






📱 Tiny phone, huge lifestyle upgrade — don’t miss out on the compact revolution!
The Unihertz Jelly Pro is the world’s smallest 4G unlocked smartphone, featuring a compact 92.4 x 43 x 13 mm form factor and weighing only 60.4g. It runs full Android 8.1 Oreo on a quad-core 1.1GHz processor, supports dual Nano SIMs, and offers 3GB RAM with 32GB storage. Equipped with an 8MP autofocus camera capable of 1080p video, 4G connectivity, GPS, and a 3.5mm audio jack, it’s designed for professionals seeking ultra-portability without sacrificing essential smartphone functionality.










| ASIN | B07TS37SR1 |
| Audio jack | 3.5 mm |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
| Battery power rating | 950 Milliamp Hours |
| Best Sellers Rank | 68,242 in Electronics & Photo ( See Top 100 in Electronics & Photo ) 2,504 in SIM-Free & Unlocked Mobile Phones |
| Colour | Black |
| Connectivity technologies | Bluetooth, USB, Wi-Fi |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars (1,488) |
| Date First Available | 2 Aug. 2019 |
| Form Factor | Bar |
| GPS | True |
| Human interface input | Touchscreen |
| Item Weight | 60.4 g |
| Item model number | Jelly Pro |
| OS | Android 8.1 |
| Other camera features | Front, Rear |
| Other display features | CE |
| Phone Talk Time | 6 Hours |
| Product Dimensions | 9.24 x 4.3 x 1.3 cm; 60.4 g |
| RAM | 3 GB |
| Scanner Resolution | 240 x 432 Pixel |
| Special features | Camera, GPS, Mp3, Wifi, usb |
| What’s in the box | [Screen Protector, Armband, Clips] |
| Wireless communication technologies | Cellular, Wi-Fi |
M**N
Great little phone
Firstly, as it comes up in almost every other review, the battery life; has to be charged everyday, maybe you can could get two days out of it in low activity, but I'm sure that's the norm these days with most phones and it's really not much of an inconvenience. It's a great little phone, easy to use and does everything I need it to do, ideal for running, light and durable (have dropped it a couple of times), decent camera, earphones nice and loud, thought the tiny touch screen would be tricky to type but it's actually okay. Would highly recommend, phones are getting way too big these days. :)
S**J
LOVE it
Cutest phone ever, and 100% functional! I got it because I travel all the time and wanted to have my home country SIM in a separate phone (that wouldn’t take up space). Jelly is the perfect solution. My boyfriend got his to take with him on nights out, which is also pretty clever! The touch screen is amazingly good, superb precise functionality. (If you have big fingers you can always use one a screen pen). The only thing is the battery life isn’t the best and I charge it every other day. But with that being the only issue I’m not complaining too much!
H**S
Fantastic phone if you aren’t a social media addict!!!
I’ve been using this phone for 2 weeks, and I’m extremely happy with it. I use social media occasionally and I had no problems whatsoever, just type a bit slower and use dictation from time time. Battery life is just fare but it charges very quickly. All apps work flawlessly. Overall build quality is very good, touch screen is sensitive, screen is bright and colours are very good. Main Camera is good with AF, nice! Selfie camera is just ok. In the end, it was exactly what I was looking for; small size, microSD up to 256 GB, 2 sim cards, removable battery what more could you ask!!
J**.
Great phone with 2 issues
Great phone with 2 issues: SIM cards were not recognized (had to insert a piece of paper under battery) and very short battery life.
C**R
Neat (Android Oreo) Mini Phone
Jelly Pro is great to use jogging, at the gym, walking or as a backup phone. It's a fully functioning Android Oreo phone with all play store apps. It also has pedometer and easy access FM radio and MP3 player. Battery is like any other phone but it's smaller so won't last as long. You might have to charge it twice a day with heavy use but if your just using as a back up it's fine Jelly Pro responds well, downloads fast and has 4G. Screen is small but big enough to handle most tasks. Nice design, easy to use, compact, headphone socket, FM and internet radio access, mp3 player, play store, phone calls, two cameras, good audio sound. Love It!
B**R
Battery life, battery and oh yea, battery
Loved the size of this phone, loved the feature set for such a small size. I went out one evening, fully charged, did not use or look at it once, when it came to ordering my taxi home - no power, completely dead. I have since returned the item for a refund as it was not fit for purpose...
T**M
Ideal for people who make calls rather than use smartphone apps
This was to replace an ancient nokia phone whose standby time had dropped to a few hours. On top of the phone capabilities, I'm also using openvpn and a SIP client so I can answer/use my 'landline' over wifi. When I used CSipSimple, the battery life was good, easily 24hrs, with 5-10 minutes of calls in a day. Unfortunately, CSipSimple caused a bad echo for the other end so I've now switched to Linphone. With Linphone, the battery life doesn't appear to be so good, My estimate is that I'll only get around 10hrs of standby. The differing opinions on battery life are probably down to the different apps people are using and whether those apps are left running when the phone is on standby. I am not using the 3G/4G features, this is primarily being used as a voice phone. The screen is tiny; passwords have to be entered with care but it is useable as a touch screen.
