Infinix Note 60 Leaks: Price, Specs & Launch Details

Infinix Note 60

The Infinix Note series has always been that “big screen + big battery” option people recommend when you don’t want to spend crazy money. And honestly, it usually delivers. That’s why the Infinix Note 60 leaks are getting attention already, even though the phone isn’t official yet. I’ve been watching Infinix for a while, and their Note lineup tends to improve in small but meaningful ways—better screens, slightly faster chips, nicer charging speeds. Nothing too dramatic, but enough to matter. So the real question is: will the Note 60 be another safe upgrade, or an actual standout? Let’s talk about what leaks and certification chatter are suggesting.

Quick heads-up about leaks (so we stay realistic)

Before we get carried away: none of this is confirmed by Infinix. These are leak-based expectations and patterns based on how brands usually launch. Some details may change. Sometimes a lot changes. Personally, I think it’s smarter to treat this as a “most likely” picture, not a guaranteed spec sheet.

Also, I’m sticking to realistic info only. No magical 200MP camera claims. No 12,000mAh battery rumors. You know the type.


Infinix Note 60

Infinix Note 60 expected launch date

Infinix hasn’t announced anything official yet. No teaser posters, no “coming soon,” nothing.

But here’s the thing: when a device starts showing up in certification-related leaks (or the kind of pre-launch paper trail phones often leave), it usually means the phone is moving toward release, not stuck in early development.

So when could it launch?

Based on Infinix’s typical timing and the way these launches usually roll out, the Infinix Note 60 is expected to launch globally in early 2026, most likely somewhere around February to March.

And what about Pakistan?

If Infinix follows the pattern they often follow, the Pakistan launch could happen a few weeks after the global announcement. Sometimes it’s quicker, sometimes it’s slower. A lot depends on stock and regional planning. But early 2026 is a fair expectation.

But will it really matter for most users?
If you’re buying a phone right now, yes. Waiting can be annoying. But if your current phone still works, early 2026 isn’t that far in phone-years.


Infinix Note 60

Infinix Note 60 expected price in Pakistan

This is the part most people actually care about. Because specs are cool, but price decides everything.

The Infinix Note line sits in that upper mid-range zone, and year by year, prices have slowly crept up. Not shocking—everything has gotten pricier, and upgrades aren’t free.

Expected base variant

Leaks suggest the base model may start at:

  • 8GB RAM
  • 256GB storage

And if that holds true, the expected price in Pakistan is around:

  • PKR 70,000 to PKR 75,000

That range makes sense for how the market has been moving, especially if Infinix actually gives an AMOLED screen and decent storage speed.

What about an 8GB + 128GB variant?

Some leaks suggest Infinix might not push a lower 128GB base model in this series anymore (or at least not as the main “headline” variant). That’s believable because 128GB in 2026 is going to feel tight for a lot of people—apps are huge, videos are huge, and WhatsApp backups alone can eat storage like it’s nothing.

Final pricing still depends on:

  • taxes and PTA-related costs
  • exchange rate changes
  • region-specific pricing decisions

So yes, the price could slide a bit either way.


If you’re curious about upcoming flagship phones, check out our detailed guide on iPhone 17e leaks, expected price, and features

Infinix Note 60 expected specifications (leak-based)

1) Display: likely the biggest upgrade

If there’s one area where the Note 60 could feel like a real jump, it’s the screen.

Expected display details include:

  • 6.78-inch large display
  • AMOLED panel (strong expectation)
  • 120Hz refresh rate
  • Full HD+ resolution

If this is true, it’s a nice upgrade for everyday use. Scrolling looks smoother. Videos look punchier. Blacks look deeper on AMOLED. And once you get used to an AMOLED panel, going back to a regular LCD can feel… a bit dull.

Personally, I think the AMOLED + 120Hz combo is what people will notice immediately. Not the processor. Not the camera marketing. The screen.


2) Performance and chipset: mid-range, but practical

Leaks point to a mid-range MediaTek chipset. Nothing suggests a flagship processor, and honestly, that’s fine. Infinix Note phones aren’t trying to be gaming monsters. They’re trying to be solid daily drivers with good value.

Expected performance setup:

  • Mid-range MediaTek SoC
  • 8GB physical RAM
  • Virtual RAM expansion support
  • 256GB internal storage (likely faster storage, possibly UFS)

What does this mean in real life?

You should get smooth day-to-day performance:

  • social media
  • messaging
  • browsing
  • YouTube
  • multitasking

For gaming, expect “good enough” for popular titles, maybe with medium-ish settings depending on the final chip. If you’re the kind of person who plays heavy games for hours on max settings… you probably already know you need a different category of phone.


