This study tackles the significant challenge of phase separation in mixed halide (Br
–/Cl
–) perovskite systems, which severely affects the spectral stability of blue perovskite light-emitting diodes (PeLEDs). A compositional engineering strategy is proposed, precisely controlling the Cs:Pb molar ratio (1∶1 to 1.1∶1) in precursor solutions to construct a CsPb(Br
1–xCl
x)
3/Cs
4Pb(Br
1–xCl
x)
6 composite phase structure. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) mapping and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis confirm that Cs
4Pb(Br
1–xCl
x)
6 nanocrystals (5–8 nm in diameter) grow in situ and uniformly encapsulate CsPb(Br
1–xCl
x)
3 microparticles (50–100 nm). This composite architecture has double functional advantages: 1) the Cs
4PbX
6 shell acts as a physical barrier, reducing halide ion migration activation energy and suppressing phase segregation during continuous operation; 2) the wide-bandgap (3.9–4.3 eV) Cs
4PbX
6 induces quantum confinement effects, confining carriers within CsPbX
3 while passivating defect states, thereby improving perovskite performance. The optimized PeLED achieves notable improvements in brightness, external quantum efficiency, and operational stability, maintaining stable emission at 478 nm under a 50 mA/cm² current density. This is achieved by inhibiting halide phase separation and enhancing the efficiency of carrier recombination achieved by the cesium-lead halide heterojunction system. This work provides fundamental insights into phase-stable perovskite design via composite crystallization kinetics, providing a viable pathway toward commercial-grade blue PeLEDs for full-color displays.