MIUI is a custom Android-based operating system and user interface developed by Xiaomi Corporation for its smartphones, tablets, and other smart devices.[1] Launched in August 2010 with its initial version built on Android 2.1 Eclair, MIUI emphasized extensive theming, gesture controls, and integrated ecosystem services to differentiate from stock Android, quickly gaining traction among early adopters in China.[1]Over its lifespan, MIUI evolved through 14 major versions, introducing features such as advanced privacy controls, floating windows for multitasking, and deep customization of the home screen and notifications, which appealed to users seeking personalization beyond Google's vanilla experience.[2] These enhancements contributed to Xiaomi's rapid market expansion, helping the company secure a global smartphone shipment share of approximately 15% by mid-2025, particularly in emerging markets like India and parts of Europe where value-driven devices predominated.[3] However, MIUI faced persistent criticism for embedding system-level advertisements, pre-installed bloatware, and telemetry that transmitted user data to Xiaomi servers without explicit consent, prompting privacy advocates to highlight risks of unauthorized surveillance.[4][5] Independent analyses, including those from cybersecurity researchers, documented extensive data collection practices, such as logging web browsing and app usage, which Xiaomi defended as necessary for service improvements but which fueled bans and scrutiny in regions prioritizing data sovereignty.[4][6]By 2023, Xiaomi began transitioning MIUI to its successor, HyperOS, a unified platform extending across smartphones, wearables, and IoT devices to streamline development and reduce fragmentation, with HyperOS updates rolling out widely by 2025 while select legacy devices retained MIUI support.[7] This shift marked the end of MIUI as Xiaomi's primary mobile skin, though its legacy endures in the company's emphasis on feature-rich, affordable hardware-software integration that propelled it from a startup to a top-tier vendor.[8]
Overview
Origins and Development
MIUI originated as a custom Android-based firmware developed by Xiaomi Corporation, which was founded on April 7, 2010, in Beijing, China, by entrepreneur Lei Jun and a team of former Kingsoft executives.[9] The software was launched on August 16, 2010, just four months after Xiaomi's inception, initially as version 1.0 based on Android 2.1 Éclair with influences from iOS aesthetics and Samsung's TouchWiz interface to provide a more polished user experience on existing Android devices.[1][10] Early development emphasized heavy customization, theme support, and user feedback loops, with the ROM distributed primarily through Chinese forums and quickly attracting international notice via the XDA Developers community in the United States.[11]Development progressed through a model of frequent, community-driven updates, including weekly beta releases that allowed rapid iteration based on user reports, distinguishing MIUI from stock Android's slower cycle and fostering loyalty among early adopters.[1] Xiaomi's first smartphone, the Mi 1, launched on August 16, 2011—marking the anniversary of MIUI's debut—with MIUI as its stock operating system, shifting the software from a standalone ROM to an integral part of Xiaomi's hardware ecosystem.[12] Subsequent versions aligned with Android upgrades, introducing features like enhanced multitasking, security scanners, and app permissions management, while amassing 30 million active users by 2013 through aggressive expansion in China and emerging markets.[9]Over 13 years, MIUI evolved into a mature skin supporting devices across Xiaomi's Mi, Redmi, and POCO lines, with major releases such as MIUI 5 (2013, emphasizing visual refinements) and MIUI 12 (2020, adding privacy-focused controls), though it faced criticism for bloatware and regional variant discrepancies.[1] By 2023, amid growing ecosystem demands for IoT integration, Xiaomi announced HyperOS as MIUI's successor, with the transition debuting on the Xiaomi 14 series in October 2023 and global rollout extending into 2024, effectively concluding MIUI's active development after serving over 600 million users.[9][13]
Core Philosophy and Design Principles