3) Camera setup: decent, not flagship (and that’s okay)

The camera section is always where brands get a bit… creative. So I’m going to keep it grounded.

Expected camera configuration:

  • 50MP primary rear camera
  • extra depth/AI sensors (likely supporting sensors, not true “big” secondary cameras)
  • 13MP to 16MP selfie camera

Infinix usually leans on software processing too, so expect features like:

  • improved night mode
  • HDR tuning
  • portrait effects
  • some video stabilization improvements

Now here’s the truth: most people mainly use the main camera. The extra sensors often don’t matter much. They’re there. They help a little. But the main lens does the heavy lifting.

And yeah, AI camera features will probably be part of the marketing. It’ll say “AI this, AI that.” Honestly, a lot of it is just scene detection and tuning. But still—if it makes faces look a bit better or keeps highlights under control, users will appreciate it.

Let me say it again in a more normal way:
the camera will probably be good in daylight, okay indoors, and a bit hit-or-miss at night. That’s how most mid-range phones behave, unless they go all-in on camera hardware.

But will it really matter for most users?
If you mainly post on Instagram, TikTok, or WhatsApp, you’ll probably be fine.


4) Battery and charging: still a Note-series strength

This is where I expect Infinix to stay strong.

Expected battery details:

  • 5000mAh battery
  • 33W fast charging or faster
  • USB Type-C

A 5000mAh battery is kind of the “standard good” these days, but it’s still a big deal if the phone is optimized well. Most people should get a full day, and lighter users can push into a day and a half.

Charging is the real question. If it stays at 33W, it’s fine. If it goes higher, even better. Either way, it won’t feel painfully slow—especially compared to older budget phones that take forever.


5) Software and features: what to expect

The Note 60 is expected to ship with the latest Android version available at the time, with Infinix’s XOS UI on top.

Expected features include:

  • Updated Android + XOS
  • Fingerprint sensor (either in-display or side-mounted)
  • Face unlock
  • Dual SIM support
  • 4G connectivity, with 5G possibly varying by market

That 4G/5G part matters. In some regions, they’ll push a 5G variant. In others, they’ll keep it 4G to hit pricing targets. Pakistan pricing and availability might depend heavily on this.

Personally, I think a lot of users still won’t need 5G day-to-day. But “having it” can help with resale value and future-proofing.


Infinix Note 60 vs previous Note models: expected upgrades

If you’re coming from an older Note phone, here are the upgrades that would actually feel meaningful (assuming the leaks are accurate):

Higher base storage

Starting at 256GB is a big quality-of-life win. Less storage anxiety. Less deleting. More room for photos and apps.

Better display quality

If the phone truly gets an AMOLED 120Hz panel, that’s a “you notice it instantly” upgrade. Even regular users notice it.

More efficient performance

Even if the raw power isn’t crazy, newer mid-range chips tend to be more efficient and smoother over time.

Faster charging (maybe)

33W or higher keeps the phone practical. Plug it in, get meaningful battery quickly, move on.


Should you wait for the Infinix Note 60?

You should consider waiting if:

  • you want a big, smooth display
  • battery life is a major priority
  • you want 8GB + 256GB as a baseline
  • you’re not in a hurry and can hold off until early 2026

You probably shouldn’t wait if:

  • your current phone is already struggling (battery health, broken screen, lag)
  • you need a phone for work or school right now
  • you find a strong deal on an existing Note model or competitor

Because here’s the thing: waiting is only “smart” if it doesn’t mess up your life. A phone is a tool.


What I think Infinix needs to get right

Personally, I think three things decide whether the Note 60 is a hit:

  1. Real AMOLED quality (good brightness, not just “AMOLED on paper”)
  2. Stable software (smooth day-to-day, fewer bugs)
  3. Fair pricing in Pakistan (the difference between PKR 69,999 and PKR 79,999 changes the whole conversation)

If they nail those, people will recommend it automatically. If they mess up one of them, the comments section will be brutal. And yeah… that’s how it goes.


Final verdict (leak-based)

Based on current leak expectations, the Infinix Note 60 looks like it’s shaping up to be a balanced upper mid-range phone with a clear focus on:

  • a better, smoother display
  • plenty of storage
  • reliable battery life
  • practical everyday performance

The expected Infinix Note 60 price in Pakistan (PKR 70,000–75,000) and the rumored 8GB/256GB base variant are especially interesting if Infinix includes an AMOLED 120Hz panel.

Now we wait for official confirmation. And yes, I know—waiting is the annoying part.

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