Best US market phones of 2023 - buyer’s guide

GSMArena team, Last updated 20 July 2023.

Last updated: May 17, 2024 (Changelog)

Seeing how popular our Buyer's guide is, we decided to do one specifically for the US market because it is pretty different from the other parts of the world.

One important difference is that the major Chinese brands are almost absent. Not all of them (there is OnePlus), but the vast majority of popular Chinese brands of smartphones such as Xiaomi, Realme, Oppo, vivo, etc., are only available as gray imports.

In addition, the traditional brands with a presence in the US market offer a more limited selection of their smartphones. For instance, the high-end Nords from OnePlus are not available, Motorola's Edge family is small, while Samsung's Galaxy A series has been reduced to just a couple of phones.

The absence of strong competition from the Chinese brands also gives a fighting chance to some OEMs that wouldn't normally take a big cut of the total shipments. Motorola is just one example.

A few things to keep in mind, we didn't include any phones, which are considered gray imports. For once, you won't be getting after-market support and warranty in most cases, and secondly, it's hard to find a phone that would work with US carriers unless it's specifically made for the US market. That's why we try to keep things as official and retail in our selection as possible, and you will find most, if not all, of the handsets below available through the manufacturers' official stores or via the major retailers and the carriers themselves.

So, without further ado, here's our comprehensive list of devices, which are worthy of your attention and hard-earned cash in descending order.

Best phones above $1000


Editors' choice above $1000

Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max

Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max

Specs
  • Exquisite design, 19g lighter, 6m water resistence
  • Outstanding OLED display
  • Excellent battery life
  • Superb speaker loudness, balance, sound quality
  • Top-notch performance
  • Class-leading video recording, impressive Pro modes
  • Superb daylight and nighttime photos from all cameras
  • USB-C is here, upgraded connectivity across the board
  • At least five years of iOS updates
  • The best iPhone ever made, duh!
  • Pricier than competing Androids
  • Charging isn't particularly fast
  • Apple's iOS and ecosystem restrictions
  • The GPU throttles heavily under load
  • The photo processing could be more likeable

The iPhone 15 Pro Max is Apple's current best iPhone and we think it’s the best phone you can buy in the US. The iPhone 15 Pro Max is worth getting for its well-rounded user experience, luxurious design, its premium services and warranty, for its clockwork iOS, and for its versatile camera performance with great photos and exceptional videos. The great battery life doesn't hurt, and the introduction of USB-C means one fewer built-in shortcoming too.

Admittedly, iOS makes moving from an Android a daunting task and one that even comes at an extra cost - Apple's price tags tend to be higher than competitors across the OS divide. The slow charging and heavy GPU throttling may or may not be an issue in your world, but they're there anyway, and the photo processing isn't universally likable either.

In any case however, we reckon the good far outweighs the bad, particularly for the US consumer that gets to enjoy all the benefits of the Apple realm. Most of these directly apply to the regular Pro, of course, and it's up to you to decide which size suits you best.

Read full review
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold5

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold5

Specs
  • New Flex hinge for gapless design
  • IPX8-rated for water resistance
  • Outstanding OLEDs, bright, color-accurate, 120Hz
  • Impressive battery life in onscreen tests for a foldable
  • Feature-rich software, unmatched multi-tasking, S Pen support
  • Excellent photo and video quality, UD cam excluded
  • Charging could have been faster
  • The ultrawide camera should have been upgraded

The Galaxy Fold5 offers the best foldable experience on the market - while its hardware seems to trail certain more region-limited competitors there's no matching its complete software package. We applaud Samsung for the multi-tasking implementation on the Fold5 and all neat software tricks available throughout One UI, while the new S-Pen Slim Case means the stylus is now even more convenient to carry around.

Samsung did hold back updating some of the Fold5's internals. The camera system in particular would have benefited from an update - of the ultrawide, at least. The charging speed is rather meh as well. That body, while looking pretty cool on its own, is nowhere near as striking as rivals from China.

Still, the Fold5 offers ingress protection, spectacular displays, great performance, even pretty nice cameras, all things considered. Its battery life is solid, and so are the speakers, and the connectivity options.

At the end of the day, the Fold5 is an easy decision for any tech-addicted user, or any power user. Even with the OnePlus Open and the Pixel Fold available in the US, the Galaxy's versatile software and proven track record with bendy displays makes it a much easier recommendation.

Read full review
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra

Specs
  • Traditional Note form factor, still premium as ever
  • Tougher materials and build all around, the titanium frame is nice to the touch, the target audience will likely appreciate the return to a flat screen
  • The new display glass offers an improved viewing experience, and the display itself is plenty bright
  • Battery life is towards the top of the class; charging is faster than Pixels or iPhones
  • The S Pen is just as unique a proposition in 2024 as it has been for years
  • Exciting One UI with plenty of AI, DeX support, and great connectivity options
  • Camera system as versatile as ever thanks to an even more useful telephoto and overall improved processing
  • Charging speed is still behind the curve; the phone is picky about adapters, and the bundled cable is 3A only
  • Illogical image quality disparity between 10x and slightly lower zoom levels

The Galaxy S24 Ultra remains Samsung's ultimate smartphone, and it's the most complete package you can buy today. Samsung didn't just coast for another year, which we felt was the case with the S23 Ultra. We got more new stuff this time around than we could have predicted. The new materials in the build don't just feel nice; they also improve the visual experience. After years of enjoying the coolness of curved displays, we've now grown up to realize that flat screens have their benefits, and Samsung's now giving us flat screens across the range.

Without much fuss around that subject, the S24 Ultra is one of the longest-lasting Androids you can buy, and even if the big names from China charge three times as fast, the Pixel and the iPhone don't. An always-with-you stylus remains elusive outside of the Samsung flagship, and you may not know you want or need one until you've had one.

The camera system is also mostly a source of satisfaction. The rethinking of the telephoto setup is a forward step that adds another layer of versatility. The rest of the rear modules we'd almost call stale next to what we're seeing from Chinese brands and their impressive hardware, but Samsung has managed to squeeze out such performance out of these otherwise uninspired bits that it doesn't feel like we're getting less than what is right.

Yes, there were display issues. And, yes, the charging is far from great. But in the end, Samsung's ultimate smartphone comes easily recommended.

