
Huawei HarmonyOS 7 Brings Agentic AI to Challenge Android
Huawei announced HarmonyOS 7 at its annual developer conference on June 12, pushing deeper into agentic AI as the company tries to build a mobile ecosystem that can stand on its own without Google’s Android. The update, which ships to devices starting in July, brings a 15% performance improvement and a new “intelligent agent” framework that lets apps communicate with each other through natural language commands.
What’s actually new
The headline feature is something Huawei calls the “Agent Framework” — a system-level layer that lets third-party apps expose their functions to an AI assistant. In practice, this means a user could say “book a flight to Shanghai and add it to my calendar,” and the assistant would coordinate between a travel app and a calendar app without the user opening either one.
Huawei demonstrated the feature on stage with about a dozen Chinese app partners, including Meituan, Didi, and Alipay. The company said over 200 apps would support the framework at launch, with more expected by year-end.
Performance improvements come from a rewritten graphics pipeline and better memory management. Huawei claims apps launch 20% faster and battery life improves by 12% compared to HarmonyOS 6. The company also added spatial audio effects and improved its “Super Device” feature, which lets users seamlessly share tasks between phones, tablets, laptops, and smart home devices.
The Android question
HarmonyOS 7 continues Huawei’s effort to move completely away from Android. While earlier versions of HarmonyOS maintained some compatibility with Android apps, Huawei has been steadily replacing Android components with its own code since HarmonyOS 5 in 2024.
The company says HarmonyOS 7 is “fully self-developed,” though some developers have noted that the underlying architecture still shares conceptual similarities with Android’s approach to app sandboxing and permissions. Huawei disputes this characterization.
The real test is app availability. Huawei claims over 1.5 million registered developers and more than 500,000 native HarmonyOS apps. That’s a fraction of what’s available on Android or iOS, but it covers most of the apps Chinese consumers use daily — WeChat, Alipay, Taobao, Douyin, and Meituan all have native HarmonyOS versions.
Why it matters outside China
HarmonyOS remains primarily a China play. Huawei’s smartphone market share outside mainland China is negligible, and the lack of Google services — Gmail, Maps, YouTube — makes the platform a hard sell in Western markets.
But within China, HarmonyOS is gaining ground. Counterpoint Research data shows Huawei’s smartphone market share in China reached 18.3% in Q1 2026, up from 13.1% a year earlier. The Mate 70 series, which launched with HarmonyOS 6, has been a strong seller.
More importantly, Huawei is positioning HarmonyOS as an ecosystem play, not just a phone operating system. The company is pushing the platform into cars (through its partnership with Seres), smart home devices, and wearables. If it succeeds in creating a cohesive ecosystem, it could become the first credible Chinese alternative to Apple’s iOS ecosystem.
The AI arms race
The agentic AI features in HarmonyOS 7 reflect a broader trend across the Chinese tech industry. Baidu, Alibaba, and Xiaomi are all investing heavily in AI assistants that can perform multi-step tasks across apps. Apple has similar ambitions with Apple Intelligence, though its rollout has been slower in China due to regulatory requirements.
Huawei’s advantage is its control over both hardware and software. By building the AI framework directly into the operating system, it can offer deeper integration than Android competitors who depend on Google’s AI services — services that are blocked in China.
The company also announced a RMB 10 billion ($1.4 billion) fund to support developers building native HarmonyOS apps, with a focus on AI-powered applications. This brings Huawei’s total developer investment to RMB 25 billion since 2023.








