The robot camera phone launch date is now official. Honor says its Robot Phone will get a global reveal at MWC Barcelona 2026, landing on March 1 in Barcelona.
That date comes from the company’s media invite, which places the announcement inside its “AI Device Ecosystem Era” showcase. Beyond the timing, Honor is keeping the rest locked down, including core specs, pricing, and which markets will get it first.
The moving camera is the hook
The defining feature is a pop-up AI camera assistant built into the rear camera setup. Instead of a fixed camera bump, the Robot Phone is designed around a camera that physically rises and moves. It’s a rare hardware swing in a moment when most phone cameras win through software.
Honor first teased the concept in October 2025, showing a pop-up camera attached to a gimbal-style module with a rotating motor. The takeaway is simple. This phone wants motion to be part of the camera system, not something you fake with cropping.
What Honor is promising
Honor is describing the system as an “AI brain” paired with the mobility of a robot, combining multi-modal intelligence with robotics and next-generation imaging. The company has also floated everyday uses, like suggesting shoes that match an outfit or answering questions about a dog’s breed based on what the camera sees around you.
But there are still basic questions that decide whether this is useful or just flashy. Honor hasn’t said how far the camera module can move, how fast it reacts, or what camera modes it unlocks in practice. It also hasn’t addressed the tradeoffs that come with moving parts, including durability and how the mechanism affects water resistance.
What a real demo must show
Between now and March 1, the most meaningful updates won’t be another AI label. A solid demo should show the camera tracking a subject while you walk, stabilizing video under motion, then snapping back into place reliably.
If you’re intrigued, treat the MWC reveal as checkpoint one, not the finish line. Right after the demo, watch for the missing anchors, price, launch regions, and a clear on-sale window. Those details will decide if it’s a curiosity or a phone you should actually wait for.