Read full review
OnePlus Open

OnePlus Open

Specs
  • Outstanding design and build
  • Excellent displays - bright, color-accurate, Dolby Vision
  • Good battery life, fast to charge
  • The Dolby Atmos 3-speaker setup works quite well
  • Impressive photo and video quality from the rear cameras
  • Superb portraits and selfies with the rear cameras
  • Feature-rich software, great for multi-tasking
  • Only IPX4 splash-proof - the Pixel and the Galaxy are IPX8-rated for submersion.
  • No HFR gaming
  • Hazy photos from the cover camera
  • Tele camera should fire more often at night
  • No stylus support

The OnePlus Open is a great addition to the foldable segment, one that has everything to make the Galaxy Z Fold5 sweat. The Open has a classier and supposedly sturdier design; it's thinner and lighter. And it became evident it has better displays - both are of higher resolution, higher color bitrate, and support Dolby Vision. The cover one also offers a much more convenient aspect ratio than the Samsung.

The OnePlus Open runs on the latest available (at the time of writing) Snapdragon chip, and its cooling solution and software optimizations make for a nicely stable performance with no harsh throttling or frame heating. We also found the battery life of the Open to be great, no matter if it was closed or open. The charging speed is more than adequate - better than on the Galaxy; the 3-speaker Dolby Atmos experience turned out good, too.

The Hasselblad cameras are thoroughly impressive with natural rendition and overall impressive photo and video quality across the board, day and night. We are particularly fond of the selfies, portraits, and closeups shot with this setup. The 'selfie' cameras mostly unremarkable results are not that relevant for this form factor, but the most frustrating thing we experienced was the camera app avoided using the actual telephoto camera for zoom photos at night, which is a shame as it snaps superb photos..

Finally, the OxygenOS 13 is incredibly feature-rich and highly customizable, while the foldable-exclusive Open Canvas multi-tasking is super clever once you get the gist of it. OnePlus is promising 4 years of major Android updates and another one of security patches, too.

The OnePlus Open is an excellent alternative to the Fold5 if a stylus is not a must and if you don't plan on (accidentally) taking it underwater.

Read full review

Best phones up to $1000


Editors' choice up to $1000

Google Pixel 8 Pro

Google Pixel 8 Pro

Specs
  • The visor still makes for a recognizable design; the flat screen helps with usability and screen protectors
  • Spectacularly bright display, sharp, color-accurate, with a competent adaptive refresh rate
  • Android from the source, exclusive feature set, 7 years of software support
  • Versatile camera with great quality overall
  • Battery life is not competitive
  • While improved, charging speed is still behind the curve
  • The Tensor G3 chipset doesn't compare well in raw performance or stability under load

With the Pixel 8 Pro Google has made strides to address a host of the complaints we had about the previous generation. No longer is the selfie camera a hit-and-miss affair, and the new ultrawide is also miles better than before. The improvement in charging speed didn't go unnoticed either, but the Pixel had so much to catch up here that it couldn't all happen in one generation. The in-house chipset isn't quite up to the standard of the day in absolute performance and doesn't handle sustained load with much grace.

Moving to the good stuff, it's not just that the ultrawide camera is no longer a source of grievances, but the telephoto has been improved too. So, with both flanks of an already great main camera now covered, the normally excellent cameraphone is now somehow even better.

The brand-new display is now up there with the leading efforts in the industry - not that the old one was bad, it's just that this Super Actua panel is more deserving of high praise, than a simple 'yeah, that's good enough'. Similarly, the already stellar software support gets promoted to best-in-business - we'll see how quickly Google will forget about that 7-year promise, but right now, it sounds really nice.

This year Google has also fitted a thermometer on the Pixel 8 Pro - we're not quite sure just how useful it is yet, but if no one else has one, it has to be a plus. What we find to be another welcome development is the flat display.

In the end, we think the Pixel 8 Pro is the evolutionary upgrade you'd expect it to be and then some. Google could have done less this generation and still charged the extra $100, but instead, they actually did bring some meaningful improvements that move the series forward. We approve. Every now and then it goes for $800, which we approve even more.

Read full review
Apple iPhone 15 Pro

Apple iPhone 15 Pro

Specs
  • Exquisite design, 19g lighter, 6m water resistence
  • Outstanding OLED display
  • Excellent battery life
  • Superb speaker loudness, balance, sound quality
  • Top-notch performance
  • Class-leading video recording, impressive Pro modes
  • Superb daylight and nighttime photos from all cameras
  • USB-C is here, upgraded connectivity across the board
  • At least five years of iOS updates
  • The best iPhone ever made, duh!
  • Pricier than competing Androids
  • Base storage is just 128GB
  • Charging isn't particularly fast
  • Apple's iOS and ecosystem restrictions
  • The GPU throttles heavily under load
  • The photo processing could be more likeable
  • Doesn't have the Max's 5x tele

The iPhone 15 Pro is a logical if not quite exciting, evolutionary step for the lineup. Small advancement in key areas go with continued refusal to improve on others, but Apple will be Apple. Perhaps that statement alone explains the fact that the new 5x telephoto only comes on the Pro Max and not the Pro, and we're bummed about it on principle, even if it's objectively not a big deal.

The high price, scant retail bundle, iOS quirks, and heavy throttling sound like cons we've listed before and will continue to do so. On the other hand, traditional strong points of the iPhone are only getting stronger - like the upmarket build and in-hand feel, spectacular display, versatile camera system and great speakers. We're more than happy to welcome the USB-C port this year on iPhone too.

Ultimately, the iPhone 15 Pro is what you'd expect it to be - the best one to date in size small.

Read full review
Motorola Razr 40 Ultra

Motorola Razr 40 Ultra

Specs
  • Nice design with some ingress protection
  • Great main display with a rather unobtrusive crease
  • Excellent external display that delivers a wow factor and supports full-fledged apps
  • Polished software with 3 years of major updates
  • Exceptional selfie performance, good ultrawide camera
  • Flagship-grade performance
  • Good battery life
  • The main display is capped at 120Hz in most scenarios despite the 165Hz rating
  • Aggressive thermal throttling under load
  • Average battery life, slow wired and wireless charging

Nominally at $999, but often discounted and bundled with Bose earbuds, the Motorola Razr+, also known as Motorola Razr 40 Ultra elsewhere, packs some impressive flagship hardware. Both displays are great, and we like the foldable screen implementation. They are vivid and bright enough, while the external screen offers almost full functionality. The chipset may not be the most recent one, but it's capable of running everything you find on Play Store. However, there are several pitfalls that are hard to ignore, even in the context of a foldable device.

The stills and videos are cropped when the device is closed, the charging speed is unimpressive, and the battery life is about average. Sustained performance may also be an issue for some of you who like to play demanding games from time to time. And although powerful enough, the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 isn't as energy-efficient as its successor, the SD8 Gen 2. A flip phone with such a small battery would have benefitted from the extra hardware efficiency gains.

