Itel Aqua Budget Phone Launches in India With IP67 Rating Under ₹2,000

Sanjay Goyal
Sanjay
Sanjay Goyal
Editor-In-Chief
Sanjay Goyal is the Editor-in-Chief of The Mobile Times, India's leading telecom and technology news publication. Based in Jaipur, Rajasthan, he covers India's telecom industry with...
- Editor-In-Chief
5 Min Read
© The Mobile Times

The Itel Aqua budget phone arrives in India with a certified IP67 waterproof rating, a spec usually reserved for phones costing three to four times more. Priced at the entry level, it targets first-time smartphone buyers and feature-phone upgraders across tier-2 and tier-3 cities. The IP67 certification alone could make this one of the most talked-about ultra-affordable handsets of 2026.

Quick Specs & Highlights

  • IP67 water and dust resistance rating
  • 1,200mAh battery; available in Black, Blue, and Red
  • Waterproofing at a price point below ₹2,000 — rare in the segment
  • Launched in India in early 2026; available via offline retail channels

What Makes the Itel Aqua Budget Phone Stand Out

The Itel Aqua budget phone carries an IP67 rating, meaning it can survive submersion in up to one metre of fresh water for 30 minutes. No rival at a comparable sub-₹2,000 price point currently offers that certification. Itel has positioned the device for users who work outdoors, in agriculture, or in construction — segments where accidental water exposure is routine. The phone ships in three colours: Black, Blue, and Red, giving it broader shelf appeal across retail counters in smaller Indian cities.

Itel Aqua budget phone | The Mobile Times
© The Mobile Times

Is the Itel Aqua Budget Phone Worth It Against Rivals?

The Itel Aqua budget phone faces competition primarily from JioPhone Next, Nokia 105, and Samsung’s entry-level feature-phone lineup. None of those devices carry an IP67 rating at a comparable price. JioPhone Next sits slightly higher in the price band and runs Android Go, making it a different category. The Nokia 105 4G lacks waterproofing entirely. On the single axis of water resistance, Itel has carved a clear gap that rivals have not addressed in 2026.

Buyers best suited for the Itel Aqua are daily-wage workers, students in rural areas, and households purchasing a second or third handset for basic calls and messaging. The 1,200mAh battery is compact by modern standards, so heavy users or those relying on the phone for media consumption will find it limiting. For someone who needs a durable, water-resistant device for calls and light use, the specs align precisely with that narrow but very large Indian consumer base.

“At sub-₹2,000 price points, waterproofing has never been a checkbox manufacturers bothered with. Itel is betting that durability sells better than specs in rural India, and the data from feature-phone upgrade cycles suggests they may be right.” — Market Analyst

Availability & Verdict

The Itel Aqua budget phone is available through offline retail stores across India as of early 2026, with no confirmed e-commerce listing at the time of writing. The price sits in the ultra-affordable segment below ₹2,000. For buyers who need a waterproof handset and have no interest in smartphones, this is a straightforward buy. Anyone expecting app support, a camera worth using, or battery life beyond a day should look elsewhere. The IP67 rating is real; everything else is basic.

Sources: ITU ↗ | TRAI ↗ | GSMA ↗ Gadgets360 — Itel Aqua Price India Launch

People Also Ask

  • What is the price of the Itel Aqua budget phone in India? The Itel Aqua is priced in the ultra-affordable sub-₹2,000 segment in India. It is available through offline retail channels and comes in Black, Blue, and Red colour options as of 2026.
  • Does the Itel Aqua budget phone have a waterproof rating? Yes. The Itel Aqua carries an IP67 certification, meaning it can withstand submersion in one metre of fresh water for up to 30 minutes. No direct rival at the same price point offers this rating.
  • How long does the Itel Aqua battery last on a single charge? The Itel Aqua runs a 1,200mAh battery, suitable for basic calls and light use over one day. Heavy users or those relying on it for media and data-heavy tasks will likely need to recharge before the day ends.
TAGGED:
Share This Article
Sanjay Goyal
Editor-In-Chief
Follow:
Sanjay Goyal is the Editor-in-Chief of The Mobile Times, India's leading telecom and technology news publication. Based in Jaipur, Rajasthan, he covers India's telecom industry with a focus on 5G rollout, TRAI regulatory developments, smartphone market trends, and the evolving digital landscape for mobile retailers and industry professionals. With deep expertise in the Indian telecom ecosystem — including Jio, Airtel, BSNL, and Vi — Sanjay brings practical, trade-focused analysis to topics ranging from spectrum policy to enterprise IoT and AI adoption. He founded The Mobile Times to serve India's mobile retail and telecom business community with timely, accurate, and actionable news.
Leave a Comment