MIUI's foundational philosophy centers on a community-driven, iterative development model that places user feedback at the forefront of enhancements. Originating as a custom Android-based ROM released on August 16, 2010, by a team of enthusiasts, MIUI adopted a practice of weekly over-the-air updates to incorporate suggestions directly from users via dedicated forums, enabling rapid iteration to resolve pain points in stock Android implementations. This approach fostered a responsive ecosystem where usability improvements, such as refined notifications and multitasking, were prioritized based on aggregated community input rather than top-down directives.[14]Design principles emphasize intuitive usability, security, and deep integration across software, hardware, and services to create a cohesive experience. Xiaomi positions MIUI as prioritizing security alongside ease of use, with architectural choices like hardware-accelerated features and system-level optimizations aimed at minimizing latency and enhancing reliability on diverse devices. Intuitive elements, including gesture-based navigation and adaptive interfaces, draw from principles of rational and practical design to make interactions feel natural and efficient.[15][16]Customization forms a core tenet, allowing extensive personalization through tools like the MIUI Theme Editor and store, which support modifications to icons, wallpapers, and UI layouts without requiring root access. This flexibility aligns with Xiaomi's broader ethos of universality and user empowerment, enabling adaptation to individual preferences while maintaining baseline stability. Privacy by design is integrated as a fundamental value, with mechanisms for local data processing, encryption, and minimal collection to protect user information amid ecosystem expansions.[17][18]
Technical Architecture
Android Base and Customization Layer
MIUI is built upon the Android Open Source Project (AOSP), serving as the core operating system foundation for Xiaomi devices, with Xiaomi applying extensive modifications to the framework, system services, and user interface components.[1] This architecture allows MIUI to leverage Android's kernel, drivers, and runtime environment while overlaying proprietary customizations that alter system behaviors, resource handling, and application integrations.[19]The Android base version corresponds to specific MIUI releases, enabling compatibility with hardware and security updates from Google, though Xiaomi often extends support beyond standard timelines by backporting features across versions. For example, early MIUI iterations from 2010 were based on Android 2.1 Eclair, evolving to align with later releases such as MIUI 14 on Android 13, which incorporates updates to the Android Runtime (ART) and framework APIs for improved performance and security.[1] Modifications to the Android framework include recompilation of system APKs like framework-res.apk to support MIUI's theming engine, which enables dynamic resource overlays for colors, icons, and layouts without altering the underlying AOSP source directly in all cases.[20]The customization layer introduces proprietary elements, such as MIUI-specific services for cloud synchronization, app management, and ecosystem integrations, which hook into Android's service manager to extend functionality like multi-window support and gesture navigation ahead of stock Android implementations.[21] These changes replace or augment AOSP components, including the launcher, gallery, and music apps, with Xiaomi-developed alternatives that prioritize user customization and data collection for services like Mi Cloud.[22] This layered approach results in a hybrid system where open-source Android provides stability and hardware abstraction, while closed-source overlays deliver differentiated features, though it can introduce complexities in rooting or custom ROM development due to deepened framework integrations.[23]
Variant Differences: China ROM vs. Global ROM
The China ROM variant of MIUI is developed primarily for the Chinese market, incorporating region-specific optimizations, pre-installed local applications like Baidu search and WeChat integrations, and exclusion of Google Mobile Services (GMS) to comply with domestic regulations and preferences.[24] The Global ROM, by contrast, targets international users with built-in GMS certification, including Google Play Store, Gmail, YouTube, and support for Google Pay, enabling seamless access to global app ecosystems.[24][25]Language support differs markedly: China ROM is limited to Chinese and English interfaces, restricting usability for non-Chinese speakers beyond basic functionality, while Global ROM supports over 40 languages such as Spanish, Russian, and Hindi for broader accessibility.[24][26] Update cadences also vary, with China ROM receiving over-the-air (OTA) firmware and security patches more rapidly—typically bi-weekly or monthly—compared to Global ROM's schedule of one to three months, attributed to additional testing for multi-region compatibility and GMS certification.[24]Certain MIUI features debut exclusively or in advanced forms on China ROM, including Super Icons for dynamic app animations, Photon Engine for enhanced visual rendering, and Ultra Battery Saver modes, which may arrive later or be absent in Global ROM due to adaptation priorities.[24][27] China ROM often embeds more system-level advertisements from Xiaomi's partner services, reflecting heavier ecosystem integration, whereas Global ROM features reduced ad presence but includes region-tailored content like Netflix optimizations in European variants.[24] Users on China ROM can sideload GMS, though SafetyNet attestation frequently fails, limiting banking and payment apps, unlike the native compliance in Global ROM.[24][28]