All in all, the Razr 40 Ultra marks a big improvement over its predecessor. It's competitive in the clamshell foldable category, and its asking price may get you any 2023 flagship smartphone with fast charging, longer battery life and excellent camera performance. That's the price - both literally and metaphorically - for getting this exclusive form factor and iconic name.

Read full review
Samsung Galaxy Z Flip5

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip5

Specs
  • Finally - gapless design
  • IPX8-rated for water resistance
  • Large and useful cover display with potential for further software tweaks
  • Outstanding foldable display - bright, color-accurate, 120Hz, HDR
  • The latest and greatest Snapdragon chipset
  • Great all-round camera experience and quality
  • Improved battery life, faster charging
  • Heavily throttles under 100% CPU/GPU load
  • No charger in the box
  • Running full apps on the cover display requires going through hoops
  • No DeX support

The Z Flip5 comes with two meaningful and significant upgrades over the previous generation. The gapless folding design is finally here, so the handset no longer looks like a prototype - it's sexier this way but also simply more compact. The other thing is the cover display - the new one is large enough to actually be useful for a change.

Alongside those two major developments, we're getting a handful of small ones that add up. The new chipset deserves a mention even if it was a given, but it's also at least partially responsible for the improved battery life compared to the previous generation - it has to be, since battery capacity has remained the same. Similarly, the camera hardware is unchanged, yet the 5 takes better pictures than the 4.

The Galaxy Flips have been steadily evolving, and with the Z Flip5, Samsung is approaching that point where it would need to do something big soon. For this year, however, we think a cover display and hinge will do. We'd be happy recommending the Galaxy Z Flip5.

Read full review

Best phones up to $900


Editors' choice up to $900

Apple iPhone 15 Plus

Apple iPhone 15 Plus

Specs
  • Ceramic Shield Glass on the front, IP68 up to 6m deep
  • Brighter OLED panel with Dolby Vision and Dynamic Island
  • Class-leading battery life
  • Flagship-grade performance even if not the latest chipset
  • Improved main camera performance, nice selfies
  • Outstanding video quality and stabilization across the board, great action clips
  • Considerably more expensive than corresponding Android alternatives
  • The display is 60Hz; there is no Always On option
  • Charging speed is not competitive
  • No dedicated telephoto camera and disappointing performance out of the ultrawide
  • Apple's iOS restrictions can be off-putting to newcomers to the ecosystem

Overall, the iPhone 15 Plus boasts a significant upgrade over its predecessor in a couple of key departments - display, battery life, performance, main camera and charging.

It's still nowhere near the Pro lineup, and it's missing features such as this year's chipset, the optical zoom, the autofocus on the ultra-wide camera, the 120Hz high-refresh-rate screen that comes with Always-On Display, or the new customizable Action key. Depending on your priorities, the lack of some of these might be a deal-breaker for you.

The iPhone 15 Plus is one really niche device, but if we had to pinpoint one key feature – it would be its really impressive battery life. And then adding the well-rounded specs, we think have a winner here.

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Samsung Galaxy S24+

Samsung Galaxy S24+

Specs
  • Improved design, IP68 rating, Gorilla Glass Victus 2
  • Gorgeous AMOLED display, QHD resolution and LTPO adaptiveness
  • Excellent photo and video quality across the board
  • OneUI with 7 years of updates, AI goodness, DeX support
  • Chipset throttles fast and hard under extended load
  • Slow-ish charging, in the grand scheme of things

As usual, the Plus-size Galaxy offers a solid and dependable Samsung flagship experience with all (okay, most) of the bells and whistles - with some meaningful updates this year bringing it closer to the Ultra. The QHD resolution display (now LTPO too) is one such development, and the 12GB of RAM across the entire range is also most welcome. With 7 years of software updates promised, the Galaxy is a futureproof option too.

These improvements come on top of the already excellent build with Gorilla Glass Victus 2 and next-gen Armor Aluminum frame, and the IP68 ingress protection rating we've gotten used to from Samsung.

The S24+ is also a dependable point-and-shoot camera with photos that look great across the board on the first try and with amazing consistency from shot to shot.

Battery life has taken a bit of hit this year, though it's still solid, so not really grounds for complaint. What continues to bug us is the slow charging, though it's still better than the iPhones and Pixels of this world, so it's almost as if this global con turns into a US pro. The aggressive CPU and GPU throttling are less than ideal, but that's hardly specific to the Galaxy as well. The 8-bit color display is a blemish in the specsheet that's worth mentioning too.

Read full review
Asus Zenfone 11 Ultra

Asus Zenfone 11 Ultra

Specs
  • Awesome battery life
  • IP68-rated body with no-nonsense design
  • LArge display with 144Hz refresh rate, high brightness, thin bezels
  • Excellent burst performance
  • Great all-around camera results
  • Chipset throttles rather aggressively
  • Night mode can be slow without great benefits

The 2024 Zenfone may no longer be a mini, but the 11 Ultra is a pretty solid plus-size model. Indeed, while having a compact device option is great (the Zenfone 10 remains on sale), this larger size is better suited to what most people would want.

And it doesn't really have any glaring faults. The only thing that rubbed us the wrong way was the absence of a charger in the retail box, but that's mostly par for the course now, just new for an Asus. Perhaps cooling could be better for the beastly Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, but that in turn is a common flagship problem.

Other than that, we have nothing but praise for the Zenfone 11 Ultra. It is a superb device all around, worthy of rubbing shoulders with the best and most popular premium phones currently out there. Here's hoping it brings Asus some much-needed market success and wider popularity with buyers.

Read full review

Best phones up to $800


Editors' choice up to $800

Samsung Galaxy S24

Samsung Galaxy S24

Specs
  • Compact and lightweight
  • Improved design, IP68 rating, Gorilla Glass Victus 2
  • Gorgeous AMOLED display, LTPO adaptiveness
  • Excellent photo and video quality across the board
  • OneUI with 7 years of updates, AI goodness, DeX support
  • Chipset throttles fast and hard under extended load
  • Slow-ish charging, in the grand scheme of things

The $800 Samsung Galaxy S24 is one of the most compact Android flagships available and the small size does't come at the cost of cut features.

The phone has an excellent 6.2-inch LTPO OLED screen with high brightness and adaptive refresh rate - sure it's not QHD, but it doesn't need to be at this size. The most powerful chipset on the US Android market is also on board, as is a superb quartet of cameras that will reliably capture whatever you put in front of their lenses.

