Best Sony Xperia Z5 Compact review: Good things come in compact packages -Androidme2018

[Androidme2018]- The Sony Xperia Z5 Compact is the latest in a series known for wrapping high-quality hardware inside a small package. But when it was unveiled last September, the reaction was lukewarm. Now that Sony has announced the Z5 Compact's official US release date (see the Release date and price section below) is it time to consider buying one? Find out in our Sony Xperia Z5 Compact review.
Sony Xperia Z5 review
Sony Xperia Z5 Premium review [hands on]

Jump directly to:
Release Date and Price
Design and Build Quality
Display
Special Features
Software
Performance
Audio
Camera
Battery
Technical Specifications
Final Verdict
Rating
Good
✓Compact design

✓Stereo speakers

✓Ergonomic fingerprint sensor

✓Removable bloatware

Bad
✕Average HD display

✕Expensive


Lowest price: Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
Best price $294.00 Check Offer
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact release date and price
The Sony Xperia Z5 Compact will see a US release on February 7. Sony announced the news over Facebook and confirmed that the device will be available unlocked, supporting GSM networks, for an asking price of US$499.99. You will be able to pick one up through Amazon, Best Buy and B&H.
In an as yet inexplicable move, Sony has decided to remove the fingerprint scanner from the Z5 Compact for its US release. The decision to remove one of the device's most notable features has been described by Sony as a "business decision", which is about as vague as explanations come.
We've reached out to Sony for further comment, and we will update this page if they provide more information on the move.

Sony Xperia Z5 Compact design and build quality
Sony’s Compact devices have a reputation for eschewing the 'Mini' or 'Lite' phone tradition of being a low-cost, lower quality version of their flagship cousins. Instead, Sony’s Compacts tend to cost about the same as the larger Xperia Z handsets and maintain many of the same high-quality components. The key difference is the size.
The Xperia Z5 Compact specs are similar to the Xperia Z5, but the same cannot be said of the design. While the Z5 comes in sleek, aluminum frame, the Z5 Compact arrives in a cheaper-feeling plastic shell with a frosted glass rear.
The plastic frame almost feels lower-quality than its predecessor, especially as it's no longer partially-transparent. On our test device, the front and rear glass plates are not equidistant from the frame – on the back of the phone, there's a gap between the glass and the frame on the left side and bottom, while it's flush at the top and right. Pay close attention to this if you are considering buying the Z5 Compact.

The new Xperia Z5 is housed in plastic. / © ANDROIDPIT
Despite the use of plastic, the Z5 Compact is marginally heavier than its predecessor, the Xperia Z3 Compact (139 g compared to 129 g), but otherwise the dimensions are roughly the same. The Z5 Compact measures 127 x 65 x 9 mm, the Z3 Compact is 127.3 x 64.9 x 8.64 mm.
Many of the Z5 Compact’s other design features echo the Z3 Compact, with only a few changes to the hardware features. The front camera and proximity sensor have switched sides and the speakers have now migrated to the top and bottom edge of the handset, but it’s still instantly recognizable as an Xperia Z device.

The volume rocker is placed a little lower on the Z5 Compact. / © ANDROIDPIT
On the right side is the Xperia Z5 Compact power button, which is now an oval shape and doubles up as fingerprint reader. This can be used to unlock the device, like on the Samsung Galaxy S6 and iPhone 6. The volume bar is now below the power button closer to the camera trigger on the side.
The volume rocker, is inconveniently placed, whether you are right or left-handed. Your thumb naturally wants to rest higher on the device, and moving the phone around in your hand just to adjust volume soon becomes annoying. The new position of the camera lens, on the far left of the back of the device, is also awkward. It's easy to accidently cover the camera sensor with a finger while taking a photo.