Aspect
China ROM
Global ROM
Pre-installed Apps
Chinese services (e.g., Baidu, WeChat); no GMS by default
Google apps (e.g., Play Store, Maps); minimal Chinese bloatware
MIUI's user interface prioritizes extensive personalization, enabling modifications to visual elements such as icons, wallpapers, fonts, and system animations through the integrated Themes application. This app connects to Xiaomi's online repository, offering millions of user-generated and official themes that overhaul the entire interface, including lock screens and notification shades.[1] The design draws initial inspiration from iOS aesthetics, featuring a persistent app drawer in early versions, but evolved to incorporate Android-like flexibility, with home screen grids adjustable from 4x5 to 8x5 icons depending on device resolution.[29]Customization extends to dynamic elements like the Control Center, introduced in MIUI 9 and refined in subsequent releases, which separates notifications (accessed via left-swipe down) from quick settings toggles (right-swipe down). Users can rearrange, resize, or add toggles for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and other functions, with later versions like MIUI 12 introducing pill-shaped media controls and floating notifications for enhanced usability.[30] MIUI 14 further advanced iconography with oval-shaped designs for a modern aspect ratio, alongside options for icon packs and adaptive theming that responds to wallpaper colors.[31][32]Advanced features include super wallpapers with 3D animations rendered via the GPU, customizable always-on displays showing time, notifications, and app data, and font replacements via the Themes store.[29] These options surpass stock Android's native capabilities, allowing users to emulate iOS-style rounded icons or create entirely novel layouts, though they require downloading from Xiaomi's ecosystem, which has raised concerns over bloatware integration in some themes.[33] Over iterations from MIUI 11 to 14, the UI shifted toward minimalism with reduced animations for smoother performance, while retaining deep customization as a hallmark, evidenced by performance benchmarks showing up to 13% faster app launches in MIUI 14 compared to MIUI 13.[34][35]
System Utilities and Integrations
MIUI incorporates a suite of built-in system utilities designed to enhance device performance, security, and management, including the prominent Security Center app, which features tools for cleaning junk files, scanning for viruses, optimizing battery usage, and managing app permissions.[36][37] The Security Center also includes real-time protection, data usage monitoring, and an app lock mechanism that secures individual applications via password or biometric authentication.[38][39]Additional utilities encompass a comprehensive backup tool capable of preserving system data such as contacts, call logs, messages, Wi-Fi settings, and app layouts, facilitating seamless data restoration across devices.[40] MIUI further provides integrated apps like an advanced calculator with unit conversion capabilities, a barcode and product scanner for quick information retrieval, and a notes application for everyday productivity tasks.[41][42] Game Turbo serves as a performance booster, optimizing resource allocation for gaming by prioritizing CPU and GPU usage while minimizing interruptions from notifications.[43]In terms of integrations, MIUI connects deeply with Xiaomi's ecosystem through Mi Cloud, enabling synchronized backups, photo storage, and cross-device data sharing with services like Mi Fit for health tracking.[44] The platform also integrates with the Mi Home app, allowing users to control compatible IoT devices such as smart lights and appliances directly from the phone's interface, fostering a unified smart home environment.[45][46] These utilities and integrations prioritize practical functionality, though their effectiveness can vary based on regional ROM variants and hardware capabilities.[47]
Compatibility and Ecosystem
Google Play Services Integration
MIUI's Global ROM incorporates Google Play Services as a core component, enabling seamless access to the Google Play Store, Google apps ecosystem, and APIs such as Google Maps, Firebase, and push notifications. Xiaomi devices intended for international markets undergo Google Mobile Services (GMS) certification, ensuring compliance with Google's requirements for app compatibility and security updates. This integration has been standard since Xiaomi's early global expansions, with Global ROM versions pre-installing the latest Google Play Services framework upon device activation.