Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max Underwater Photography Guide: Features, Tips & DIVEVOLK Housing

By DIVEVOLK • Published April 16, 2026 • Updated April 17, 2026
huawei mate 80 diver coral reef underwater

The underwater world demands more from a camera than any land-based scenario. Light fades fast, colors shift blue-green within meters, and subjects rarely hold still. For smartphone underwater photographers, the question has always been: can a phone's imaging system actually handle these challenges? With the Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max and its second-generation XMAGE imaging system, the answer is a convincing yes—especially when paired with a DIVEVOLK underwater phone housing rated to 60 meters.

Here's what makes the Mate 80 Pro Max stand out for underwater shooting, and how to get the most from it beneath the surface.

XMAGE Imaging System: Hardware Built for Underwater Color Accuracy

The single biggest frustration in underwater photography is color loss. Water absorbs red wavelengths first, turning vibrant reef scenes into flat blue-green washes. The Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max tackles this at the sensor level.

The primary camera uses a 50MP sensor with an RYYB color filter array—replacing one green pixel with yellow—which captures significantly more light than traditional RGGB sensors. Combined with a variable F1.4–F4.0 aperture and OIS stabilization, the main shooter pulls in enough light to keep ISO low and noise minimal even at depth.

The real differentiator is the 17.5 EV dynamic range. Underwater scenes are notoriously contrasty: sunbeams piercing through the surface create harsh highlights while reef overhangs plunge into deep shadow. With 17.5 stops of dynamic range, the Mate 80 Pro Max retains detail across both extremes in a single frame—no need to bracket or rely on HDR compositing.

White and yellow nudibranch macro photograph captured with Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max XMAGE underwater

Macro and Telephoto: Two Lenses for Two Worlds

Underwater photography splits into two camps: macro (nudibranchs, shrimp, coral polyps) and wide/telephoto (reef panoramas, sea turtles, sharks). The Mate 80 Pro Max covers both.

The Fengsui Edition features a 50MP super-concentrating macro telephoto lens with 4x optical zoom. This captures stunning close-up detail of tiny marine creatures—the kind of shots that typically require dedicated macro lens attachments. For subjects at a distance, the standard Pro Max adds a separate 50MP super-telephoto for even greater reach, letting you photograph shy marine life without closing the gap and risking disturbance.

Transparent shrimp on bubble coral captured in macro with Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max underwater

Dedicated Underwater Photography Mode

Unlike most smartphones that leave you to fight auto-exposure in underwater conditions, the Huawei Mate series includes a dedicated underwater photography mode. Access it through the camera's "More" menu, and the phone automatically:

  • Adjusts white balance to counteract blue-green color casts
  • Optimizes autofocus algorithms for underwater subjects and contrast patterns
  • Fine-tunes exposure metering for the unique light conditions below the surface

This is a genuine advantage over competitors. Most phones require manual white balance tweaks or external red filters to get anywhere close to accurate underwater color. The Mate 80 Pro Max handles it in-camera.

Vibrant colorful nudibranch photographed in close-up with Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max underwater mode

Advanced Shooting Features That Translate Underwater

Beyond the dedicated underwater mode, several of the Mate 80 Pro Max's standard features work exceptionally well beneath the surface:

  • Super Macro & Macro Video: Get impossibly close to tiny marine critters—sea slugs, decorator crabs, coral polyps—with detail that rivals dedicated macro setups
  • AI Live Photos: Capture brief animated clips of marine life behavior, then choose the perfect still frame afterward
  • Video HDR Vivid & Video Log: Shoot in Log format for maximum latitude in post-production color grading—critical for correcting underwater color shifts in video
  • Slow Motion: Dramatic slow-motion footage of schooling fish, ascending bubbles, or jellyfish pulses transforms everyday dive footage into cinematic sequences
  • Motion Stabilization: OIS plus electronic stabilization keeps footage smooth despite surge, current, and the inevitable wobble of shooting one-handed while managing buoyancy

Outdoor Exploration Mode: Safety Beyond the Camera

The Mate 80 Pro Max isn't just a camera underwater—it's also a safety tool. Huawei's Outdoor Exploration Mode switches the phone to a low-power interface with integrated trail navigation, real-time location cards, and satellite weather data.

In areas with no cellular coverage, the phone can communicate with other Huawei devices via StarFlash technology—a short-range, low-power wireless protocol. For divers operating in remote locations, this means one device handles both imaging and emergency communication on the surface. Pair it with a DIVEVOLK SeaLink transmitter and you can even stream live video from underwater to the surface.

Diver silhouette with sunlight streaming through water above coral reef shot on Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max

Taking It to Depth: DIVEVOLK SeaTouch 4 Max Housing

The Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max carries an IP68 rating, but that certification only covers brief submersion in shallow fresh water—nowhere near sufficient for actual diving. To unlock the phone's full underwater potential, you need a proper dive housing.

The DIVEVOLK SeaTouch 4 Max is purpose-built for this. Key features include:

  • 60m/196ft depth rating—suitable for recreational and technical diving
  • Full touchscreen operation—access every camera setting, switch modes, review shots, all while submerged
  • Universal phone compatibility—swappable adapter trays fit a wide range of smartphones including the Mate 80 Pro Max
  • Accessory ecosystem—mount video lights, wide-angle lenses, red filters, and handles for a full underwater rig

The combination of the Mate 80 Pro Max's XMAGE sensor system and dedicated underwater mode with the SeaTouch 4 Max's depth-rated, touchscreen-compatible housing creates a genuinely capable underwater photography system—at a fraction of the cost and complexity of traditional underwater camera rigs.

Tips for Getting the Best Results

  1. Activate Underwater Mode first. Enter the camera's "More" menu and switch to Underwater Photography before descending. This locks in optimized white balance and autofocus.
  2. Use the macro telephoto for reef details. Tiny subjects like nudibranchs and shrimp benefit enormously from the 4x optical zoom—you can fill the frame without getting dangerously close.
  3. Shoot Log format for video. Underwater video always needs color correction in post. Log preserves maximum dynamic range for grading.
  4. Add a red filter in blue water. Even with built-in underwater mode, a physical red filter on the housing improves color in open water beyond 5 meters depth.
  5. Keep the housing maintained. Check o-rings before every dive and rinse with fresh water after. Visit DIVEVOLK Technical Support for maintenance guides.
Scuba diver photographing coral reef with dive lights using Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max in DIVEVOLK housing

The Bottom Line

The Huawei Mate 80 Pro Max brings a rare combination to underwater photography: a sensor built for low light, a dedicated underwater shooting mode, and a versatile lens system that covers both macro and telephoto ranges. Paired with the DIVEVOLK SeaTouch 4 Max housing, it becomes a serious underwater imaging tool that fits in your BCD pocket.

Whether you're documenting nudibranchs on a muck dive or capturing wide-angle reef scenes on a drift, this combination delivers results that would have required thousands of dollars in dedicated equipment just a few years ago.

Ready to take your Huawei underwater? Browse the full range of SeaTouch 4 Max kits or contact DIVEVOLK to find the right setup for your phone and diving style.

Further Reading

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Ricky é um Instrutor Master de Mergulho PADI com mais de 20 anos de aventuras de mergulho ao redor do mundo — de coloridos recifes de coral a naufrágios históricos. Morando em Bali, Indonésia, ele é apaixonado por fotografia subaquática e conservação marinha. DivevolkDiving.comRicky compartilha análises práticas de equipamentos, dicas de segurança e histórias pessoais do mundo subaquático, inspirando outros a mergulharem mais fundo e capturarem a beleza do oceano com as caixas estanque e acessórios para smartphones da Divevolk.