The Z5 Compact offers MicroSD card support. / © ANDROIDPIT
Like all device in the Xperia Z series, the Z5 Compact is dustproof and waterproof to IP65 / 68 certification. What’s more, it can be operated even when the screen is wet or underwater – something that was difficult with its predecessors.
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact display
The Xperia Z5 Compact has 4.6-inch screen diagonal, making it smaller than the majority of smartphones released by the major Android manufacturers this year. Its display has a mid-range, HD resolution (1,280 x 720) the same as the Xperia Z1 Compact and Xperia Z3 Compact.
This contains 320 pixels per inch, which is less than the bigger, Full HD Xperia Z5, but almost the same as the popular iPhone 6 (326 ppi). Sony's liquid crystal displays are usually associated with superb brightness, but this hasn't been (noticeably) improved upon since the previous generation. (Here is Sony’s statement on its display tech.)

The Xperia Z5 Compact has a slightly disappointing HD display. / © ANDROIDPIT
Sony’s local adaptive contrast display technology is effective, adapting to the ambient brightness of your environment to aid visual clarity. It's a superior solution to 'adaptive brightness', which is offered as standard on Android. Whether in bright sunlight or in deep shade, the screen responds to the environment and remains readable, even when we held the phone at a 30-degree angle.

Sony has ensured that the device is still usable when the display is wet. / © ANDROIDPIT
Overall Sony’s HD display is good. It’s sharp and the color saturation is balanced but I can’t help but wish it had been upgraded to Full-HD resolution. Full-HD media is readily available and it would have improved the appearance of (some) images and videos greatly. Given Sony’s apparent enthusiasm for high-definition displays (see the Xperia Z5 Premium), and the relatively high price of the Z5 Compact, this is a disappointment.
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact special features
The Xperia Z5 Compact has a fingerprint scanner that you can use to unlock the device, as well as make payments with Android Pay. Sony’s scanner, unlike many of its competitors’, is positioned on the side of the phone, which feels like a more natural place to access it: your thumb will often find its way there automatically.

The fingerprint reader Xperia Z5 Compact is combined with the power button. / © ANDROIDPIT
The Xperia Z5 Compact fingerprint scanner yielded good results in my tests. It's placed in a natural position, the 'wake' gesture works fast without needing the button to actually be pressed, and you can still hold the device securely when using it. The one downside to the fingerprint sensor is that, unlike the display, it will not work when your thumb is wet.
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact software
The Xperia Z5 Compact is running the same user-interface as the Xperia Z5. It ships with the latest version of Android Lollipop together with the Xperia UI and Sony’s usual bunch of pre-installed apps: Music, Videos, Xperia Lounge, etc, along with Facebook and 11 applications from Google. Sony also includes a radio antenna to support FM radio.
Although Sony is testing a UI that's closer to the stock Android experience, this has yet to manifest itself. Still this current version of Xperia remains close to stock Android, meaning Sony is in a position to provide relatively quick updates; particularly useful when security crises such as Stagefright occur.
Sony has plenty of preloaded apps on the Z5 Compact but most of them can be uninstalled or removed immediately. The most notable Sony apps are Socialife, Lifelog, Smart Connect and Xperia Lounge.

The Z5 Compact arrives running Android 5.1.1 Lollipop. / © ANDROIDPIT
The news app Socialife is well-designed and surpasses many competing apps in its successful implementation of Material Design. As a vertical list of news, its functionality is reminiscent of Google news and weather, but it’s also used to promote Sony products and services.
Lifelog is a fitness tracking app that's especially useful when combined with a smartband. It measures how much time you have spent doing sports, at work, driving a car or playing video games. If fitness is your thing, Sony’s app is as good as any.
Smart Connect allows you to make simple automations regarding connectivity. You can set it so that plugging in your headset, for example, will launch your favorite music-player app. It’s much like Tasker or IFTTT.

