A foldable phone isnโt for the faint of heart. Theyโre generally heavier, pricier, and have less capable cameras than a standard slab-style phone. Theyโre also still not as durable as regular smartphones, though theyโre not nearly as fragile as they once were. In fact, thanks to Google, we finally have a foldable phone we can take with us to the beach.
There are basically two kinds of foldables at the moment โ the kind that fold like books and the ones that fold clamshell style, like your old flip phone. Hereโs how I think of it: a book-style foldable is like a phone plus a tablet, and a flip-style foldable is a phone plus a smartwatch. The book foldables provide an outer screen for all your regular phone needs, and then a tablet-like inner screen when you want, well, more screen. Flip phones come with a smaller secondary display on the outer panel thatโs useful for checking information quickly. When you need to do regular phone stuff, you unfold it.
What Iโm looking for
Thereโs no shortcut to properly testing a phone; I put my personal SIM card (physical or otherwise) in each phone I review and live with it for a minimum of one full week. I set up each phone from scratch, load it up with my apps, and go about living my life โ stress testing the battery, using GPS navigation on my bike while streaming radio, taking rapid-fire portrait mode photos of my kid โ everything I can throw at it. Starting over with a new phone every week either sounds like a dream or your personal hell, depending on how Into Phones you are. For me, switching has become so routine that itโs mostly painless.
The phones listed here have powerful processors and enough RAM to keep up for years, so itโs fair to expect more than a handful of OS updates throughout the life of your phone. Four years of new OS versions and five years of security updates is a healthy benchmark for this class, and many of the phones here meet or exceed that standard.
Most phone cameras can perform well in good lighting conditions, from the flagship class down to $300 budget phones. The devices listed here offer a little something extra, like a useful telephoto lens, a great portrait mode, or impressive low-light shooting โ and many include all three. Stabilization for the main camera unit to help in low light is a must in this category.
Most modern foldables carry an IP48 rating, meaning theyโre built to withstand full water immersion and solid particles 1mm or bigger. Devices with an IP48 rating arenโt fully protected from dust, which remains a concern when it comes to long-term durability. However, Googleโs Pixel 10 Pro Fold carries an IP68 rating, making it the first foldable to offer full water and dust resistance.
In addition to the best devices at any price, I look for phones that offer the best mix of must-have features for good prices. That might lead to a recommendation of a lower-tier model if itโs particularly feature-rich for its price or last yearโs model if itโs still sold new and this yearโs device doesnโt offer many upgrades.
So while they all fit in one category of folding tech, theyโre suited to two very different kinds of people โ someone who wants even more phone with their phone and someone who wants to be fully immersed a little less. Whichever category you fit into, youโd be wise to get the manufacturerโs extended warranty with your purchase; fixes can be expensive, and you wonโt be able to walk into just any phone repair shop to get them. If you donโt opt for the warranty, youโll want to be sure you can comfortably afford to replace your phone in the event of a sudden sand-related catastrophe. Death can come swiftly to a folding screen.
If I havenโt scared you off by this point, then youโre probably the kind of person who will have a heck of a good time with a foldable. Iโve used every phone under the sun, and folding phones are some of my favorite gadgets. Run four apps at once! Prop it up like a tiny laptop! Hold it like a camcorder when you shoot video! There are tons of possibilities, and the thrill you get when you fold your phone shut never fully wears off.
$1799
The Good
- Full dust resistance! On a foldable!
- Qi2 support with built-in magnets
The Bad
- Heavy and chunky
- Cameras arenโt as good as the other 10 Pro phonesโ
- Pricier than a regular phone
Screen: 8-inch, 2076p, 120Hz OLED inner screen; 6.4-inch, 1080p, 120Hz OLED cover screen / Processor: Google Tensor G5 / Cameras: 48-megapixel f/1.7 main with OIS; 10.8-megapixel 5x telephoto with OIS; 10.5-megapixel ultrawide; 10-megapixel selfie (cover screen); 10-megapixel inner selfie camera / Battery: 5,015mAh / Charging: 30W wired, 15W wireless (Qi2) / Weather resistance: IP68
Durability has long been the North Star of the foldable category, and the Pixel 10 Pro Fold marks a real milestone in that journey. With an IP68 rating, itโs the first foldable to offer full water and dust resistance. That means you can take the $1,799 device on a hike or to the beach without worrying that a stray grain of sand will absolutely destroy it. Add in Qi2 support with built-in magnets for accessories and wireless charging โ along with Googleโs more powerful Tensor G5 chip โ and you have the most well-rounded foldable available.
