Criteria
What separates the best e ink phones from the rest
The category of e ink phones is bigger than it used to be (Bigme, Boox, Hisense, Mudita, and a handful of Chinese-market-only models). Most of them are sluggish, half-baked Android forks running on panels two generations old. The list of credible options is short. The four we cover below clear three bars: a Carta 1200 panel or newer (the refresh-rate floor for usable scrolling), a real Android stack with Google services working (so banking, messaging, and 2FA do not break), and battery that survives a full workday of moderate use without limping.
The best e ink phones do one job well and ten jobs adequately. They are not iPhone replacements. They are useful in three cases: as a secondary focus phone you carry when you want messages without scrolling, as a dedicated e-reader phone for commuting (Kindle in the pocket without the Kindle), and as a digital-minimalism primary phone for the small group of people who genuinely want less screen pull. If any of those is you, one of the four below probably fits.
Picks
The four best e ink phones, picked
1. Boox Palma 2 (the obvious lead)
The Boox Palma 2 is what most reviewers call when asked for the best e ink phone today, and the call holds up after a few weeks of carry. 6.13-inch Carta 1200 panel, Android 13 with Google Play working, 6GB RAM, 128GB storage, microSD slot, USB-C, two-week-class battery on moderate use. The trade-off everyone notes is that it is technically a phone-shaped device rather than a phone in some markets; the Palma 2 has WiFi and Bluetooth but no cellular modem, so calls and texts route through your data plan. For most second-phone-for-focus use cases that does not matter; for primary-phone-replacement it does, and the Bigme HiBreak Pro below is the better fit instead.
2. Bigme HiBreak Pro (full Android, cellular)
The Bigme HiBreak Pro is the closest thing to a normal Android phone with an e ink screen on the market. 5.84-inch Carta 1200, Android 13, dual SIM with 4G cellular, fingerprint unlock, working camera (e-ink phones traditionally skip this, the HiBreak does not), and a refresh-rate toggle that goes higher than the Palma 2 at the cost of battery. Best fit if the e-ink phone is meant to replace your daily driver rather than complement it. The trade-off: heavier, slightly thicker, and the camera is functional rather than good.
3. Mudita Kompakt (the dumb-phone end)
The Mudita Kompakt is the deliberately-minimal option. 4.3-inch E Ink Carta 1300, MuditaOS (custom Android-derivative with intentionally limited app set: calls, SMS, calendar, alarm, calculator, music player, e-reader, notes), no app store, no browser. Designed by Mudita explicitly for the digital-minimalism use case, with the assumption that you carry a real phone too or that the dumb-phone feature set is enough. Right for someone whose problem is I scroll too much; wrong for someone whose problem is wanting a phone with an e-ink screen. The HiBreak Pro is the latter; the Kompakt is the former.
4. Boox Palma (the original, still credible)
The original Boox Palma launched in 2023 and is still on sale at a lower price than the Palma 2. Carta 1200 panel, Android 11, 6GB RAM, 128GB storage. The Palma 2 improvements over the original are real but incremental (Android version, processor, fingerprint unlock); for buyers on a budget the original delivers most of the Palma 2 experience at roughly two-thirds the price. The case to spend more on the Palma 2 is the newer Android (Android 13 vs 11 matters for banking app compatibility), the fingerprint unlock, and the warmer front light tuning.
Comparison
Comparing the four best e ink phones side by side
| Boox Palma 2$280 | Bigme HiBreak Pro$420 | Mudita Kompakt$429 | Boox Palma$200 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screen | 6.13″ Carta 1200 | 5.84″ Carta 1200 + refresh toggle | 4.3″ Carta 1300 | 6.13″ Carta 1200 |
| OS | Android 13 | Android 13 | MuditaOS (custom) | Android 11 |
| Cellular | No (WiFi only) | 4G dual SIM | 4G | No (WiFi only) |
| Google Play | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Best for | Reading phone | Primary phone | Digital minimalism | Budget reading phone |
For most readers, the Palma 2 is the right starting point and the one to buy if you are uncertain which use case fits you. The HiBreak Pro is better if you need cellular. The Mudita is better if your real problem is screen pull rather than wanting an e-ink screen. The original Palma is the right call only if budget is the binding constraint.
The best e ink phone in 2026 is the Palma 2 for most people. The runner-up exists because not everyone wants a Wi-Fi-only second phone.What we found
When not
When the best e ink phones still are not the right call
Three use cases where none of the four work as advertised. The first is anything camera-heavy: e-ink panels are slow enough that even the HiBreak Pro’s working camera is more documentation than photography. If your phone use is primarily photo or video, an e-ink phone will frustrate. The second is video calls: refresh rate on e-ink is fundamentally not built for moving picture, and Zoom, Teams, and FaceTime are all best described as playable but unpleasant on the Carta 1200 panel. The third is gaming, full stop. The Palma 2 will run light Android games (chess, sudoku, idle-clickers) but anything with twitchy refresh requirements (rhythm games, action games, even some scrolling-heavy puzzlers) hits the refresh-rate wall.
The other thing worth knowing: e-ink phones are second devices for the people who already love e-ink, and an awkward fit for everyone else. If you have never owned an e-reader, the right move is usually to try a Kindle Paperwhite or a Boox Go for two weeks first. If the e-ink experience clicks for you there, the Palma 2 is a natural next purchase. If it does not click on a reader, it will not click on a phone either.
How to choose
How to choose between the best e ink phones
Decide whether this is a primary or secondary phone.
Secondary (you carry another phone too): Palma 2 or original Palma. Primary (this is your only phone): Bigme HiBreak Pro or Mudita Kompakt. The cellular question collapses to this single decision.
If secondary, decide whether reading or pocketability matters more.
Most secondary buyers default to Palma 2; the 6.13-inch screen is the better reading surface, and the lack of cellular does not hurt because the primary phone covers it. Skip the original Palma unless price is the constraint.
If primary, decide whether you want Android or intentionally less.
The HiBreak Pro is Android phone with e-ink screen; the Mudita Kompakt is deliberately limited dumb-phone with an e-ink screen. They are not interchangeable. If banking apps and ride-share matter, HiBreak Pro. If your problem is screen pull, Mudita.
If you want an e-ink tablet alongside the phone, our best e ink tablet roundup covers the wider category, and the colour e-ink piece covers the CANVAS and Kaleido panels specifically. For the Palma 2 in depth, the Palma 2 review goes deeper than this summary on day-to-day use.
FAQ
Common questions, answered briefly
What is the best e ink phone in 2026?
Can the Boox Palma 2 make phone calls?
Are e ink phones good for reading?
Will banking apps work on an e ink phone?
How long does the battery last on an e ink phone?
If your situation is not above, drop the question in the comments and we will add it.
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