[24][48]In the China ROM variant, developed for the domestic market, Google Play Services are absent by default due to China's regulatory ban on Google services since 2010, which prohibits official distribution of GMS within the country. Xiaomi adheres to these policies by shipping China ROM without GMS, relying instead on its own GetApps store and proprietary services for app distribution and cloud features. Official support for installing Google Play Services on China ROM is limited or unavailable on select models, as confirmed by Xiaomi in 2021, to comply with local laws and avoid certification issues.[49][50]Despite the official exclusion, many ChinaROM devices from 2023 onward include underlying Google service frameworks, allowing users to manually enable and install the Google Play Store via Xiaomi's GetApps or APK sideloading methods. These workarounds, detailed in community guides, involve toggling "Basic Google services" in settings and downloading the Play Store package, achieving functional but uncertified integration. Success rates vary by model and firmware version, with potential limitations in features like Google Assistant or full API support compared to native GlobalROM implementations.[51][52][53]This bifurcated integration strategy accommodates Xiaomi's dual-market approach: Global ROM prioritizes interoperability with the Android ecosystem dominant outside China, while China ROM emphasizes local alternatives, reflecting broader geopolitical constraints on technology deployment rather than technical incompatibility.[24]
Cross-Device and App Ecosystem Challenges
MIUI's bifurcated ROM architecture—distinguishing China ROM from Global ROM—creates fragmentation in the app ecosystem. The China ROM excludes Google Mobile Services (GMS), substituting Xiaomi's GetApps and Mi App Store, which host fewer Western-developed applications, impose language barriers for non-Chinese users, and integrate promotional content.[24][50] Global ROM incorporates GMS for broader app compatibility via Google Play, yet MIUI's overlaid modifications can trigger installation conflicts, delayed updates, or suboptimal performance for apps expecting stock Android behavior.[54] This duality forces users to select devices based on regional needs, limiting universal app portability and complicating developer optimization efforts across variants.[55]A prominent app ecosystem hurdle stems from MIUI's stringent batterymanagement, which aggressively terminates background processes to conserve power, often disrupting essential functions like push notifications, messaging sync, and location tracking.[56] This behavior, driven by components such as com.miui.powerkeeper, prioritizes standby time over app persistence, requiring users to iteratively whitelist applications via settings for autostart, background activity, and lock-in-recents—measures that prove unreliable post-reboot or system filter cycles. [57] Developers report elevated support tickets for MIUI-specific tweaks, as standard Android Doze modes are amplified, affecting apps reliant on periodic execution without explicit exemptions.[58]Cross-device challenges arise from MIUI's mobile-centric design, offering rudimentary tools like Mi Share for peer-to-peer transfers between Xiaomi smartphones and limited IoT via Mi Home, but lacking native, low-latency features for broader ecosystems such as universal clipboard sharing, screen continuity, or seamless handoff to laptops and tablets.[59] Background killing exacerbates sync interruptions across devices, necessitating cloud intermediaries or manual interventions, in contrast to more integrated rivals like Samsung's DeX or Apple's Continuity.[56]Xiaomi's ecosystem expansion, including partial support for Windows linking, remains hampered by inconsistent implementation and regional ROM variances, contributing to user reliance on third-party solutions for multi-device workflows.[60] These limitations persisted through MIUI 14's lifecycle, prompting the shift to HyperOS for enhanced connectivity as of late 2023.[61]
Reception and Market Impact
Achievements in Accessibility and Innovation
MIUI's innovations have centered on enhancing user interaction and customization, introducing features such as floating windows for multitasking, which allow apps to run in resizable overlays, debuting in MIUI 10 and refined in subsequent versions to improve productivity on smaller screens.[62] Super wallpapers, launched in MIUI 12, utilize high-resolution planetary animations that adapt to device orientation, providing immersive visuals without significant battery drain through optimized rendering.[62] These elements, combined with a redesigned control center and app drawer options, have enabled deeper personalization compared to stock Android, influencing broader Android ecosystem trends toward fluid animations and modular interfaces.[63]In accessibility, MIUI integrates standard Android tools like TalkBack for screen reading, color correction for daltonism, magnification gestures, and voice CAPTCHA for verification, alongside Xiaomi-specific enhancements such as accessible menus and universal remote controls via IR blasters on compatible devices.