Screen size
Battery
Is it worth it?
The DOOGEE U11 is aimed at anyone who wants a big-screen Android tablet for streaming, browsing, reading and family use without paying premium-tablet money. Its appeal is easy to understand: an 11-inch display, 90Hz refresh rate, 128GB storage, expandable memory and a large 8580mAh battery in a slim metal body. The real trade-off is just as clear: this is a value media tablet first, not a serious laptop replacement or a high-end gaming slate.
My quick verdict is that the U11 makes sense for casual home use, kids’ streaming, sofa browsing and light multitasking, especially if smooth everyday navigation matters more than razor-sharp resolution or fast charging. I would buy it for films, apps, email and family duty, but skip it if you need dependable heavy gaming, strong low-light cameras, or a more clearly productivity-led tablet with keyboard and stylus support.
| Screen size | 11 Inches |
|---|---|
| Resolution | 1200 x 800 |
| Chipset | Unisoc T606 octa-core |
| RAM | 16GB (4GB + 12GB expansion) |
| Storage | 128GB |
| Battery | 8580mAh |
Display and media use
The combination of an 11-inch IPS screen, 90Hz refresh rate and Widevine L1 support gives this tablet a stronger streaming case than many low-cost rivals.
That matters because smooth scrolling and proper HD playback on services such as Netflix make a bigger difference in daily enjoyment than raw spec bragging. The caveat is resolution: this is a comfortable media screen, not a detail-rich premium one.
Battery life that changes the fit
An 8580mAh battery is a meaningful advantage in a tablet built for home use, travel and family sharing.
In practice, that means less charger hunting during a day of mixed browsing, reading and video. The compromise is the refill time, which is slower than the battery size deserves, so it rewards planned charging rather than impatient charging habits.
Storage and everyday flexibility
The U11 comes with 128GB internal storage and supports microSD expansion up to 2TB, which is unusually useful in a value tablet.
That gives it room for downloaded films, kids’ apps, ebooks and offline media without feeling cramped too quickly. It also makes more sense as a shared household tablet than many entry models that run out of space early.
Use evaluation
On the sofa or in bed, the U11 lands in the comfortable everyday-tablet lane straight away. The 11-inch panel gives you more breathing room than an 8-inch class tablet for web pages, comics and streaming apps, while the 540g weight and 7.9mm body stop it feeling like a chunky budget brick. The screen is only 1200 x 800, which works out at roughly 131 pixels per inch across 10.95 to 11 inches, so text and fine detail are not in premium territory. For Netflix, YouTube and general browsing that is acceptable, but if you read tiny documents all day or obsess over crisp typography, this is where the compromise shows first.
Once you start hopping between Chrome, email, Kindle, YouTube and social apps, the U11’s route becomes clearer. Android 15, the Unisoc T606 and the 4GB physical RAM backed by memory expansion keep ordinary multitasking feeling brisk enough, and the 90Hz mode helps scrolling feel smoother than many cheap tablets. That does not turn it into a powerhouse. It is happier with browsing, streaming and light app switching than with demanding games or ambitious split-screen workloads, where the class limits of the hardware start to show.
Away from the charger, the large 8580mAh battery is one of the strongest reasons to choose this tablet. A full day of mixed use is a realistic expectation for media, reading and general household tasks, which makes it easy to leave on the coffee table or pack for a day out without battery anxiety. The catch is charging pace. The battery is generous, but the charging experience is not especially quick, so this suits people who top up overnight more than those who want short, rapid boosts between sessions.
For calls, family sharing and basic everyday convenience, the U11 covers the essentials well. Face unlock adds a bit of friction-free ease, dual-band Wi-Fi supports stable home use, and the dual speakers appear good enough for casual video and streaming without instantly reaching for headphones. The cameras fit the usual budget-tablet pattern: fine for video calls, document snaps and daylight moments, but not something to buy for photography.
Pros
- Smooth everyday feel helped by 90Hz refresh and clean Android 15
- Strong battery life for streaming, reading and mixed daily use
- 128GB storage plus microSD expansion up to 2TB is generous at this level
- Widevine L1 support makes it a better-value streaming tablet than many cheap alternatives.