Starting with this generation, you also get 7 years of OS updates, and Samsung's close collaboration with Google means an abundance of AI-enabled functionality.

Read full review
Apple iPhone 15

Apple iPhone 15

Specs
  • It's an iPhone, and a 'cheap' one at that, as iPhones go
  • Great new colors
  • IP68 rating, Ceramic Shield on the front
  • Extremely bright OLED display, excellent HDR and color accuracy
  • Finally, a USB Type-C port
  • Solid battery life
  • Great stereo speakers
  • Excellent all-around performance
  • Great photo and video quality across all three cameras, new 48MP main cam
  • At least five years of iOS updates
  • A lot more expensive than corresponding Android alternatives
  • The display is still just 60Hz, with no Always-On option
  • Charging isn't particularly fast
  • No dedicated telephoto camera or autofocus on the ultrawide
  • Apple's iOS and ecosystem restrictions

Apple's smartphone ecosystem is mostly an isolated island at this point snd the vanilla iPhone definitely has its place. It's the one you get when you simply want "an iPhone," and since it just happens to be the cheapest of the latest bunch, it gets a lot of attention on that front as well.

As far as innovations go, the iPhone 15 brings much more to the table than its predecessor. The all-new and incredibly bright OLED display is a great step forward, and we appreciate Apple finally unifying its design with Dynamic Island across all models. And speaking of unification, Type-C was a long-overdue change. The other major novelty this year must be the new 48MP main camera. We found it to be excellent all-around and a noticeable improvement over last year's 12MP cam.

All things considered, the vanilla iPhone 15 will get you most of the way there to the full iPhone Pro-level experience.

Read full review
Apple iPhone 14 Plus

Apple iPhone 14 Plus

Specs
  • Sturdy design and sleek looks
  • Excellent OLED, Dolby Vision, HDR10, high brightness
  • Very good battery life
  • Top-notch stereo speakers
  • Flagship-grade performance even if not the latest chipset
  • Dependable photo quality from the main and selfie cameras
  • Outstanding video quality and stabilization across the board, great action clips
  • Every iPhone gets at least five years of iOS updates
  • Wide feature gap with the 14 Pro family: no 120Hz refresh rate, A16 Bionic, zoom camera or AF on the ultrawide
  • Slow charging
  • Apple's iOS and ecosystem restrictions

You could be after a larger display on your iPhone and within this budget, the iPhone 14 Plus will deliver that. A bonus that stems from the size is the larger battery capacity and hence - the better battery life.

The iPhone 14 Plus is one of the lightest 6.7-inch smartphones around with a flagship-grade design, screen, speakers, battery life, performance and video quality. The cameras may not be as good as the ones on the 15 generation, but trade-offs must be made.

Read full review
OnePlus 12

OnePlus 12

Specs
  • Excellent display, with Dolby Vision too
  • Great battery life, super-fast charging, wireless option is back
  • Universally great stills camera performance from the rear cameras, particularly good in low light
  • Selfies are better than most
  • Superb video stabilization
  • IP65 rating, when competitors offer submersion-grade IP68
  • Daylight video quality somewhat unimpressive

OnePlus may have lost its distinct character as the brand grew into maturity, but that doesn't mean they're not making great phones still. Sure, OxygenOS is now just another name for Oppo's ColorOS, but why should ColorOS be a bad thing. Certain issues we had with the OnePlus 11 have been resolved on the 12 and its only the sub-standard water protection that remains - essentially all other high-end phones are rated for submersion, while the 12 isn't.

We're not quite fond of the 12's video output during the day, though we're almost convinced that the spectacular stabilization makes up for shortcomings elsewhere. Selfies are also unusually good, but more important, we feel, is the overall great stills performance from all rear cameras in all conditions.

Excellence on the fundamentals should go without saying at this level. Even in this context, however, the OP12 is among the better ones in terms of battery life, charges faster than just about anything else mainstream, and has a display that does more HDR than a lot of competitors.

In the end, the OnePlus 12 makes it quite easy for us. It's so great in many ways and only has small-ish missteps in just a couple of areas - that sounds like grounds for a recommendation.

Read full review

Best phones up to $700


Editors' choice up to $700

Google Pixel 8

Google Pixel 8

Specs
  • Compact and premium build, easy to handle, dust- and water-resistant
  • Bright and color-accurate 120Hz OLED panel
  • Improved charging
  • Overall great camera quality
  • Superb stereo speakers
  • Android from the source, exclusive feature set, 7 years of software support
  • No AF on the selfie camera, no Pro camera mode
  • Ultrawide camera is underwhelming in low light
  • A dedicated telephoto camera would have been nice
  • Unimpressive battery life

The Pixel 8 offers an improved viewing experience compared to the previous generation, excellent all-round camera results, faster charging, 7 years of software support, and timely major OS updates. And, it is one of the most compact smartphones on the market.

But the Pixel 8 isn't without its flaws. For instance, a 3x telephoto unit would have been greatly appreciated. Charging and battery life aren't particularly impressive either, although somewhat okay in Pixel terms. We also wonder why Google decided to skip the autofocus feature on the selfie camera and the support for Pro camera mode on the smaller Pixel.

Bottom line, the Pixel 8 is an easy recommendation because, despite its issues, it's a significant upgrade over the previous generation and manages to pack competent hardware into a compact body. It's also nice that it gets good discounts every now and again.

Read full review
Apple iPhone 14

Apple iPhone 14

Specs
  • Bright OLED screen, HDR10, Dolby Vision and excellent color accuracy
  • Solid battery life
  • Loud stereo speakers, excellent output
  • Great all-around performance from the older but still competent chipset
  • Great photo and video quality across all three cameras
  • Autofocus on the selfies camera and Action Mode are great camera additions
  • Every iPhone comes with at least five years of iOS updates
  • Minor upgrade over iPhone 13, while the iPhone 15 is better
  • The notch is still a polarizing design element
  • The fast charging isn't particularly fast
  • Apple's iOS and ecosystem restrictions

There's an iPhone at every price point now and it's the iPhone 14 that comes in at $700. It was an incremental upgrade over last year's model, while the 15 seems to bring a bit more to the table, but $100 is $100. Battery life is solid, while the now two-year-old chipset remains plenty powerful.

The camera may not be the latest either, but you still get a reasonably large sensor on the main unit, top-notch stabilization and AF for selfies. Nice stereo speakers and robust update policy remain strong selling points as well.

