OnePlus exits Europe, North America as the 'flagship killer' fights for relevance

OnePlus is withdrawing from Europe and North America as part of a global strategy adjustment. This move follows reports of parent company Oppo restructuring its smartphone business operations. India remains a key market for OnePlus, with local ope...

For much of the last decade, OnePlus occupied a unique place in the global smartphone industry.

It never matched Samsung's scale or Apple's ecosystem. Yet for a generation of Android users, it became the default recommendation for anyone looking for flagship performance without paying flagship prices.

That journey has now entered a new chapter.


On Thursday, OnePlus announced that it will stop launching new products in Europe and North America as part of what it described as a "proactive global strategy adjustment." The announcement comes hours after Bloomberg reported that parent company Oppo was restructuring its smartphone business and planning to wind down OnePlus operations across several international markets.

Also Read: OnePlus, once popular with tech fans, to pull out of US and Europe

While the company has now confirmed its withdrawal from Europe and North America, it has not announced any such plans for India. Responding to ET's queries earlier, OnePlus India said: "OnePlus India continues to operate its business as usual, with all local operations on track. We urge the media to exercise restraint before amplifying unverified speculation."
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The confirmation ends weeks of speculation around OnePlus' international strategy, although questions remain about what it ultimately means for other key markets such as India. The move has once again put the spotlight on a company that, despite never becoming one of the world's largest smartphone brands, played an outsized role in shaping the premium Android market.

The "flagship killer" era

Founded in 2013 by Pete Lau and Carl Pei, OnePlus entered a premium smartphone market largely dominated by Apple and Samsung.

Its strategy was relatively simple. Offer flagship specifications at significantly lower prices, pair them with a clean Android experience and build a community instead of relying on expensive advertising.
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The original OnePlus One launched in 2014 with Cyanogen OS before the company later introduced OxygenOS, which became one of its biggest differentiators. The invite-only sales model generated considerable buzz, while subsequent launches such as the OnePlus 3, 5 and 6 established the company's reputation as the original "flagship killer."

The strategy translated into rapid growth.
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According to Counterpoint Research, OnePlus' global smartphone shipments grew 270% year-on-year in 2018, making it one of the fastest-growing premium smartphone brands globally. That year, it entered the world's top five premium smartphone brands despite accounting for only around 2% of the global premium smartphone segment — an indication that its influence extended well beyond its shipment volumes.

Europe helped establish the brand's credibility, but India became its biggest success story.

India became the growth engine

OnePlus entered India in late 2014 through an exclusive partnership with Amazon, at a time when the country's premium smartphone market was still relatively small.

The company found an opportunity between expensive flagship devices from Apple and Samsung and the rapidly growing budget Android segment. The strategy worked.

According to Counterpoint Research, OnePlus became India's largest premium smartphone brand in the second quarter of 2018, capturing 40% of the premium smartphone segment. It retained the lead through the year, ending the fourth quarter with 36% market share.

Its strongest year came in 2019.

Counterpoint estimated that OnePlus became the first premium smartphone brand to ship more than 2 million smartphones in India in a calendar year. At the time, India contributed nearly one-third of the company's global revenue, highlighting just how central the country had become to OnePlus' business.

"OnePlus entered India in 2014 as a premium Android challenger with its 'flagship killer' positioning, offering strong hardware at prices below Apple and Samsung," Prachir Singh, Senior Research Analyst at Counterpoint Research, told ET Online.

"India soon became its largest overseas market, with the brand maintaining a 3%-5% shipment share and peaking at 7% in 2023, driven by a strong portfolio including the OnePlus 11 series, Nord and Nord CE series. Its success came from addressing both affordable premium and flagship segments."

The company's true impact extended far beyond shipping boxes. Before OnePlus, the market for ₹35,000–50,000 Android smartphones was incredibly restricted. By delivering premium-tier performance at significantly lower costs, OnePlus proved there was a massive consumer base willing to pay for premium Android devices if they perceived genuine value.

In many ways, OnePlus helped expand India's premium Android smartphone market. Not just for itself, but for the industry.

The company began to change

By 2020, OnePlus had reached a critical inflection point. Co-founder Carl Pei departed the enthusiast startup he helped build into a household name, launching Nothing shortly after. The strategy behind his new venture felt intimately familiar to long-time tech fans, with focus on clean software, distinctive design and community-led marketing rather than simply competing on specifications.

Once again, India became central to the story.

Pei has repeatedly described India as Nothing's largest smartphone market. Counterpoint Research said Nothing's smartphone shipments in India grew 510% year-on-year in the third quarter of 2024, helping it enter the country's top 10 smartphone brands for the first time. The momentum continued into 2025, with the company reporting 146% year-on-year shipment growth in the second quarter, marking its sixth consecutive quarter as India's fastest-growing smartphone brand.