Cons
- 1200 x 800 resolution is serviceable rather than sharp on an 11-inch panel
- Charging is on the slow side for such a large battery
- Cameras are adequate for calls and quick snaps, but weak in low light
- Not the right fit for demanding gaming or true productivity accessory use.
Community
User reviews
Feedback around the U11 follows a familiar pattern for a good-value Android tablet: people are won over by the speed, battery life, screen smoothness and easy setup, while the weaker points tend to be the modest cameras, slow charging and the occasional software or support frustration rather than the core media experience.
I bought this as a second tablet for my kids and was impressed by how fast and smooth it felt, with a sharp 90Hz screen, good Netflix streaming, all-day battery life and quick face unlock.
I was surprised by how much tablet I got for the money, with a good display, responsive performance, clean Android 15, fast 128GB storage and useful extras like 2.4GHz and 5GHz Wi-Fi and microSD support.
I found it very impressive for the money with good speed, decent battery life and a solid HD display, though I did hit one annoying interface issue when trying to log out of Facebook.
This slotted easily into my routine thanks to the bright 90Hz screen, roomy storage, strong battery life, punchy speakers and quick face unlock, although heavier games showed the odd stutter and charging felt slow.
Comparison
| Attribute | DOOGEE U11 Current | DOOGEE Tab A9 | DOOGEE U10 | SVITOO P11 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price | Out of stock | Out of stock | Out of stock | £99.99 |
| Screen size | 11 Inches | 10.1 Inches | 10.1 Inches | 11 inches |
| Resolution | 1200 x 800 | FHD 1080p | 1280 x 800 | 1280 x 800 |
| RAM | 16GB (4GB + 12GB expansion) | 12GB | 16GB (4+12) | 20 GB |
| Storage | 128GB | 64GB | 128GB | 128 GB |
| Battery | 8580mAh | 6580 Milliamp Hours | 5060 mAh | - |
| Chipset | Unisoc T606 octa-core | Unisoc T310 Quad Core 1.8 GHz | Quad Core 2 GHz | T7250 octa-core 2.0 GHz |
| Editorial score | 6.8/10 | 6.7/10 | 6.4/10 | 7.2/10 |
Against a Fire tablet or other cheap media-first slates, the U11 has a more open Android route, smoother 90Hz navigation and a stronger case for people who want Google apps, Netflix HD playback and more flexible storage. If your main job is streaming, browsing and family use, this is the more versatile choice. If you mainly want the simplest possible content machine for a tightly locked ecosystem, a Fire-style alternative can still be enough.
Against better-known mid-range Android tablets from Samsung Galaxy Tab A or Lenovo Tab families, the DOOGEE wins on paper value and storage generosity, but it does not fully close the gap in polish. Those alternatives are the better route if you care more about display sharpness, accessory ecosystem, brand support and a cleaner long-term ownership experience. The U11 is the one to choose when screen size, battery and low-cost everyday usefulness matter more than refinement.
Compare with Compare this model This product stays fixed; add a recommended alternative or search another model in the category.
Compare with
Add a second model to activate the direct comparison.
Recommended models
No products match that filter combination.
Is the DOOGEE U11 tablet worth it?
The reason to skip it is not that it fails at its job, but that its job is quite specific. This is not the tablet for sharp-screen enthusiasts, serious mobile gamers, camera-led use or anyone expecting a proper productivity setup with keyboard and pen support. Buy it as a big, affordable Android media tablet with decent stamina and a few sensible extras, and the trade-off makes sense.
FAQ
Is the DOOGEE U11 mainly a media tablet or a work tablet?
It is mainly a media and everyday-use tablet, with enough speed for browsing, email, reading and light multitasking but without the accessory support or power to replace a laptop.
Is the screen good enough for Netflix and reading?
Yes for streaming and casual reading, especially with 90Hz smoothness and Widevine L1, but the 1200 x 800 resolution is only average for an 11-inch panel so fine text is not its strongest suit.