Read full review
Asus Zenfone 10

Asus Zenfone 10

Specs
  • Compact body, standout styling, IP68 rating
  • Excellent battery life; now has wireless charging
  • Headphone jack, solid speakers
  • Fastest Android chip yet, solid sustained performance
  • Reliable camera kit and quality, wonderful video stabilization
  • Maximum display brightness is below the standards of the day
  • 2 OS updates isn't a lot
  • Autofocus now gone from the selfie and ultrawide cameras
  • No telephoto camera

The Zenfone 10 ended up without a true successor but it remains on sale here or there and it still brings heaps of performance into an easily pocketable package. Its small size doesn't get in the way of achieving excellent battery life, the Snapdragon chip isn't all too bothered by the compact body, and there was room for the usual headphone jack, but also for the addition of wireless charging.

While all that is great, it's just that we're not entirely sure that the gaming-only 144Hz refresh rate on the display counts, and we most definitely aren't thrilled about AF being gone from the ultrawide and the selfie camera, compared to the previous generation. The continued absence of a telephoto isn't helping the Zenfone's case either.

Still, getting this Zenfone 10 is not a bad idea at all. It remains part of a relatively short list of phones catering to customers prioritizing compactness over everything else. And it does deliver flagship specs and promising performance across the board.

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Motorola Edge+ (2023)

Motorola Edge+ (2023)

Specs
  • 165Hz Dolby Vision OLED screen
  • Dual Gorilla Glass Victus design, IP68-rated
  • Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset
  • Triple-camera on the back with a 50MP OIS primary, 50MP ultrawide AF, 12MP 2x tele
  • 60MP selfie camera with 4K video recording
  • Ready For support, clean Android 13
  • 5,100mAh battery with 68W wired charging
  • Fast wireless and reversed wireless charging
  • 512GB storage, stereo speakers
  • Only 2x zoom for the telephoto camera

The Motorola Edge+ (2023) is a pure flagship sold at an upper midrange price. While somewhat aging, it still impresses with a 165Hz OLED screen with Dolby Vision, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chip is easily powerful enough, and the powerful stereo speakers and waterproof design don't hurt. The phone has only one version and it comes with 512GB UFS 4.0 storage, which is quite nice.

The camera experience seems great, too. There is a 50MP OIS primary, a 50MP ultrawide with autofocus, and a 12MP 2x zoom tele at the back. 8K video capturing is available. Oh, and inside the small display perforation you will find a high-end 60MP selfie camera with 4K video recording capability.

The phone offers all sorts of connectivity options including Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.3, NFC, dial-SIM 5G (via eSIM), Ready For 3.5 support, even USB 3.2 with DisplayPort 1.4 support.

The only thing that’s probably average on this Moto is the short 2x zoom on the telephoto camera, other phones do better.

SPECS
Motorola Razr 40

Motorola Razr 40

Specs
  • Exquisite clamshell design with grippy vegan leather exterior
  • Great primary display with a rather unobtrusive crease
  • Helpful external OLED
  • Adequate battery life, fast charging
  • Loud stereo speakers, good audio quality
  • Great sustained performance, no throttling, no heating
  • Great all-round camera experience
  • Polished software with 3 years of major updates
  • Only basic ingress protection
  • We never saw 144Hz refresh rate on the screen unless forced
  • GPU performance is behind direct competitors
  • Electronic video stabilization needs improvement

Known outside of the US as the Razr 40, the Motorola razr can stand its ground successfully against most competitors and it does so from the comfortable position of being the cheapest-but-still-great clamshell. It's also nicely discounted more often than not.

We found its bendy OLED display to be of excellent quality, while its external panel turned out to be quite useful if a step behind the 2023 trends. The loud stereo speakers were also a nice touch, and the solid camera quality across the board was much appreciated. The battery life turned out to be adequate for such a device, and if Motorola addresses the high standby drain with an update it could well become great.

The Snapdragon 7 Gen 1 processor is perhaps more than enough for the category as we don't see many heavy gamers going for flip phones. So all things considered we liked the Motorola razr and while it doesn't feel like it will be the new V3, it looks destined to become the most popular of the new generation Razr phones.

Read full review

Best phones up to $600


Editors' choice up to $600

Nothing Phone (2)

Nothing Phone (2)

Specs
  • Unique glass design with Glyph UI, IP54-rated
  • Bright Fluid AMOLED, adaptive refresh rate, slim bezels, 1B colors
  • Excellent battery life, fast charging
  • Flagship-grade performance, good heat dissipation
  • Great photos and videos from all cameras, day and night
  • Lovely Nothing OS, up to 4 years of updates
  • No high refresh rate gaming; some GPU throttling may occur
  • Not IP68-rated

The Nothing Phone (2) is an excellent sequel and a tempting offer in this pretty tough crowd. The phone has something that no other phone, well, except Phone (1), has, and that's the Glyph UI. Even better, the LED functionality has been expanded, and it's a really cool and convenient way to see what's happening on your phone without looking at its screen.

The Phone (2) has a larger and brighter LTPO OLED display, with a much more adaptive refresh rate, a welcome update over the Phone (1). The most notable upgrade is the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 flagship chipset, which makes working with the Phone (2) a breezy experience, gaming included (albeit at up to 60Hz). Then there is the improved battery life. The richer audio from the stereo speakers. And better photo and video quality across the board. Let's not forget the faster 45W charging speed.

If you just want a breath of fresh air, an innovation of sorts in an otherwise boring market, the Nothing Phone (2) will not disappoint you. The fact that it's also solid on the fundamentals doesn't hurt either.

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Samsung Galaxy S23 FE

Samsung Galaxy S23 FE

Specs
  • Beautiful classic design, dual glass, IP68-rated
  • Fast OLED screen, decent brightness, great color accuracy, HDR10+
  • Very good stereo speakers
  • Flagship-grade performance
  • Reliable camera quality across the board
  • One UI with DeX support; 4 major Android updates
  • It's closer related to S22 than S23 and yet it arrives 18 months after the S22 family
  • Heavy weight, thick screen bezels
  • Unimpressive battery life
  • Strong GPU throttling
  • Price at launch doesn't make sense

Slotting inbetween the S23 and the S23+ in terms of screen size, the 6.4-inch Galaxy S23 FE is the not-quite-flagship for those willing to give up on some of the top-tier models' niceties in return for some savings - particularly in the US context.

While its name makes little sense, the phone itself is quite competent. What in our minds is a late Galaxy S22 FE has an attractive dual-glass design, a great OLED screen, capable hardware, consistently good cameras, superb speakers, and flagship software.