[64] MIUI 12 introduced a customized accessibility shortcut menu, granting quick access to the Xiao AI voice assistant, power toggles, volume adjustments, and notification controls, streamlining navigation for users with motor or visual impairments.[65] Further updates added real-time subtitles and advanced voice controls, expanding usability for those with hearing or speech challenges, as part of Xiaomi's broader push for inclusive digital experiences.[66]By tailoring MIUI optimizations for budget hardware, Xiaomi democratized access to feature-rich smartphones, delivering premium-like performance at lower costs and capturing significant market share in emerging economies where affordability barriers previously limited adoption. This approach, emphasizing high cost-performance ratios, enabled millions to engage with advanced OS capabilities, fostering innovation in user-centric design while challenging incumbents through efficient resource management and ecosystem integrations.[67]
Criticisms of User Experience and Business Model
MIUI has faced substantial criticism for its user interface elements that prioritize promotional content over seamless functionality, leading to a cluttered and intrusive experience. Users frequently report advertisements appearing in system apps, file managers, security scanners, and even settings menus, which disrupt navigation and contribute to perceived sluggishness. For instance, in MIUI 10 and later versions, ads were embedded in core utilities like the GetApps store and Mi Browser, often requiring manual disabling through buried settings or third-party tools, a process that many found cumbersome and incomplete. Bloatware, including pre-installed Xiaomi ecosystem apps such as Mi Video and Mi Music alongside third-party promotions, further exacerbates storage consumption and battery drain, with reports indicating up to dozens of such apps on devices like the Redmi Note series as of 2023. These elements have been described by reviewers as detracting from the otherwise customizable iOS-inspired design, fostering a sense of over-commercialization that alienates users seeking a clean Android experience.[68][69][70]The business model underpinning MIUI, centered on low hardware margins subsidized by services revenue, has drawn scrutiny for incentivizing aggressive ad integration at the expense of user satisfaction. Xiaomi's commitment to maintaining no more than a 5% profit margin on devices, as articulated by executives, relies heavily on internet services and advertising income, which manifests in persistent system-level promotions even in global ROM variants. Critics argue this approach, while enabling affordable pricing—such as sub-$300 flagships—creates a dependency on user tolerance for monetization tactics, with no straightforward opt-out toggle introduced even in the transition to HyperOS in 2023-2024. In 2024, Xiaomi confirmed plans to reduce bloatware but explicitly rejected a single-switch ad disablement, citing revenue necessities, prompting backlash from users and analysts who view it as prioritizing short-term profits over long-term loyalty. This model has been contrasted with competitors like Google Pixel, where ad-free stock Android avoids such trade-offs, though Xiaomi maintains that ads adhere to "quality standards" to minimize intrusion.[71][72][73][74]
Controversies
Privacy and Data Practices
MIUI has faced significant scrutiny for its data collection practices, which involve extensive telemetry and user activity tracking embedded in the operating system and pre-installed applications. Independent analyses have revealed that MIUI gathers detailed information on app usage, device interactions, and browsing habits, often transmitting this data to servers in China and Singapore without comprehensive user opt-out options.[4] For instance, MIUI's analytics framework collects data on app launches, usage durations, and system snapshots during initial setup and updates, purportedly for performance optimization but raising concerns over scope and retention.[75]A prominent 2020 investigation by security researcher Gabi Cirlig, reported by Forbes, documented Xiaomi's Mi Browser and Mint Browser apps recording users' web visits, search queries, downloads, and even incognito mode activity for millions of devices globally, with data hashed but potentially de-anonymizable and sent to Chinese servers.[4][76]Xiaomi responded by asserting that collected data was aggregated and anonymized, denying personal identification, and introducing an opt-out for incognito data collection in browser settings effective May 2020.[77][78] However, critics noted that such telemetry persists across MIUI's ecosystem, including system-level logging of screen touches and interaction patterns via MIUI Analytics, which operates in the background.