This article describes a tandem photoelectrochemical cell that captures and converts visible to near infrared light to deliver a power conversion efficiency of ∼ 7%. In this tandem device the photocathode was prepared from p-type nickel oxide sensitized with silver bismuth sulfide (AgBiS2) quantum dots and was paired with a photoanode based on cadmium sulfide-sensitized titania. Trigonal-selenium sub-microtubes (t-Se s-μT) were anchored to the photoanode and served two roles: (1) enhancement of the conductivity under illumination (with holes as majority carriers); (2) co-sensitization provided more electron-hole pairs that increased the device performance by 1.5-fold. The separate p-type (AgBiS2/NiO−Ni) and n-type (TiO2/CdS/Se−Ni) solar cells were characterized as well as the (p/n) tandem cell architecture with a quasi-solid polysulfide/silica gel electrolyte under 1 sun illumination (AM 1.5G). The results provide scientific insights into the proposed charge flow mechanism via favourable energy level alignment in this unique device. © 2022 Elsevier B.V.