How much is the Infinix Note 50?
Infinix Note 50 specs

Infinix Note 50 vs Infinix Note 60
Should you still buy the Infinix Note 50 in 2026?
Where to buy the Infinix Note 50
The Infinix Note 50 launched in March 2025 as one of the best value midrange phones you could buy. A year later, the Infinix Note 60 has arrived, and the Note 50’s price has fallen sharply, making it worth a second look.
This guide covers the current price of the Infinix Note 50, its full specs, how it compares to the Note 60, and whether it still deserves your money in 2026.
The Infinix Note 50 launched in Nigeria at ₦311,500, though some retailers listed it at ₦319,500. Globally, it sold for about $229. The base model never officially launched in India, where Infinix instead sold the Note 50s, Note 50X, and Note 50 Pro+.
Prices have fallen a long way since then. Here is what the phone costs as of July 2026:
If you searched for the Note 50 and landed on a different price, you probably saw one of its siblings. Here is how the whole family compares right now:
These are the full specifications of the base Infinix Note 50 (model X6858). The Pro, Pro+, 50s, and 50X are different phones with different specs, so keep that in mind when you compare listings.
One thing to watch out for: the heart rate and blood oxygen sensors that Infinix markets as Bio-Active Halo are found on the Pro models. The base Note 50 skips them.
The Infinix Note 60 launched in March 2026 as the direct successor to the Note 50. This table compares the two base models side by side:
The Note 60 upgrades almost every core spec. The battery jumps from 5,200mAh to 6,500mAh, the screen gets sharper and far brighter, the chipset moves to a newer 4nm Dimensity 7400 Ultimate, and the phone finally adds 5G. You also get Gorilla Glass 7i, MIL-STD-810H durability, and a longer software promise of 3 major upgrades and 5 years of patches.
Two things are worth flagging. First, the Note 60 swaps the Note 50’s 2MP macro camera for a far more useful 8MP ultrawide, so the camera setup changes rather than simply improves in count. Second, satellite calling is a Note 60 Ultra feature. Spec sheets for the base Note 60 omit it, so skip any listing that promises satellite connectivity on the standard model.
Buy the Note 50 if you find it at a steep discount, meaning roughly ₦50,000 or more below the Note 60 base in Nigeria, and you can live with 4G. At that price, you still get an AMOLED 144Hz screen, an OIS main camera, wireless charging, and an aluminum build that most budget phones cannot match.
Skip it if the price gap is small. Once the Note 60 base sits within about ₦40,000 of the Note 50, the newer phone wins comfortably. It gives you an extra Android upgrade (Android 19 vs Android 17), two more years of security patches, a much bigger battery, a brighter screen, and 5G.
A few caveats from long-term owners are worth knowing before you buy. User reports include software bugs after updates, overheating during long gaming sessions, lens glare on the main camera, and low-quality photos in low light. These come from user forums rather than lab testing, but the pattern is consistent enough to factor into your decision.
In Nigeria, you can still find the Note 50 on Jumia, Konga, Slot, Pointek, XPark, and Jiji. Be careful with stock sold as brand new without the carton, and test the phone before you pay. In Kenya, the phone remains in stock at Jumia and local phone stores. Stock is winding down everywhere, so if you want one new and sealed, sooner beats later.


