, always played things a little differently. Both thanks to its early role as an enthusiast-focused brand and its foundation in the Chinese smartphone market, OnePlus phones sold in the States frankly trounced the competition on paper. Just look back at that OnePlus 13 I loved so much. Compared to the dominant Android phone of the time, the Galaxy S24 Ultra, the OnePlus 13 had a drastically bigger battery, much faster charging, better camera hardware (overall), and all for a much lower price point.

The difference was even bigger with OnePlus 15, which packed a 7,000 mAh battery when most other flagships in the US were just barely, finally, surpassing 5,000 mAh. Regardless of how you might feel about that phone – our Will Sattelberg wasn’t too hot on it, despite his similar appreciation of the OnePlus 13 – it really showed just how far behind a lot of US devices are. OnePlus was the only brand really pushing ahead in the US.

Logically, you’d think such a brand would apply some pressure to the rest of the market, pushing competitors to up their game in order to stay relevant.

OnePlus never saw the success it needed to in the US, really never making a dent in the market nor becoming a well-known brand. Much of that boils down to a short-lived carrier stint that simply didn’t work out. Without carriers, most smartphone brands can’t survive in the US and, as OnePlus shows us, even that isn’t exactly a silver bullet. OnePlus tried to make it work with a Best Buy partnership, but that was never going to deliver the same impact.

I’m sad about it, especially because it means the US market is losing one of its very few options, and perhaps one of its best when it comes to certain features like massive batteries. But, ultimately, the impact here will be minimal. The market has spoken, and people just aren’t buying OnePlus smartphones in the US in any meaningful numbers – when you’re behind Google Pixel, you know something’s not working. In the US, OnePlus devices are estimated to make up less than 0.5% of active use based on web data (which, as we’ve seen, is not exactly infallible). Even if you combine that with Oppo as a margin of error, it’s still less than Xiaomi makes up. Oof.

The sad truth here is that, after years of OnePlus in the US, it just hasn’t had an impact on the wider market. The likes of Samsung, Google, Motorola, etc just haven’t responded to the “pressure” OnePlus was supposed to provide. That’s very sad, because it leaves most US smartphones feeling quite stagnant compared to Android phones sold in other parts of the globe. The recent Galaxy S26 Ultra, good as it may be, is essentially the same phone Samsung has been releasing for the past several generations.

What do you think? Are you a OnePlus user? Will you miss the brand in the US? Discuss in the comments below!

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I'll miss OnePlus for sure. The OP1 held its own against the Nexus 5, HTC One M8 and Moto X gen 2: it had the fastest Snapdragon 801 SoC (ACv3 variant) and the most RAM (3GB). This allowed it to transition from CyanogenOS to CyanogenMOD to LineageOS and still perform quite well. I owned all of those as a developer at the time and loved the HTC One M8 the most, but guess which one remained in my home the longest? Then came my OnePlus 3T, which competed well against the Pixel XL, as it had the faster AC variant of the Snapdragon 821 SoC and 6GB RAM compared to 4GB on the Pixel. Now in 2026 my son still uses that old OnePlus 6 with its 8GB RAM, where I traded in my Pixel 3 long ago due to its middling 4GB of RAM (and admittedly good trade-in value from Google). OnePlus was the brand that offered better performance and longevity at a lower price if you could get past the mediocre camera performance, and I could live with that before having children.

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Why it matters

News like this often changes audience expectations and competitors’ plans.

When one player makes a move, others usually react — it is worth reading the event in context.

What to look out for next

The full picture will become clear in time, but the headline already shows the dynamics of the industry.

Further statements and user reactions will add to the story.

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