Many of the pre-installed can be quickly removed. / © ANDROIDPIT
The Xperia Lounge is Sony’s own marketplace for music or movies, similar to what Google Play and the Amazon Store offer. The most useful apps are Music, Video, PlayStation and Album (the media apps), the contents of which can be viewed and interacted with across other Sony devices.
Other Sony extensions hidden under the hood include ANT +, A-GPS, Bluetooth 4.1, NFC (with One Touch Setup), Micro-USB port (High Speed 2.0) with support for MHL 3.0 and 5-pin, screencasting, DLNA certification, Throw function (for external media playback ), HDCP, Cast screen, MirrorLink, screen mirroring, Native USB tethering, SmartConnect, and FM radio.​
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact performance
The Xperia Z5 Compact runs on a 64-bit Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 processor (MSM8994), with four cores running at 1.5 GHz and four at 2 GHz, with the Adreno 430 GPU. Additionally, the Z5 Compact houses 2 GB of RAM (1 GB less than on the Z5 and Z5 Premium) and 32 GB of internal storage, though it supports microSD cards up to 128 GB. Check out the benchmark results below.

In these tests the Xperia Z5 Compact outperforms the powerful Galaxy Note 4 phablet. / © ANDROIDPIT

The Xperia Z5 Compact geekbench scores. / © ANDROIDPIT

In the AnTuTu benchmark, the Z5 Compact reached 84 percent the Galaxy S6's score. / © ANDROIDPIT
It seems that Sony has learned some lessons from its recent history, and has done a great job of optimizing the OS so that the hardware doesn't overheat, despite the processor being the same as the one in the Xperia Z3+.
If we compare the Z5 Compact to our performance measurements created for our fastest Android smartphone article, the Z5 Compact lines up somewhere between the Z3+ and the OnePlus Two, both of which are equipped with the Snapdragon 810 processor. The 'fastest compact smartphone' crown would certainly not be out of reach for the Sony Xperia Z5 Compact.
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact audio
We pitted Xperia Z5 Compact against the Xperia Z3 Compact to investigate Sony's promise that it had improved the audio quality. We played the same MP3 track, in the same player, with the same audio settings, at full volume, on both devices.
Though the maximum volume was (disappointingly) almost the same, the sound was significantly clearer in the Z5 Compact, particularly in the low to mid frequencies. The larger Z5 Compact drivers offer far more depth.

Compared to the Z3 Compact (right), the Z5 audio has been much-improved. / © ANDROIDPIT
However I still wouldn’t recommend the Xperia Z5 Compact as an alternative to a Bluetooth speaker, because, despite its stereo speaker setup, it’s just not loud enough. Nevertheless, it was a notable improvement over the last device, and call quality and video call quality were also excellent.
The stereo speakers of the Z5 compact, are far better than the bottom- or rear-mounted single speakers of many modern flagships, the Galaxy S6 and LG G4 included.
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact camera
The camera software is the real centerpiece of this year's Xperia generation. The Sony Xperia Z5 Compact camera features a 23 MP Exmor RS Sensor, and a super-fast autofocus of 0.03 seconds.
In bright outdoor shots, the dynamic range is remarkable, displaying huge contrast between light and dark, but also maintaining detail in shade where most competing phones would only show black. The Z5 Compact does tend to distort colors slightly however, edging towards a blue hue, but it makes a change from the long-standing pink bias of the Xperia phones. Indoor images should generally be taken with the flash to reduce this.

The dynamic range in automatic mode on the Xperia Z5 Compact camera. / © ANDROIDPIT
The default Sony camera app produced some impressive photos, however. In addition, the Z5 Compact camera has what Sony calls a 'hybrid image stabilizer', which helps to decrease the shakiness found in handheld videos.
The continuous autofocus, which automatically changes the focus of an image according to the proximity of the object to the lens, is another highlight of the Z5 Compact camera. The Sony camera sensor recognizes moving objects and makes the adjustments impressively fast. Other current cameras offer this software feature too, but they don’t really compare.