S**.
Can't connect to mobile data.
Plenty of nice things to say about this phone, firstly the size which is perfect (I hate large phones) and the screen is very clear and responsive to touch. The battery life is ok most of the time but sometimes it would just drain out rapidly and I'd be needing a recharge after only about 10 hours of barely even using it. Not sure why this would happen - I only had the phone for about 3 weeks and barely ran any apps at all on it. Also, on two occasions whilst I was on the phone for about 10 minutes, it became so hot that I had to cut the conversation off because I was concerned that it might explode! Although you can take photos with it, they are very poor and you can forget texting a photograph to anyone as the maximum size of a text message is only 300kb. And while I could have lived with some of these failings, the main reason for returning it is because it simply would not access mobile data - at all! Wi-Fi connection is fine but the mobile data function simply doesn't work. It's weird because the phone does seem to think that it has access to the 4G network but no matter how hard you try, once you open a browser it simply fails to access the internet at all. I tried different sim cards, looked at the troubleshooting forums online, showed it to my super-geeky-gadget-savvy friend, nothing worked - the phone was never able to connect online and that's basically a huge deal-breaker as far as I'm concerned. Sorry Unihertz, maybe I'll try again in another 5 years once these issues are resolved.
N**A
I have had this phone for about 24 hours now and I don't see myself ever going back to my full sized smartphone. This can do literally everything a full sized smartphone can. But, you may not always want to, and that's kind of the point. This phone has allowed me to keep all the things I sort of "need" in my life. Ride sharing apps, google maps, mobile hotspot, email, etc. And those apps are really pretty easy to use even in this small form factor. You won't be composing big responses in your emails, or doing a ton of browsing through social media, and for some of us, that's a positive thing. But, don't be fooled. The phone is completely capable of tackling all the tasks that have kept you tied to your smartphone in the first place. Here are the pros, cons, and some tips. Pros: * First thing I noticed right away is that this cures distracted driving 100%. You won't be tempted to try to use it while driving, because it's kind of impossible. * I love the way it fits in my pocket. Yes, it DOES fit in the coin pocket perfectly! It's barely bigger than a key fob. No more white rectangle wear lines in my jeans. *It's nicely weighted. * The phone processor/ram is fast enough and it has plenty of storage for anything that you should really be wanting to do with it. * The flashlight is bright, and the cameras aren't terrible. *Full Android, play store and all. *FM radio is actually a really great app that even lets you record songs from over the airwaves to save for later. And uses NO data. *The home button is an LED that can pulse different colors to let you know about missed calls or texts. *Expandable storage and removable battery. *Headphone jack. *Built in speaker that isn't awful. Cons: *Screen resolution is low. It would be nice to have just a little more PPI to avoid the blurry or jagged letters on the tiny screen. *Battery life is not quite a full day under moderate usage. This one could also be considered a pro as part of the whole digital detox strategy. You will find yourself wanting to save the phones battery for more important tasks. *Typing is more difficult than you will be used to. I am finding ways around it, voice input, gesture keyboards, but it's still more difficult than it was on my larger phone. *The edges of the touch screen can be inaccurate. Tips: *Install a keyboard like Gboard, or Swiftkey and use gesture input. It helps a ton to swirl around to find your word rather than pinpointing the letter. I also found that Gboard worked great in landscape. This is one of the few phones that you can actually type one handed in landscape. Swiftkey did some strange things in landscape with this. *Install a launcher like nova launcher that gives you gestures from the home screen. I use the gestures in Nova to launch several apps and it saves me from having to press them. I can launch them without looking. *Go into settings, about phone, build number, and click build number repeatedly until it brings up developer options. Inside developer options enable "show visual touches". This will help to know where it's registering your touches when you are on the edge of the screen and having difficulty. *Go to settings, accessibility, and enable magnification. This comes in handy. A triple tap anywhere will magnify the screen and let you more easily tap links or other buttons. I highly recommend this phone. It's something you won't understand until you give it a try!
独**嫁
一番高いですが、UniHertzさんより購入。 メモリー3G、ストレージ32GB、OSはオレオ、CPUは1.44GHzでした。 もっさり、ちいさいだけ、電池もたないという話しをきいていたので、まあメイン端末でスカイプとかやって、出先で通話着信できればいいや程度しか期待してませんでしたが、そこそこいい動きをしてくれています。 色々設定を変える事で、楽天SIMも使えます。 残された問題点は、画面が小さすぎてタッチの反応が悪い事ぐらいでしょうか。 この大きさを考えれば、それも当然。些末な事です。 チッチャイコフスキーのお友達はぜったいにゲットすべし。
A**D
Parece que algunos fabricantes se han acordado de los que queremos un teléfono para eso; para teléfono, de cualquier manera es un teléfono con las prestaciones y a la altura de cualquier otro smarphone pero con la comodidad de su tamaño reducido que nos permite llevarlo en cualquier bolsillo sin tener que soportar todo el día el peso y dimensiones de los teléfonos comunes con dimensiones parecidas a las Tablet, es un teléfono para alguna consulta puntual a internet, algún whapsat y sobre todo hacer llamadas o recibirlas ya que sus reducidas dimensiones no son las mas adecuadas en cuanto a agilidad para escribir o leer textos, teniendo en cuanta que sus dimensiones nos permiten llevarlo en cualquier bolsillo por pequeño que este sea este será su principal atractivo para los que nos negamos a llevar un portátil encima, por lo demás es un teléfono muy bonito y muy bien acabado con todas las funciones operativas del android 7.0 y como punto negativo quizás precisamente por sus dimensiones reducidas la autonomía de la batería es también limitada teniéndolo que cargar según uso cada dos días o todos los días.
