Review Tablets SVITOO

SVITOO P11 Tablets - Review and opinions

SVITOO P11
8.1 Overall

Quick recommendation

Value for money 8.6/10
Ease of use 8.0/10
Durability 7.1/10
Customer reviews 8.8/10

Is it worth it?

The SVITOO P11 is aimed at anyone who wants a big-screen Android tablet for streaming, browsing, reading and light family use without paying premium-tablet money. Its appeal is easy to understand: an 11-inch display, Android 16, a 90Hz refresh rate, 128GB of storage, expandable memory and a case in the box. The trade-off is just as clear: this is a value tablet for everyday tasks, not a convincing laptop replacement or a safe pick for people who are fussy about app compatibility and accessory ecosystems.

My quick verdict is that this makes sense for sofa use, travel streaming, kids’ homework, casual games and general home duties, especially if the included case matters to you. Skip it if your tablet needs to feel light in the hand for long sessions, if you expect polished speaker quality, or if one troublesome streaming app or Bluetooth quirk would ruin the purchase for you. The P11 wins on usable screen area and sensible everyday spec balance, but it still behaves like a budget Android tablet rather than a premium all-rounder.

Screen size 11 inches
Resolution 1280 x 800
Chipset T7250 octa-core 2.0 GHz
RAM 20 GB
Storage 128 GB
Refresh rate 90 Hz

Key features

Display that suits media first

The 11-inch IPS panel uses a 16:10 shape, which is a good fit for mixed use rather than one narrow job. It gives enough height for reading and browsing while still feeling natural for films and catch-up TV.

The key buying point is not outright sharpness but comfort and smoothness. The 90Hz refresh rate helps everyday navigation feel cleaner, while Widevine L1 gives this tablet a stronger streaming case than many bargain rivals. The catch is simple: 1280 x 800 is adequate, not luxurious, on an 11-inch screen.

Balanced everyday hardware

An octa-core 2.0 GHz processor, 128GB storage and support for microSD expansion up to 1TB make this easier to recommend than ultra-cheap tablets that run out of room quickly.

That matters most if the tablet will be shared around the house or loaded with offline video, school apps and casual games. It has enough space and day-to-day fluidity for regular use, but the overall route remains light productivity and entertainment rather than serious multitasking work.

Useful extras in the box

A budget tablet feels better value when it arrives ready to use, and the included case is a real advantage here. It lowers the real setup cost and makes the tablet easier to stand up for films or recipes in the kitchen.

This also answers a practical question many buyers have with affordable tablets: do I need to buy essentials immediately. Here, less of the budget disappears into basic protection, although finding specialised third-party cases appears less straightforward than with better-known brands.

User experience

On the sofa with video, web browsing and messaging in rotation, the P11 lands in a comfortable everyday lane. The 11-inch 16:10 screen gives more room than a 10.1-inch budget tablet, and at roughly 137 pixels per inch it is sharp enough for streaming and reading without pretending to be a high-end panel. Widevine L1 matters here because it keeps Netflix and Prime Video in the proper HD route, while the 90Hz refresh rate helps menus and scrolling feel less sticky than many cheap tablets. The compromise is resolution: films and text look perfectly serviceable, but not especially crisp if you are used to pricier tablets.

Move from media into light work and the tablet still holds together reasonably well. Android 16, 20GB RAM as marketed, and 128GB storage give it enough headroom for browser tabs, email, study apps, shopping and casual multitasking without the whole experience feeling cramped from day one. That does not turn it into a productivity machine. There is no clear keyboard or stylus route here, and the 1280 x 800 panel is fine for documents in short bursts rather than long desk sessions where a sharper display would matter more.

For family use, the practical touches are what make this tablet easier to live with. The case is included, the box also includes the charging cable, and the screen protector arrives pre-fitted on some retail packages, which cuts down the usual first-day fuss. The 8800mAh battery and quoted 14-hour battery life place it in the all-day casual-use bracket rather than the constant-charging nuisance zone, though heavy streaming will pull that down. One thing you do notice in this class is that large affordable tablets can feel heavier and less elegant in the hand than their premium rivals, so this is better propped on its stand for long viewing than held one-handed for ages.

The weak point is not speed for ordinary tasks but consistency around the edges. Sound is described as acceptable rather than rich, with a slightly tinny character at higher volume, and connectivity is the area where this tablet draws the most caution. If your routine is straightforward Android apps, YouTube, Netflix, browsing and email, it fits the brief. If your purchase depends on flawless Bluetooth behaviour, niche accessories or every streaming service behaving perfectly after updates, there are clearer choices.