Sony's selection of scenes or shooting modes. / © ANDROIDPIT
Following optimizations to the Xperia Z5 Compact software, it is now possible to use the augmented reality modes, for example, without the device overheating. Sony's camera app comes with a pool of apps, most of which are 'fun' effects such as the AR-mask, but some are very cool. Time-shift video recording for example, records videos at a higher frame rate and lets you choose a portion of the video to playback in slow motion. It’s not unique to Sony, but it’s a nice addition.

The highlighted area marks a 1,920 x 1,080 section of shot taken with the 23 MP Z5 Compact camera. / © ANDROIDPIT
Sony's camera software includes a Manual mode for incremental camera adjustments, but I found its automatic mode worked just fine in most circumstances. The results were consistently impressive, and you can see a whole bunch of them in our Xperia Z5 Compact camera review gallery.
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact battery
When testing the Xperia Z5 Compact, I installed all of the apps I normally use, including the notoriously data and power-hungry Facebook app. I set the screen brightness between 60 and 70 percent, so I could easily read it in the office, and made all of the benchmarks and photo examples you can see in this review during the initial test.
After 24 intense hours, with about six hours of screen-on time, the battery was still not depleted (my Nexus 5 would have died twice in that time). I used the device far more than the average person would have done over the same period and yet it still had 8 percent (estimated at around three hours) of juice left. Maybe battery performance will dwindle after repeated use, but for now it seems that Sony still knows how to rock battery life.

The Z5 Compact doesn't die easily. Heavy users can easily use it for a day. / © ANDROIDPIT
According to Sony, the battery of every Xperia smartphone in the Z5 range can last up to two days and one hour (or almost 50 hours, as a normal person might put it), and supports Qualcomm quick-charge 2.0 functionality. Additionally, the Xperia Z5 battery has been slightly boosted to 2,700 mAh, compared to its Z3 Compact predecessor’s 2600 mAh capacity.
The Sony Xperia Stamina mode and ultra power-saving mode also make a return. All told, the Xperia Z5 Compact is one of the most energy-efficient smartphones on the mobile market – the trade off for one of the most average displays.

No USB Type-C for the Z5 Compact. / © ANDROIDPIT
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact technical specifications
Dimensions:127 x 65 x 9 mm
Weight:139 g
Battery size:2700 mAh
Screen size:4.6 in
Display technology:LCD
Screen:1280 x 720 pixels (319 ppi)
Front camera:5.1 megapixels
Rear camera:23 megapixels
Flashlight:LED
Android version:5.1.1 - Lollipop
User interface:Xperia UI
RAM:2 GB
Internal storage:32 GB
Removable storage:microSD
Chipset:Qualcomm Snapdragon 810
Number of cores:8
Max. clock speed:2 GHz
Connectivity:HSPA, LTE, NFC, Bluetooth 4.1

Final verdict
The Sony Xperia Compact line should never be compared to other Mini smartphones. Sony has provided the same CPU, GPU, camera and audio quality as the Premium device in this series, just with a smaller, lower-resolution screen. You don't find other Android OEMs taking this approach. The battery life is strong, the performance is in the same region as any 2015 flagship and the camera is at the peak of Sony's potential.
When we first reviewed this phone, its price equated to around US$600, we said was "unreasonably high" given the "rapid decline" in Sony's Xperia Compact prices just a few months after their release. So what about its official US$499 US introductory price?

The Xperia Z5 Compact is still one of the only premium 'small' devices. / © ANDROIDPIT
Well, it's still expensive considering the relatively low-resolution screen, but the Xperia Z5 Compact is also the best 'small' smartphone in the world. What's more, unlike the standard Xperia Z5, the Z5 Compact may not see a sequel until the end of 2016.
Ultimately, if you want a flagship standard smartphone that's less than 5-inches tall, you should get the Xperia Z5 Compact.
What are your thoughts on the Z5 Compact? Let us know in the comments.
This article has been updated since it was first published. Comments below may not reflect the current content.
Sony Xperia Z5 Compact
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