Meanwhile, OnePlus was moving in the exact opposite direction. Seeking massive scale over niche enthusiast appeal, the brand launched the mid-range Nord series to drive volume beyond flagship devices. In June 2021, OnePlus also announced deeper integration with Oppo, including combining research and development teams.

ChatGPT Image Jul 16, 2026 at 06_42_06 PM
Over time, OxygenOS became increasingly aligned with Oppo's ColorOS, while hardware designs across Oppo, Realme and OnePlus grew more similar.

The latest announcement further underscores that integration. In its latest community post, OnePlus said eligible OnePlus devices globally will have the option to migrate to Oppo's ColorOS 17 as part of an effort to streamline software development and better utilise shared engineering resources.

The numbers reflected the shift

These strategic corporate changes were soon accompanied by a gradual decline in market share. According to TechInsights, OnePlus' global smartphone market share has fallen for three consecutive years, with cooling trends starkly visible across both the Asia Pacific region and India.

According to TechInsights, OnePlus' global smartphone market share has fallen for three consecutive years—from 1.5% in 2023 to 1.1% in 2024, with the research firm estimating it declined further to 0.9% in 2025 and forecasting another dip to 0.8% in 2026.

Singh said the slowdown wasn't driven by a single factor.

"Since 2024, OnePlus has lost momentum due to a combination of factors. The display green-line issue generated negative publicity, while retailer concerns over channel policies weighed on channel sentiment. At the same time, intensifying competition from Apple, Samsung and other Android OEMs further pressured the brand," he said.

The Nord series helped increase shipments but moved the brand beyond the premium positioning that had once placed it alongside Apple and Samsung. The deeper integration with Oppo further blurred the distinction between the two brands.

A tougher smartphone market

The broader smartphone market was evolving rapidly alongside OnePlus' internal shifts.

Apple expanded manufacturing in India and made iPhones more accessible through financing programmes and trade-in offers. Samsung strengthened its Galaxy S and FE portfolios. Google expanded the Pixel business, while Vivo and iQOO established themselves as serious competitors in the premium Android segment.

Compounding this pressure were challenging macroeconomic realities. Rising memory prices and escalating component costs made it increasingly difficult for smartphone makers to sustain aggressively priced devices, particularly in the competitive mid-range segment where OnePlus' Nord lineup fights for margin.

The broader numbers reflect those pressures.

According to TechInsights, Oppo and OnePlus together shipped 24.5 million smartphones globally in the second quarter of 2025, down 2% year-on-year. Separate IDC data showed OnePlus' market share by volume in India declined from 4% in Q2 2024 to 2% in Q2 2025, even as rivals such as iQOO gained ground.

Meanwhile, Counterpoint Research estimates Apple's value share of India's smartphone market reached a record high in 2025 as consumers continued moving towards premium devices.

Ironically, the premium market that OnePlus helped expand increasingly benefited its competitors.

Why India remains the ultimate battleground

Yet the picture is not entirely one of decline.

Despite the restructuring, TechInsights says OnePlus has been more aggressive in India over the past few quarters. India accounted for roughly 42% of the brand's global smartphone shipments in the third quarter of 2025, making it by far OnePlus' most important market.

The company has also expanded its offline retail presence after years of being largely an online-first brand, strengthened relationships with retailers and increased marketing around recent launches such as the OnePlus 13s, OnePlus 15 and OnePlus 15R.

"Overall, this does not appear to be the strategy of a brand planning exit," TechInsights said in its January 2026 analysis.

Singh said the reported restructuring could represent a strategic reset rather than an immediate withdrawal.
"While streamlining operations may improve efficiency, any reduction in its offline presence could make it more challenging for the brand to compete in the premium segment, where offline retail remains a key purchase channel," he added.

More than an exit story

OnePlus' withdrawal from Europe and North America marks the biggest strategic shift in the company's history. Whether India eventually follows remains an open question.

OnePlus never needed to become the world's biggest smartphone manufacturer to leave a legacy; its true influence came from entirely shifting consumer expectations around premium Android hardware.

It proved that flagship-level devices could pair top-tier performance with clean software and a reasonable price tag.

Over time, however, those hard-fought differentiators became baseline industry standards.

Today, Apple, Samsung, Google, Vivo, iQOO, and Nothing all compete for the exact same premium buyers, armed with extensive software support, rapid charging, advanced AI features, and sophisticated camera hardware.

The existential challenge for OnePlus isn't simply whether it leaves certain markets.

It is whether a brand that built its entire mythos on "Never Settle" and being radically different can rediscover its distinct identity in a market where every competitor now promises the exact same thing.

That question, far more than anything, will dictate the final script of the next chapter in the OnePlus story.
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