Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission.Learn more.

HUAWEI confirms big sales drop due to ban (Update: US firms want ban reduced)

July 18, 2025

Update, July 03, 2025 (01:30 PM ET):It appears U.S.-based chipmakers — including Qualcomm, Intel, and Xilinx — are quietly lobbying the U.S. government to reduce the HUAWEI ban in an effort to not harm American companies.

According toReuters, several reps from major chipset manufacturers met with the Commerce Department to discuss allowing companies to continue to sell certain products to HUAWEI. The argument they are apparently making is that selling something like a Qualcomm modem to HUAWEI does not negatively affect national security but does positively affect U.S. companies’ bottom line.

The HONOR 20 Pro by HUAWEI sub-brand HONOR.

“This isn’t about helping HUAWEI. It’s aboutpreventing harm to American companies,” one of the people said.

In 2018, HUAWEI spent about $70 billion on buying components from other companies, of which about $11 billion went to U.S. firms. With the ban in full effect, that’s $11 billion the U.S. economy won’t see this year.

HONOR 20 Pro rear logo

Original article, July 16, 2025 (4:13am ET):Huaweihas endured a torrid few weeks, as it continues to battle the effects of a U.S. trade ban. BetweenArm,Google,Qualcomm, and other firms being unable to do business with it, the Chinese brand has suffered a major blow.

Now,Bloombergreports that HUAWEI is expecting international smartphone sales to drop by 40 to 60 percent due to the ban. The outlet, citing several sources, says internal estimates are that there’ll be a sales drop of roughly 40 to 60 million devices this year. HUAWEI CEO Ren Zhengfeilater confirmedthe large drop in revenue but shook it off by saying growth happens very fast.

Read:HUAWEI reportedly looking at Sailfish OS fork as its Android alternative

This makes for a big drop, especially as HUAWEI shipped200 million smartphonesin 2018. The company looked on course to narrow the gap andpossibly pass Samsungin 2019, but this doesn’t seem to be the case any more.

Sources toldBloombergthat HUAWEI is also exploring several options in the wake of the U.S. trade ban, including the possibility of pulling theHONOR 20series. The range is already available in its home country of China, where it’sreportedlysold one million units in two weeks.

The new HONOR phones are expected to launch in Europe on June 21, but it’s believed executives could cut off shipments if sales are poor. In fact, sources told the outlet that two of France’s biggest networks aren’t carrying the HONOR 20 series at all. A HUAWEI spokesperson toldBloombergthat the launches were “proceeding.”

An HONOR representative also toldAndroid Authoritythat the HONOR 20 series launch is going ahead on June 21 in the U.K.

“U.K. sales have so far not been impacted. We are doing good with HONOR 20 Lite and as you can see we have gone all out in branding HONOR 20 series around London tubes and in EU (sic),” the representative said via an emailed response, adding that the series will be available in other overseas markets too.

It’s also believed that HUAWEI is hoping to grab as much as 50 percent market share in China, which would help it offset the expected international sales decline. HUAWEI/HONOR achieved 34 percent market share in Q1 2019 according toCounterpoint Research. This is a big leap over Q1 2018, when the company was sitting at 22 percent.

Would you buy a new HUAWEI phone in the wake of the U.S. trade ban? Let us know in the comments!

NEXT:How much faster are modern phone processors?

Thank you for being part of our community. Read ourComment Policybefore posting.