Read full review
Apple iPhone 13

Apple iPhone 13

Specs
  • High-end build - sturdy and waterproof
  • Bright OLED screen, HDR10, Dolby Vision
  • Dependable battery life
  • Loud stereo speakers, excellent output
  • Excellent performance, 5G
  • Great all-round photo and video quality across all three cameras
  • Minor upgrade over iPhone 12
  • No 120Hz refresh rate
  • The notch is still an eyesore even if smaller
  • The fast charging can be handled better

As we mentioned as part of our iPhone 14 entry, the iPhone 13 is an equally attractive offer as it is almost an identical phone, cheaper at that - now at $100 lower still. The iPhone 13, just like the 14, does lack a high refresh rate screen – its most notable omission. But the iPhone 13 is still one of the most durable and powerful phones on the market, yet lightweight and comfortable. The OLED screen is great; it has reduced though still huge notch, offers outstanding contrast and brightness, Dolby Vision and HDR10 support.

The iPhone 13 has a powerful Apple chip with 5G, a reasonably competent main camera and okay ultrawide and selfie shooters. Stereo speakers are on board, battery life is solid, and you get MagSafe support.

Read full review

Best phones up to $500


Editors' choice up to $500

Google Pixel 7a

Google Pixel 7a

Specs
  • Clean Android interface, exclusive features, timely updates
  • Chipset has plenty of oomph, GPU is beefier than most in the class
  • Flagship-grade photo quality from the rear cameras in most situations
  • Display is 90Hz amongst competitors with 120Hz (or higher)
  • Very slow charging, so-so battery life
  • Only 128GB storage option available
  • Portrait mode is subpar; selfies aren't great either
  • Video stabilization isn't flawless; video quality from the main cam is overall unimpressive too

The appeal of Pixel phones tends to be difficult to explain with just numbers and test results, and such is the case with the 7a. Google hasn't been quick to adopt a high refresh rate display on its 'midrange' model and even when it finally has, it's a 90Hz panel. Battery life is unremarkable, charging speed is downright unacceptable, the lack of storage options is limiting, and the Tensor G2 runs hot and throttles. There are also missteps in what should be any Pixel's forte - camera performance.

Counter the above, we have an Android experience tailored to Google's own vision with a clutter-free interface, Pixel-only features, and an update policy that's hard to rival. An otherwise meh flagship chipset does make for a pretty great midrange one, prone to throttling as it may be. And so long as you avoid people shots in most of their incarnations, the Pixel 7a's camera's system will deliver image quality that wouldn't be out of place on an actual flagship.

In summary, with the 7a, Google appears to have simply created a more affordable Pixel 7, making the latest a-series model the go-to option for someone just looking for a Pixel. And it's one of the most sensible options in its price segment in the US in particular.

Read full review
Motorola Edge (2023)

Motorola Edge (2023)

Specs
  • Compact and lightweight, super grippy back, IP68 rating
  • Very fast wired charging, wireless available too
  • Android 13 interface akin to that on a Pixel, 'ready for' PC-like capability
  • Very potent chipset for the class
  • Competent camera setup for the class, particularly good results from main camera in low light; solid selfies too
  • No telephoto camera
  • Video stabilization isn't as good as the competition
  • Direct competitors offer longer and more timely software updates

The Motorola Edge (2023), sold in the US, is a mix of two Motos available globally - the Edge 40 and Edge 40 Neo. While we haven't really experienced the US version, we have plenty of findings for the other two to be able to tell what the Edge (2023) is going to be like.

We're really liking the Moto's form factor and it's a really nice option if you're after a more pocketable (especially lightweight) device in this class. The grippy back and IP68 rating are strong points too. The fast charging and wireless charging capability are most welcome as is the brawny Mediatek chipset. The nice camera system rounds up an overall very strong perfomnace.

SPECS
OnePlus 12R

OnePlus 12R

Specs
  • Excellent display, with Dolby Vision too
  • Class-leading battery life, super-fast charging
  • Excellent performance, solid sustained load handling
  • Superb photos from the main camera, particularly good in low light; better than expected low-light ultrawide stills too
  • IP64 rating when a lot of competitors offer submersion-grade IP67/IP68
  • No wireless charging
  • No zoom camera, low-res ultrawide without AF
  • Unremarkable daylight video quality, so-so stabilization

The OnePlus 12R's weaknesses may be readily seen in the specsheet - the lack of wireless charging and the IP rating will possibly disqualify it for some potential buyers. More limiting, we reckon, is the camera system that features a so-so ultrawide and is missing a zoom unit - that's the weak point that rivals can readily exploit.

That said, stills performance is superb on the main camera and not half bad on the ultrawide, with both excelling in the dark - that's anything but a disappointing performance, if you don't particularly care for video. Add to that a wonderful display, class-leading battery life, and charging speed that's also among the best (in any class), and the 12R isn't looking too shabby, all things considered.

Ultimately, whether the OnePlus 12R is merely good enough or just great for you will be decided on exactly how much you want to be zooming in or out on your cameras. Less frequent zooming - go ahead and pick up a 12R; more zooming - have a look at some other options first.

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Samsung Galaxy A54

Samsung Galaxy A54

Specs
  • Design makes it look like the flagship, IP67 rating is rare in the midrange
  • One of the best displays in the class - bright, 120Hz refresh rate, color-accurate
  • Great battery life
  • New chipset is back to A52s level of performance
  • Excellent primary camera across all use cases; very nice selfies
  • Latest Android and One UI
  • No charger in the box
  • New chipset is at Galaxy A52s level of performance
  • Video stabilization only available in 1080p

The A54 put the series back on the right track last year, so the delayed arrival of the A55 in the US isn't too problematic. Tha A54's chip may not be cutting-edge (roughly on par with the old A52s), but you get improved battery life, and an even nicer display.

The somewhat generic styling may not be overly eye-catchy, but it does quickly reveal your brand allegiance, and it can easily pass for the brand's flagship too. The dust and water protection rating is almost flagshippy too, and not a given at this price point.

The brand-new primary camera is a significant step up from the A53's, and it's one of the best units of its kind for the class, possibly even punching above its weight. The selfie camera takes great photos too, and the not-so-impressive ultrawide does the job.

That is, so long as you don't need it for video. Add to that the lack of stabilization in 4K, and the A54's viability as a video camera is more than slightly shaken. The fact that you don't get a charger in the box still rubs us the wrong way, and as good as the new chipset may be, it only brings us back to the level the series was at two years ago.

All things considered, we are quite liking the Galaxy A54. It's a meaningful generational improvement and a competent midrange package.

