AQHH 10.1 inch Android Tablet Computer, Android 13 Review

The AQHH tablet costs just $80, but you get what you pay for. It's a basic screen for videos, held back by slow performance and so-so battery life.

CPU 2000
Storage 128 GB
Screen 10.1"
OS Android 13
Stylus No
Cellular No
AQHH 10.1 inch Android Tablet Computer, Android 13 tablet
34.8 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

It's an $80 tablet, so manage your expectations. The screen is fine for videos, but performance is slow and battery life is inconsistent. Only buy this if you need the absolute cheapest large screen for very basic tasks and nothing more.

Overview

This AQHH 10.1-inch tablet is a classic budget Android device. It's got a big screen, expandable storage, and the latest Android 13 OS, all for about $80. For that price, you're getting a basic media viewer and web browser that's fine for very light tasks, but don't expect it to keep up with anything demanding.

Our database scores it highest for entertainment and reading, which tracks. The 1280x800 IPS screen is decent for videos, and the 6800mAh battery should get you through a day. But its performance scores land in the bottom half of all tablets we track, especially for productivity. This is a device with very clear limits.

Performance

Performance is exactly what you'd expect for eighty bucks. The unspecified quad-core processor and 8GB of RAM (which is likely 4GB of physical RAM plus 4GB of virtual swap) handle basic app switching and video streaming okay. But our percentile rankings show its CPU and GPU performance are below average, sitting in the 44th and 46th percentiles respectively. That means any kind of gaming beyond simple puzzles, or trying to run multiple apps at once, will feel sluggish. The WiFi 6 connectivity is a nice modern touch, though.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 40.8
GPU 42.5
RAM 34.9
Screen 40.5
Battery 49.1
Feature 28.1
Storage 50.9
Connectivity 80.2
Social Proof 67.1

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The $80 price tag is seriously cheap for a 10-inch tablet. 80th
  • The screen is bright and fine for watching videos. 67th
  • You get Android 13 and WiFi 6, which are surprisingly modern for this price.
  • Expandable storage up to 512GB is a huge plus for media hoarders.

Cons

  • Performance is slow and can't handle multitasking or games. 28th
  • Battery life complaints are common among real owners. 35th
  • The 1280x800 resolution is low for a 10-inch screen in 2024.
  • Build quality and long-term reliability are big question marks.

The Word on the Street

4.1/5 (121 reviews)
👍 Many buyers are pleasantly surprised by the value, calling it a solid choice for casual video watching and web browsing.
👎 A common complaint is that the battery life doesn't live up to the advertised claims, draining faster than expected during use.
🤔 Several users note it works well for light tasks like social media, but clearly struggles with anything demanding like gaming or video editing.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU 2000
GPU Intel (model not specified)

Memory & Storage

Storage 128 GB

Display

Size 10.1"
Panel IPS

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6

Physical

Weight 0.8 kg / 1.8 lbs
OS Android 13

Value & Pricing

At $80, the value proposition is simple: you're paying for a screen and not much else. If your needs are literally just watching YouTube in bed, reading e-books, or handing a device to a kid for cartoons, it's hard to argue with the price. But you are making serious compromises on speed, battery consistency, and screen sharpness. For about $50-$100 more, you could find refurbished brand-name tablets that will perform much better and last longer.

$80

vs Competition

Stacked against the giants like the iPad or Galaxy Tab, there's no contest—those are in a different league. The real competition is in the budget segment. Compared to an Amazon Fire tablet, this AQHH runs full Android 13 without Amazon's walled garden, which is a plus. But Fire tablets often have better software optimization and more reliable performance for similar money. Compared to older refurbished iPads, you lose the app ecosystem and smooth performance, but you gain a bigger screen and newer OS. It's a trade-off between platform and raw hardware value.

Spec AQHH 10.1 inch Android Tablet Computer, Android 13 Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung 12.4" Galaxy Tab S10+ 256GB Multi-Touch Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft - Surface Pro - Copilot+ PC - 13” OLED Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus Xiaomi Xiaomi Redmi Pad 2 Only WiFi (No Calls or Text)
CPU 2E+3 Apple M5 MediaTek 9300 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 2.2 GHz mediatek_helio
RAM (GB) - 12 12 32 16 -
Storage (GB) 128 512 256 1000 256 256
Screen 10.1" 11" 2420x1668 12.4" 2800x1752 13" 2880x1920 12.7" 2944x1840 11" 2560x1600
OS Android 13 iPadOS Android 14 Windows 11 Home Android 14 Android 15
Stylus false true true false false false
Cellular false false false false false false

Common Questions

Q: Is this tablet good for gaming?

Not really. Its GPU performance is below average, so it will only handle very simple games. Anything 3D or graphics-intensive will be a slideshow.

Q: How is the battery life in real use?

Our data shows battery performance is average, but real owner feedback suggests it often falls short of the '5+ day standby' claim with regular use, lasting a more typical single day.

Q: Can I use this for Zoom calls or work?

It has a front-facing camera, but the slow processor and low RAM make multitasking painful. Our productivity score for it is very low (21.5/100), so we don't recommend it for work.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you need a tablet for anything productive. Students, remote workers, or anyone who needs to run more than one app at a time should look elsewhere. The performance just isn't there. Also, skip it if you're a gamer or want a sharp screen for reading comics—the low resolution and weak GPU won't cut it.

Verdict

Buy this if you need the absolute cheapest possible 10-inch screen for passive media consumption and you're okay with sluggish performance. It's a candidate for a kid's first tablet, a dedicated recipe screen in the kitchen, or a video player for road trips where you're afraid it might get broken. For anyone else, especially if you plan to actually use it for work, browsing with many tabs, or any kind of gaming, you should save up a little more.