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Redmi’s latest 300W charging feat powers your phone in under five minutes

Redmi’s latest 300W charging feat powers your phone in under five minutes

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Or if you’re really in a rush, you can juice up half the phone’s battery in a little over two minutes.

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An image showing a Redmi phone charging to 100 percent in five minutes
Image: Redmi

Redmi’s fast-charging technology just got even more ridiculous. In this post on Weibo, the Xiaomi-owned phone maker shows off its new 300W fast-charging technology that can power up a phone in just five minutes flat, as spotted earlier by Android Authority.

If you don’t believe it, you can see it here for yourself. Redmi hooks up a modified version of its Note 12 Discovery Edition, which comes equipped with a 4,100mAh battery instead of a 4,300mAh one, to its superfast charger.

The dual GaN device manages to charge half of the phone’s battery in just a little over two minutes, and by the time the five minutes are up, it reaches 100 percent. That’s barely enough time to finish eating your breakfast cereal or even unload your dishwasher.

Although Redmi touts its charger as capable of charging up to 300W, it only hits about 290W during the charging process. That’s a pretty impressive feat regardless and beats the company’s previous record of charging the Note 12 Discovery Edition in nine minutes at 210W.

It also tops the speeds from Chinese phone maker Realme, which demoed its fast-charging technology earlier this month that can juice up its new GT Neo 5 in under 10 minutes. Other Chinese phone companies, including OnePlus, have taken a stab at making ultrafast charging the standard but still fall short of Redmi’s latest charging times. But hey, at least the OnePlus 10T’s available in the US and can reach a full charge in about 20 minutes.

We don’t know whether Redmi will bring this technology to one of its smartphones, but it seems like a possibility. After all, if it added the nine-minute charging feature to its Note 12 Discovery Edition it released in China, what’s stopping it from making even faster speeds available to customers in the future?

Correction March 1st, 3:28PM ET: A previous version of the article incorrectly stated that Redmi previously set a record by charging its Note 12 Discovery Edition at 240W when it is actually 210W. We regret the error.