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Best phones up to $400


Editors' choice up to $400

Samsung Galaxy A35

Samsung Galaxy A35

Specs
  • Sturdy build with glass on both sides and IP67 ingress protection
  • Good quality 120Hz Super AMOLED display
  • Stereo speakers with good quality
  • Solid battery life
  • Latest Android and One UI
  • Good performance for this price range and great thermal behavior
  • Solid photo and video quality
  • 5G, NFC, microSD
  • No charger in the box
  • No HDR video support
  • Virtual proximity sensor not as good as a physical one

The Galaxy A35 is a very well-rounded device through and through and even if it doesn't do anything groundbreaking with the tried-and-true Galaxy A formula, it further refines the A3X series. You get glass on both sides (Gorilla Glass Victus+ on the front) and an IP67 ingress protection rating. The 6.6-inch Super AMOLED 120Hz display is still solid without really changing much from previous generations. A solid hybrid stereo speaker setup and a large 5,000 mAh battery with good endurance.

Performance-wise, the Exynos 1380 is a nice little step up from the Dimensity 1080 inside the A34. It is perfectly adequate for the class and enough to offer a fluent One UI experience. That experience will be a big draw for a lot of people with very few features still limited to Samsung's flagship models and outright missing from the Galaxy A35. Plus, the A35 comes with four years of major software updates and five years of security updates.

Red full review

Best phones up to $300


Editors' choice up to $300

Samsung Galaxy A25

Samsung Galaxy A25

Specs
  • Attractive & sturdy design
  • The Super AMOLED display now does 120Hz
  • Stereo speakers with good quality
  • Latest Android and One UI
  • Good performance for this price range and great thermal behavior
  • Great photo and video quality now with 4K video capture, lossless 2x zoom, great selfie photos&videos
  • 5G, NFC, microSD
  • No charger in the box
  • Still no official ingress protection rating
  • No automatic refresh rate switching and no HDR support
  • Video stabilization is only available in 1080p
  • Pretty poor all-around low-light camera performance
  • Virtual proximity sensor not as good as a physical one

The Galaxy A25 brings 5G to the A2x lineup but, while welcome, that's not the only sensible upgrade introduced to the formula. The move from 90Hz to 120Hz refresh rate might be relatively small, but it is meaningful and helps the phone feel smother and more responsive overall. You could probably eek some longer battery life runtimes out of it with the high refresh rate disabled so it's up to you to make that choice.

The jump up from the MediaTek Helio G99 to the Exynos 1280 might not be colossal in terms of raw performance either, but beyond the already mentioned 5G connectivity, it also brings 4K video recording - another small but significant update. The new stereo speaker setup also counts big time in our books, it's miles better than the single speaker offered on the Galaxy A24.

All of these small updates pile up and arguably place the Galaxy A25 closer than ever to Galaxy A3X territory regarding features. It still offers a solid build, now with a slightly tweaked design, which we found to offer a more comfortable grip. Both the battery life and performance are dependable, and the same can mostly be said about the camera setup. Well, at least in daylight. Low-light photography is a bit of a letdown, though still not bad enough to be a dealbreaker.

Read our full review
Motorola Moto G Stylus 5G (2023)

Motorola Moto G Stylus 5G (2023)

Specs
  • 120Hz 1080p LCD screen
  • Powerful enough Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 5G chipset
  • Water-repellent design, stylus
  • Dual-camera on the back with a 50MP OIS primary and 8MP AF UW
  • Stereo speakers
  • 256GB storage
  • 5,000mAh battery
  • LCD display may not be as attractive as an OLED

The Motorola Moto G Stylus 5G (2023) can be found at about $300 or even $250, and it’s an outstanding mid-range phone with a 120Hz display, good performance and reliable cameras with 4K video capture. The large battery is a thumbs up, too.

The Motorola Moto G Stylus 5G (2023) also offers clean no-nonsense Android experience. There are stereo speakers and plenty of storage, too.

SPECS
OnePlus Nord N30

OnePlus Nord N30

Specs
  • Thin, attractive design and sturdy build quality
  • Headphone jack and microSD expansion
  • Great battery life and fast charging
  • Solid stereo speaker setup
  • Decent overall photo quality
  • 5,000mAh battery, 50W charging
  • No OnePlus alert slider
  • LCD with poor color calibration and relatively low brightness
  • Display very rarely uses the max 120Hz refresh rate
  • Suffers from the occasional stutter and slowdown in performance
  • No ultra-wide camera
  • No 4K video recording

Overall, we like the OnePlus Nord N30 5G. It has a 120Hz display, a high-res camera, decent performance, stereo speakers, fast charging on a large battery.

We really wish the N30 had an OLED or, failing that, a better and brighter LCD and one backed up by proper high refresh rate handling. The Snapdragon 695 also leaves us kind of wanting, particularly in the video recording department, with its unfortunate 1080p capture limit. Some sort of ingress protection is also attainable in this price range.

However, having said all that, we still don't think the Nord N30 5G is a disappointment. Seeing how the US market has limited options in this price range, the Nord N30 does have a fairly decent market standing. We wouldn't recommend you actively go out to buy one, but you might not have too many alternatives and if you do end up owning it through some amazing deal or another circumstance, it is a solid budget device overall.

Read our full review
Motorola Moto G Power (2024)

Motorola Moto G Power (2024)

Specs
  • Large screen, 120Hz, small notch
  • Dimensity 7020 provides adequate performance
  • 50MP primary camera, 8MP ultrawide with AF
  • Android 13
  • 5,000mAh battery, 256GB storage, microSD, 3.5mm jack, NFC
  • Stereo speakers
  • Water-repellent coating
  • LCD display may not be as attractive as an OLED
  • No 4K video recording

The Moto G Power (2024) addresses a bunch of it spredecessor's shortcomings and makes for a nice budget-conscious package, now all the more well-rounded. The additions this year include an ultrawide camera (with AF nontheless), NFC, and faster charging (at 30W). Add to that the larger 120Hz LCD screen, a decent performing Dimensity 7020 chipset (with 5G), and a sizeable 5,000mAh battery, and there's not a lot to dislike about this Moto.

SPECS

Best phones up to $200


Editors' choice up to $200

Samsung Galaxy A15 5G

Samsung Galaxy A15 5G

Specs
  • Good-looking solid design
  • 90Hz OLED, good maximum brightness
  • Outstanding battery life, fast to charge
  • Good main and selfie cameras
  • EIS for videos
  • Dual SIM, 5G, NFC, microSD, 3.5mm jack
  • Android 14 with One UI 6
  • Lag and stutter are observable
  • Only 4GB RAM for the base model
  • Poor ultrawide camera
  • No charger in the box
  • Virtual proximity sensor

The Galaxy А15 5G is a balanced smartphone across the board. It has an easily likable design available in various cool colors; the OLED screen is bright and fast; the battery life is outstanding, and the charging speed is great.

