Huawei’s HarmonyOS on 55m phones as China steps up push for domestic software

2 min read Original article ↗

China’s home-grown software and operating systems like Huawei Technologies’ HarmonyOS are gaining traction, according to an official of China’s technology ministry, as the country accelerates its push to cut reliance on foreign technology.

More than 55 million smartphones ran on the HarmonyOS mobile platform as of the end of March, according to Ke Jixin, vice-minister of industry and information technology.

“Domestic software like operating systems and databases has been improving steadily,” Ke said at a press conference on Tuesday. “We have seen a transformative shift in the experience of using domestic software compared to a few years ago, as they become smoother and easier to use.”

HarmonyOS has seen rapid adoption in the past few years on the back of Huawei’s comeback in the smartphone market. It surpassed Apple iOS in China in late 2024, and in early 2025 was only behind Android as the second-largest operating system in the market, according to Counterpoint data.

HarmonyOS has seen rapid adoption in the past few years on the back of Huawei’s comeback in the smartphone market. Photo: Shutterstock Images

HarmonyOS has seen rapid adoption in the past few years on the back of Huawei’s comeback in the smartphone market. Photo: Shutterstock Images

However, it faced renewed competition in the fourth quarter of 2025 amid the strong local reception for the iPhone 17 series. HarmonyOS, holding a 16 per cent market share in China, was pushed to third place by iOS with 22 per cent, while Android maintained its lead with 61 per cent of the market in the period, according to the latest Counterpoint data.