[79]In September 2021, Lithuania's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) issued a report after examining Xiaomi devices, identifying built-in mechanisms to detect and potentially censor sensitive terms (e.g., "Free Tibet" or "Tiananmen Square") via over-the-air updates, alongside aggressive data collection practices that transmit user information to Xiaomi servers without adequate safeguards.[80][81] The NCSC highlighted risks from Chinese national intelligence laws, which compel companies like Xiaomi to share data with authorities upon request, and advised against using such devices for sensitive communications.[82] Xiaomi countered that censorship features were disabled in European firmware and not activated without user consent, engaging third-party auditors to verify compliance.[83][84]Ongoing concerns persist into 2025, with GDPR complaints filed against Xiaomi for transferring European user data to China without sufficient legal basis, as acknowledged in the company's privacy policy and transparency reports, potentially exposing it to unrestricted governmentaccess.[85][86] While Xiaomi maintains adherence to ISO/IEC 27001 standards and claims no data sales to third parties, independent findings underscore discrepancies between policy assurances and observed transmission volumes, fueling debates on transparency in Chinese-manufactured OS skins.[79][6] Users can mitigate some tracking by disabling MIUI analytics in settings or installing custom ROMs, though system-level integrations limit full circumvention without rooting.[87]
Advertising and Monetization Tactics
MIUI employs built-in advertising as a core monetization strategy, embedding promotions directly into system-level interfaces and pre-installed applications to generate revenue from users who purchase low-margin hardware. Ads appear in utilitarian areas such as the Settings menu, Security app scanner results, file manager recommendations, and even app folders, often promoting Xiaomi's GetApps store, Mi Browser extensions, or third-party games and services.[88][68][69]This tactic aligns with Xiaomi's overarching business model, which subsidizes affordable smartphones through software-driven income, including ads and preloaded apps that drive in-app purchases or app downloads. In September 2018, Xiaomi executives confirmed the presence of these ads, describing them as "unobtrusive" and necessary to sustain ecosystem services without raising device prices, while pledging to maintain quality standards to avoid degrading user experience.[89][69]Advertising forms a substantial portion of Xiaomi's internet services revenue, which encompasses MIUI-delivered promotions; for Q2 2025, this revenue hit RMB 6.8 billion, up 14.6% year-over-year, with full-year 2024 figures reaching RMB 24.7 billion.[8][90]Disabling ads requires navigating fragmented toggles, such as deactivating "recommendations" in individual apps like MSA (MIUI System Ads) or GetApps, but complete removal often demands advanced methods like DNS filtering or rooting, leaving residual promotions in core functions.[68][69] Xiaomi's Mi Ads platform supports this by enabling precise targeting via user demographics and behavior within native MIUI apps, yielding elevated click-through rates compared to external networks due to seamless integration.[91][92]Critics argue these tactics prioritize revenue over usability, with ads intermittently disrupting workflows in non-optional system tools, though Xiaomi counters that they fund innovations like extended software support without premium hardware pricing.[68][89] No ad-free subscription exists for MIUI, distinguishing it from models like Amazon's Fire OS, and persistence across updates has fueled user backlash, particularly in global markets where privacy norms differ from China's app-centric ecosystem.[68][69]
Technical Issues
Security Vulnerabilities
MIUI, Xiaomi's customized Android operating system, has exhibited several security vulnerabilities in its framework, system applications, and pre-installed components, potentially enabling unauthorized data access, code execution, and privilege escalation. These issues stem from improper input validation, exported components susceptible to interception, and inadequate permission enforcement in MIUI-specific services.[93][94]In April 2023, security researchers at Oversecured disclosed 20 vulnerabilities affecting Xiaomi devices running MIUI and its successor HyperOS, with many impacting core MIUI elements such as the Security app (com.miui.securitycenter), Settings (com.android.settings), and MIUI Bluetooth (com.xiaomi.bluetooth). Notable flaws included shell command injection in the System Tracing app (com.android.traceur), allowing arbitrary command execution via unchecked inputs; intent redirection in the Security app, granting system-level access to arbitrary activities; and path traversal in MIUI Bluetooth for stealing arbitrary files. Additional issues involved binding arbitrary services, implicit intents leaking Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and telephony data, and overwriting files via the Print Spooler. These vulnerabilities, exploitable by malicious apps or attackers with basic access, could lead to data theft, account deletion, or full device compromise, affecting millions of users prior to patches. Xiaomi acknowledged and resolved the reported issues following disclosure.