Pros

  • Strong value route for streaming, browsing and casual family use
  • 11-inch 90Hz display with Widevine L1 is a good fit for budget media duty
  • Case included and easy initial setup improve day-one usability
  • 128GB storage plus microSD expansion is practical for shared or long-term use.

Cons

  • 1280 x 800 resolution is only average on an 11-inch panel
  • Weight can be noticeable in long handheld sessions
  • Speakers are serviceable rather than full or rich
  • App and connectivity behaviour can be inconsistent if you rely on fuss-free Bluetooth or every streaming service working perfectly.

Community

User reviews

The overall pattern is consistent: people buy this for value, easy setup and everyday media use, and many come away pleasantly surprised by how complete the package feels. The complaints are not about the basic idea of the tablet so much as the usual budget-tablet rough edges such as weight, occasional connectivity annoyances and the odd app-specific frustration.

Value

I bought it for my daughter and it has been fast enough for Roblox and streaming, with decent battery life and a display that is perfectly adequate for everyday use.

Value

I expected the usual cheap-tablet compromises, but Android 16, proper Play Store support and a vibrant screen made this a much better buy than I thought for browsing and streaming.

Value

I wanted an occasional-use Android tablet for streaming and general tasks, and this has been good for the money, though it is quite heavy and the speaker sounds a bit tinny.

Value

I was impressed by the screen, battery and general speed for regular tasks, but Disney+ became a real annoyance after an update, which stopped it being an easy five-star buy.

Comparison

Attribute SVITOO P11 Current DOOGEE U11 ZZB ZB10+CASE JVVQTB S3
Price 99.99 GBP 99.19 GBP 89.45 GBP 84.98 GBP
Screen size 11 inches 11 Inches 10.1 inches 10.1 inches
Resolution 1280 x 800 1200 x 800 1280 x 800 1280 x 800 pixels
RAM 20 GB 16GB (4GB + 12GB expansion) 6GB including 4GB extended memory 30GB RAM (8GB + 22GB expansion)
Storage 128 GB 128GB 32GB with support for up to 1024GB microSD expansion 128GB
Chipset T7250 octa-core 2.0 GHz Unisoc T606 octa-core Quad-core CPU -
Editorial score 8.1/10 8.1/10 7.0/10 8.2/10

Against the DOOGEE U11, the SVITOO P11 makes its case with a similar 11-inch format, a faster-sounding 90Hz route and more generous marketed memory, while the DOOGEE counters with a 1200 x 800 display and a known Unisoc T606 platform. Choose the SVITOO if you care more about the included case, HD streaming support and a smoother-feeling everyday interface. Choose the DOOGEE if you would rather take the slightly higher listed resolution and a more clearly identified chipset path.

Against the ZZB ZB10+CASE and JVVQTB S3, the P11 sits in the middle in a sensible way. It is a better big-screen home tablet option than the 10.1-inch ZZB if screen area matters more than absolute cheapest entry cost, and it looks more balanced than the JVVQTB if you want a straightforward media tablet rather than a spec-heavy budget model chasing headline RAM figures. The SVITOO is the safer pick for general media use, while the JVVQTB is the one to look at if you are tempted by bigger memory claims and do not mind a more aggressive budget-brand gamble.

Conclusion and verdict

The SVITOO P11 gets the basics right for the kind of buyer who wants a low-cost 11-inch Android tablet for home use. Android 16, Widevine L1, 90Hz refresh, 128GB storage, expandable memory and the included case create a package that is easy to place: this is a media-first tablet with enough speed for normal apps and enough battery for relaxed daily use. If the current offer keeps it in the budget bracket, it is an easy model to shortlist.

I would pass if your standards are closer to an iPad or a higher-end Samsung Galaxy Tab, or if your routine depends on perfect app behaviour, strong speakers and a lighter chassis. The P11 works best when you want maximum usefulness per pound and can accept the familiar compromises of the affordable Android tablet class.

FAQ

Is this tablet mainly for media or for work?

It is much better suited to streaming, browsing, reading and light everyday tasks than to replacing a laptop for serious work.

Is the included case actually important here?

Yes. It improves value, makes the tablet easier to prop up for video, and reduces the extra spend that often comes with budget tablets.

Alexandre Lefèvre

About the author

Alexandre Lefèvre

Tech enthusiast focused on testing and reviewing the latest devices. I share honest insights to help you choose the right products with confidence.