The performance is not a strong side of the phone, and the cameras are rather average, with the ultrawide camera being straight-up disappointing, though it's still an upgrade over the A14 5G's entirely absent ultrawide. Overall, we'd say the A15 5G is the most smartphone you can get in the US for $200.

Read full review
Motorola Moto G Play (2024)

Motorola Moto G Play (2024)

Specs
  • Large screen, tiny punch-hole
  • 50MP primary camera
  • Dedicated microSD slot, 3.5mm jack
  • Water-repellent coating
  • No charger in the box
  • No UW camera

The Moto G Play (2024) is another possibility in this price bracket, and it's typically more affordable than the Galaxy. It has a large 720p LCD and a sizeable 5,000mAh battery - a virtue that will probably offset the slow charging capability, though that's been improved for the latest generation (15W vs. 10W on the 2023 model).

Also upgraded is the primary camera, the new 50MP unit being more in touch with the times than the predecessor's 16MP shooter. With that in mind, we'd be willing to forgive the lack of an ultrawide, which is also not something to consider a given to begin with in this price bracket. The 2MP macro and depth cameras of the old model won't be missed either. More importantly, the G Play (2024) has gotten a memory bump to 64GB of storage and 4GB of RAM, and we're now getting stereo speakers too. The water-repellent coating on the internals is a nice touch too.

SPECS
Motorola Moto G Stylus (2023)

Motorola Moto G Stylus (2023)

Specs
  • Stylus
  • Water-repellent design
  • Large 120Hz screen, tiny punch-hole
  • 50MP primary camera
  • Dedicated microSD slot, 3.5mm jack
  • Stereo speakers
  • 5,000mAh battery
  • No charger in the box
  • No UW camera

Motorola has styluses at multiple price points and you can still get the 4G version of the Moto G Stylus (2023). Its biggest selling point is, well, the stylus, but the phone also packs a 120Hz display and a 5,000mAh battery, as well as a decently capable 50MP main camera.

Niceties like a microSD slot and a 3.5mm jack also help its case. As most Motos, this G Stylus is also water-repellent offering some level of protection against the elements at a low price.

SPECS

Most recent updates

May 17, 2024: Added the Galaxy S24 Ultra, Galaxy S24+, Galaxy S24, Galaxy A35, Galaxy A25, Galaxy A15 5G, Asus Zenfone 11 Ultra, OnePlus 12, OnePlus 12, Motorola Moto G Power 5G (2024), Moto G Play (2024), Moto G Stylus (2023).

November 14, 2023: Added the iPhone 15 Pro Max, iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 15 Plus, iPhone 15, Galaxy Z Fold5, Galaxy Z Flip5, OnePlus Open, OnePlus 10T, Pixel 8 Pro, Pixel 8, Pixel 7a, Zenfone 10, Motorola Razr (Razr 40), Edge (2023), Moto G Play (2023), Nothing Phone (2).

July 20, 2023: Added the Galaxy S23, Motorola Razr+, Motorola Edge+ (2023), Moto G Stylus 5G, Moto G Power 5G. Removed the Galaxy S21 FE, Moto G Stylus 5G (2022), Motorola one 5G UW ace, Moto G Power (2022), OnePlus 10T, Motorola Edge 30 Fusion. Moved the Galaxy S23+, Motorola Edge 30 Pro, OnePlus 10 Pro, Motorola Edge (2022) and OnePlus Nord N20 5G to other categories.

April 12, 2023: Replaced Galaxy S22 Ultra with the Galaxy S23 Ultra. Replaced the Galaxy S20 FE with the Galaxy S21 FE. Replaced the Galaxy A23 with the Galaxy A23 5G. Moved the Galaxy S23+ to a different price category (cheaper). Added the OnePlus 11, Samsung Galaxy A54 5G, Motorola Edge Fusion 30, Apple iPhone 13 mini. Removed the Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max, Samsung Galaxy S22+, OnePlus 9 Pro, OnePlus 9, Samsung Galaxy A42 5G, Samsung Galaxy Xcover6 Pro, Apple iPhone 12 mini.

March 21, 2023: Replaced Galaxy A13 with Galaxy A14 5G (new top under $200).

November 23, 2022: Added Samsung Galaxy S23+.

November 23, 2022: Added iPhone 14 Pro Max, Galaxy Z Fold4, Galaxy Z Flip4, Google Pixel 7 Pro, Pixel 7, Zenfone 9, iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, OnePlus 10T, Galaxy S22+, Motorola Edge+ (2022), iPhone 13, iPhone 12 mini, Galaxy Xcover6 Pro, Nokia G400, Galaxy A13 5G, Galaxy A23 5G, Moto G Pure, OnePlus 9 Pro, Galaxy S20 FE. Removed Galaxy Z Fold3, Galaxy S21 Ultra, Pixel 6 Pro, OnePlus 10 Pro, Galaxy S22, iPhone 12, Zenfone 8 Flip, iPhone 13 mini, Galaxy S21 FE, Pixel 6, iPhone 11, Galaxy A52 5G, Motorola Edge (2021), Nokia G20.

August 3, 2022: Added Galaxy S22 Ultra, OnePlus 10 Pro, Samsung Galaxy S22 5G, Samsung Galaxy S21 FE, Asus Zenfone Flip 8, iPhone SE (2022), Galaxy A53, Pixel 6a, OnePlus Nord 20 5G, Samsung Galaxy A03s, Motorola G Power (2022). Removed Galaxy Z Flip3, ROG Phone 6s, OnePlus 9 Pro, Galaxy S21 5G, Zenfone 8, OnePlus 8T, Pixel 5a 5G, iPhone SE (2020), Samsung Galaxy A32 5G, Samsung Galaxy A12.

Dec 16, 2021: Replaced the Samsung Galaxy A32 5G with the Motorola One 5G Ace as our Editor's Choice in the sub-$300 category.

Best phones by category


Reader comments

  • Anonymous
  • 06 May 2024
  • IY4

Please update the list for the summer

  • hey
  • 11 Apr 2024
  • IGC

no sony phones??

  • Mark S
  • 12 Feb 2024
  • Iw3

Thanks for the great review of the Moto Edge+ 2023 I have it and it is truly the best Motorola has put out in awhile. Gives Iphone and Samsung a big run for their money!!!!!!