[93][95][96]Xiaomi's official security bulletins further document framework-level vulnerabilities in MIUI-equipped phones, such as CVE-2024-45356, an unauthorized access flaw with a CVSS score of 7.3 (high severity) due to improper validation, published on February 21, 2025. Similarly, CVE-2024-45355 (CVSS 5.5, medium) and CVE-2024-45347 (CVSS 9.6, critical) in the Mi Connect Serviceapp enabled unauthorized access and sensitive information leakage through protocol flaws. These were addressed via system updates, reflecting Xiaomi's ongoing patch releases, though exploitation risks persisted until applied.[94]Earlier incidents include a 2017 vulnerability in the Mi Mover app, which bypassed Android's sandbox to transfer system and confidential data (e.g., payment information) without authentication on devices like the Mi Max 2, and flaws allowing uninstallation of device-administrator anti-theft apps without passwords. Xiaomi disputed some characterizations but recommended enhanced locking mechanisms. Such patterns highlight MIUI's historical challenges with exported intents and privilege management, though updates have mitigated many risks.[97]
Performance and Stability Problems
MIUI implementations have frequently encountered performance bottlenecks, manifesting as interface lag, animation stuttering, and delayed app responsiveness, particularly in mid-range devices under multitasking loads. Users of devices like the Xiaomi 11T reported noticeable slowdowns following the MIUI 13 update in early 2022, with issues linked to the pre-enabled memory extension feature that repurposes storage as virtual RAM, exacerbating I/O delays over time.[98] Similarly, MIUI 12 exhibited increased lag compared to MIUI 11 on hardware such as the Redmi Note 7, where benchmarks showed sustained but diminished fluidity in transitions and app switching due to heavier system resource demands from added customizations.[99][100]Stability concerns have included frequent app crashes and system-level failures, often tied to MIUI's aggressive battery and memory optimization algorithms, which prematurely terminate background processes and conflict with third-party applications. On Xiaomi devices running MIUI variants, app crashes have been attributed to custom ROM modifications and hardware-specific drivers, with developers noting inconsistencies that lead to force-closes in gallery apps or system UI elements, as seen in reports from MIUI 10 to 13 eras.[101][102] Random reboots and unresponsiveness plagued certain builds, such as MIUI 13.0.3, rendering devices like the Mi 11 series temporarily unusable until downgrades or patches were applied.[102]Battery drain has been a persistent complaint, with idle consumption spiking in updates like MIUI 14, where users observed up to double the drain compared to MIUI 13 due to unchecked background services and unoptimized Google app integrations.[103]Xiaomi acknowledged and addressed select stability flaws, including random shutdowns on Redmi Note models, through engineering fixes rolled out in June 2025, though user forums indicate that pre-update tweaks like clearing caches or restricting apps were often necessary mitigations.[104] These issues stem from MIUI's layered customizations atop Android, which, while feature-rich, introduce overhead that hardware limitations in budget segments amplify, prompting Xiaomi to iterate via OTA patches but not always preemptively.[105]
Evolution and Legacy
Version History Milestones
MIUI's development began as a custom AndroidROM, with its inaugural version released on August 16, 2010, based on Android 2.1 Éclair, drawing inspiration from iOS and Samsung's TouchWiz interfaces to offer a differentiated user experience on compatible devices.[106][10] Early iterations, including MIUI 2 in October 2010 and MIUI 3 in March 2011, focused on incremental refinements to stability and basic customization, still rooted in Android 2.x and 2.3 Gingerbread bases, respectively, without widespread hardware integration at launch.[106]A significant milestone arrived with MIUI 4 on January 19, 2012, marking the first alignment with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, introducing UI enhancements like improved notifications and theming options that bridged custom ROM aesthetics with emerging stock Android features.[106] MIUI 5, released March 1, 2013, on Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, diverged regionally by omitting the Google Play Store in the Chinese variant to comply with local app ecosystem preferences, while emphasizing smoother animations and battery optimizations.