R**R
電池が持たないとか、解像度が今一つとか、絶対的にはいろいろ足りないところはありますが、ネットも見れていろんなアプリ入れられ、実用になるスマホで、とにかく小さいという点で、比類がありません。加えて安い。 ・小さい画面ですが、意外と文字入力はうまくできます。 ・IP電話等は問題ないです。 ・ポケモンゴーは、歩数計替わりならなんとかなりますが、手の動きにボールがついてこないところがあり、捕まえるのはこつがいります。田舎ならなんとか使えるかものレベルです。 ・アップデートについて不具合が報告されていますが、2018/10にアンドロイドを8にバージョンアップしましたが、問題なく完了しました。
D**O
I bought this phone in December 2017, having moved up from the Posh Micro X. I had planned to write a review comparing the two phones (e.g., size, weight, features, battery life, and so on). Since the Posh Micro does not appear to be available any more, there's no use in writing that review. In summary, though, the Unihertz Jelly is the superior phone -- although I did like the slightly smaller size of the Posh Micro -- but it failed in one feature: the GPS. Other reviewers have noted the erratic nature of the GPS and for me it was virtually useless. When I used it to navigate, it suddenly had me off the interstate and driving through neighborhoods several blocks away. This phone would be a great tool to use when running, especially when wearing it with the optional armband, but without a functioning GPS, I couldn't reliably track my run. A five mile loop around Stone Mountain turned into 6.95 mile straight line, though the GPS did generously shave a couple minutes off my pace! So, I contacted Unihertz support. They informed me that they had made improvements in the GPS and, since my phone was still under warranty, offered to exchange it if I would ship my phone to China. I was reluctant to do so since, first, I relied on my phone every day and, second, shipping to China by a trackable means isn't cheap. Still, I backed up my data, reset the phone to the factory setting, and shipped it. Meanwhile, I resurrected my old Posh Micro, which loosely fit in the Unihertz armband. It told me that a 3.1 mile (5 kilometer) run through the woods was 3.09 miles. Wow! Subsequent runs were similarly accurate. I kept my fingers crossed for the replacement Jelly. When it finally arrived, I eagerly took it for a run. It measured that same 3.1 mile course through the woods as 3.15 miles. The GPS told me the five miles around Stone Mountain is a loop of 5.15 miles. In addition, it reports changes in elevation, which the previous Jelly did not. It's still not 100% accurate, since a couple times it has dumped me off the interstate when I'm driving, and it straightened out a curvy stretch of trail when running. But, my daughter's expensive Garmin watch sometimes misreports her runs, so that might be the nature of GPS. So, Unihertz has indeed addressed the GPS issue. I'm happy with the phone, which I can comfortably store in my pocket. I can run with it, listening to podcasts and reasonably accurately tracking my route and pace. Since Georgia passed a hands free driving law, I can use Bluetooth earbuds or connect to my car stereo and use Android Auto to navigate in traffic, send and receive phone calls and texts, and listen to music and podcasts. But it has to stay plugged in because Android Auto will flatten the battery pretty quickly! UPDATES: A question was asked below about Android Auto. For unknown reasons, Amazon won't let me reply. But here's my answer: It's odd that this is mentioned in the specs and I wonder if it might have applied to the phone when it was initially available. I use Android Auto regularly. Generally, it works fine, with occasional quirks (e.g., it won't initiate text messages, it reads then deletes messages I've received). I don't know if this is the app or the phone, but restarting the app usually cures it. It does consume a lot of power, especially Google Maps, so I keep the phone plugged in when running it. Now, for the GPS. Last week, it was pouring rain. My wife was driving with her Motorola phone running Waze. I was in the passenger seat with the Unihertz Jelly running Google Maps. I watched while my phone repeatedly lost contact with the GPS. A few seconds later and it reconnected, only to drop again. I attributed that to the cloud cover, but my wife's Motorola never lost contact. The next week, while driving on the interstate in clear weather, the GPS kept moving me onto side streets while Google Maps told me to make a u-turn. However, my phone has been dead on during my runs, except for running in the rain, when it got lost in the woods. The bottom line is that the GPS is much, much better, but it's not perfect. That may be a lot to ask for such a small phone. Still, I'm generally quite pleased.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
3 weeks ago