Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 Moonlight White price and specs via Revu Philippines

New Redmi Note 7 version to go on sale in PH starting July 31

In Phones by Alora Uy Guerrero6 Comments

This particular color variant was introduced in China about two weeks ago. Starting July 31, it will be available in the Philippines.

HONOR X9d 5G Cybertruck Revu Philippines ad

Xiaomi has announced that the Redmi Note 7 in Moonlight White with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage will be rolling out to local Mi Authorized Stores and Kiosks tomorrow.

The model costs P9,990 (around $197), the same price as that of the Redmi Note 7 Ruby Red, Sapphire Blue, and Onyx Black versions that were sold at launch — in end-March.

Xiaomi’s premium-looking Redmi Note 7 in Moonlight White

Color is the only differentiator; the specs are the same. The Moonlight White unit is still powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 660 chip.

SEE ALSO: Redmi 7A priced starting at P4,790 ($94) in the Philippines

And yes, it still features a 6.3-inch screen with a dewdrop-style notch; Corning Gorilla Glass 5 protection; 48-megapixel primary and 5-megapixel depth sensors; a 13-megapixel front camera; a fingerprint sensor; a 4,000mAh battery that supports quick charging over USB Type-C; and Android 9.0 Pie-based MIUI 10.

READ ALSO: Redmi 7 is PH’s most affordable Snapdragon 632 phone

Will the Moonlight White shade of the P7,990 ($157) 3GB/32GB and P11,490 ($226) 4GB/128GB Redmi Note 7 be brought here as well? If yes, when? We’ll let you know as soon as we get an update from Xiaomi.

Redmi Note 7 specs

  • 6.3-inch LCD display, 2,340 x 1,080 resolution (19.5:9)
  • Octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 660 processor
  • 3GB/4GB RAM
  • 32GB/64GB/128GB expandable storage
  • Dual 48MP and 5MP rear cameras
  • 13MP front camera
  • Fingerprint reader (rear-mounted)
  • 4,000mAh battery with fast charging via Type-C
  • MIUI 10 based on Android 9.0 Pie

Share this Post


Learn About This Author

Alora Uy Guerrero

Facebook Twitter

Editor-in-chief: Alora Uy Guerrero is a 24-year media veteran who has survived the newsrooms of giants like Yahoo and a high-stakes detour into OPPO's digital marketing. She eventually returned to her journalism roots to helm REVU. A strict advocate for quality over quantity, Alora lives by a family-first philosophy — mostly because her babies are the only bosses she can't negotiate with. When she isn't chasing kids or deadlines, she's probably traveling, shooting, or passionately over-analyzing her favorite bands, films, and basketball teams.