[106]MIUI 6, launched August 16, 2014—coinciding with the fourth anniversary of MIUI's debut—shifted to Android 5.0 Lollipop and adopted a minimalist design paradigm with flat icons, translucent elements, and new dynamic wallpapers, prioritizing visual simplicity over heavy theming.[106] This version expanded device compatibility, including Xiaomi's Mi 4 smartphone, and laid groundwork for performance tweaks amid growing user adoption, reaching 30 million active users by 2013.[9] MIUI 7 in August 2015, based on Android 6.0 Marshmallow, introduced bootloader locking measures to mitigate malware risks, alongside refined permissions and do-not-disturb modes, reflecting Xiaomi's increasing focus on security as hardware sales scaled.[106]Later evolutions emphasized gesture-based navigation and productivity: MIUI 9 (mid-2017, Android 8.1 Oreo) added split-screen multitasking, full-screen gestures, and face unlock, streamlining the interface for larger displays.[106] MIUI 11 (2019, Android 10) debuted system-wide dark mode, advanced power-saving profiles, and redesigned native apps like the gallery and file manager, enhancing usability in low-light conditions and extending battery life on devices such as the Mi 9.[106]MIUI 12, unveiled April 27, 2020, and globally launched May 19, 2020, on Android 11, represented a major aesthetic overhaul with floating notifications, enhanced privacy controls via app permissions visualization, and animations themed around "Touch the imagination, feel the reality," deployed initially on flagships like the Mi 11.[106][107] MIUI 13 (December 28, 2021, Android 12) prioritized security fortifications, such as improved app sandboxing, and fluid design tweaks for better multitasking on devices including the Xiaomi 12 series.[106]The penultimate major release, MIUI 14 (December 11, 2022), introduced efficiency-focused elements like super icons for customizable animations, super folders for app organization, and optimized resource scheduling at the kernel level to reduce latency, based on Android 13 for eligible models, while signaling the platform's maturity with over 600 million users by 2023.[106][9][108] MIUI 14's global stable rollout began February 26, 2023, covering most Xiaomi and Redmi devices by Q3 2023, before Xiaomi transitioned to HyperOS as its successor OS, announced October 27, 2023, to unify ecosystems across smartphones, tablets, and IoT devices.[109][110]
Transition to HyperOS and Future Implications
Xiaomi officially unveiled HyperOS on October 26, 2023, during its 14th anniversary event in Beijing, declaring it the successor to MIUI with the goal of creating a cohesive operating system spanning smartphones, tablets, vehicles, and IoT devices.[111] The company emphasized HyperOS's development origins dating back to 2017, framing the transition as an evolution to enable "human x device x car" synergy rather than a mere rebranding of MIUI 15.[111] This shift ended active MIUI development after version 14, redirecting resources toward HyperOS's architecture, which promises reduced latency, optimized resource allocation, and ecosystem-wide interoperability.[112]The initial rollout began in China with the Xiaomi 14 series in December 2023, marking the first devices to ship pre-installed with HyperOS 1.0 based on Android 14.[113] Global expansion followed in early 2024, with over-the-air updates provided to compatible MIUI-equipped devices such as the Xiaomi 13 series and Redmi Note lineups, though eligibility varied by region and model hardware.[112] By mid-2024, HyperOS 2.0 introduced refinements like lighter system footprints—occupying approximately 9.14 GB compared to MIUI's over 12 GB—and enhanced animations, though some users noted initial bugs and feature omissions from MIUI, such as certain security customizations.[114]As of October 2025, HyperOS 3.0, built on Android 16, has entered stable global rollout starting with the Xiaomi 15T series and extending to dozens of models through March 2026, incorporating AI-driven features under HyperAI for personalization and ecosystem management.[115] This progression underscores Xiaomi's pivot toward a "HyperConnect" framework, aiming to rival integrated platforms like Apple's, by minimizing silos between devices and improving data flow for tasks like cross-device continuity.[116]Looking ahead, HyperOS positions Xiaomi to sustain long-term software viability through commitments like five-year update cycles for flagships, potentially bolstering device longevity and market competitiveness amid scrutiny over past MIUI-era delays.[117] However, implications include ongoing risks of inherited issues like bloatware persistence and regional update disparities, with analysts observing that while core performance has advanced—evidenced by smoother multitasking and reduced overhead—the OS's success hinges on addressing user-reported instability in major upgrades.[118] Full ecosystem maturity could drive adoption in emerging markets but demands rigorous optimization to avoid alienating users accustomed to MIUI's customization depth.[119]