The Pixel 10 Pro Fold isnโt without its shortcomings, though. It offers all-day battery life with minimal use of the inner display; however, if you spend most of your time using the inner screen, your battery will likely be in the red by bedtime. Also, while we love the deviceโs improved durability, its cameras fall short of Googleโs other 10 Pro models, especially in low light. The foldable is a bit heavier and thicker than the Galaxy Z Fold 7, too, which is a fair trade for greater peace of mind.
Read our full Pixel 10 Pro Fold review.
$900
The Good
- Samsung finally adopted the big cover screen
- All-day battery
- Reliable camera
The Bad
- More susceptible to dust than your average phone
- Still too hard to run full apps on the cover screen
Screen: 6.9-inch, 1080p, 120Hz OLED inner screen; 4.1-inch, 948p, OLED cover screen / Processor: Samsung Exynos 2500 / Cameras: 50-megapixel f/1.8 main with OIS; 12-megapixel ultrawide; 10-megapixel selfie (inner screen) / Battery: 4,300mAh / Charging: 25W wired, 15W wireless, 4.5W reverse wireless / Weather-resistance rating: IP48
The latest Galaxy Z Flip may not be as fun as the newest Razr Ultra, but it does offer a few new tricks. Samsung ditched the old file-folder cover screen in favor of a glorious, 4.1-inch edge-to-edge panel that wraps around the cameras. The extra real estate means you have more room to quickly respond to messages or perform any task that doesnโt require you to open your phone (and risk getting lost in a digital rabbit hole).
In addition to the larger cover screen, the Flip 7 offers a couple of other thoughtful updates. Itโs thinner than its predecessor and features a bigger 4,300mAh battery, which is a step up from the 4,000mAh battery found in the last-gen Flip 6. The camera system remains unchanged from last yearโs model, too, though thatโs not necessarily a bad thing. The 50-megapixel main shooter still produces great images, and you get all the versatility the flip form factor has to offer, including the ability to easily take selfies using the rear camera.
Despite some welcome changes, the Flip 7 carries the same IP48 rating as last yearโs model, which means long-term durability against fine dust particles remains a concern. However, Samsung offers a great warranty and repair program, along with seven years of OS and security updates. The Flip 7 isnโt perfect, but itโs the most powerful and polished version yet โ just donโt drop it while lounging on the beach.
Read our full Galaxy Z Flip 7 review.
$1000
The Good
- One of the best-looking phones you can buy
- Great battery life
- Outer screen is useful in unexpected ways
The Bad
- AI button is wasted real estate
- Long-term durability is still a question mark
- Camera processing is occasionally weird
Screen: 7-inch 1224p OLED 165Hz inner screen; 4-inch 1080p OLED 165Hz outer screen / Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite / Cameras: 50-megapixel f/1.8 main with OIS; 50-megapixel f/2.0 ultrawide; 50-megapixel f/2.0 selfie / Battery: 4,700mAh / Charging: 68W wired, 30W wireless / Weather-resistance rating: IP48
The Razr Ultra is the newest and most advanced member of Motorolaโs foldable lineup. Compared to the Razr Plus, it boasts a higher-resolution inner screen, Qualcommโs most powerful mobile processor, double the storage space, and an upgraded selfie camera. The device is also one of the best-looking phones you can buy โ the gold-bronze chassis and wooden back panel lend the Ultra a real elegance. When every phone tends to look the same โ even in the foldable market โ the Razr Ultra stands out in a crowd, which only adds to its charm.
Beyond its appearance, the Ultra is just plain fun to use. The 4-inch outer screen covers almost the entire front of the phone, making it perfect for checking notifications, responding to messages, and taking quick actions such as hailing an Uber. The titanium hinge is also an upgrade over the stainless steel found in the Razr Plus. While the Ultra is enjoyable, it canโt overcome the gripes weโve had with previous Motorola foldables, like inconsistent camera processing. Meanwhile, Motorola is only promising three OS upgrades and four years of security updates, which is on the shorter side considering the $1,300 retail price.
Read our full Razr Ultra (2025) review.
The best battery life in a foldable
$1999
The Good
- Itโs really, really thin
- Excellent battery life
- The crease is almost invisible
The Bad
- Foldables are still fragile
- Itโs not launching in the US or Europe
Screen: 8.12-inch, 2248p, 120Hz OLED inner screen; 6.62-inch, 1140p, 120Hz OLED outer screen size/ Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Cameras: 50-megapixel f/1.9 main with OIS, 50-megapixel 3x telephoto with OIS, 8-megapixel ultrawide, 8-megapixel selfie cameras (inner and outer) / Battery: 5,600mAh / Charging: 80W wired, 50W wireless / Weather-resistance rating: IPX8/IPX9
Letโs get the bad news out of the way first: if you live in the US or Europe, you canโt buy the Oppo Find N5. That rules out, well, a lot of us. But if you live in China, Singapore, or any of the other Asian countries Oppo included in its so-called โglobalโ release, then youโre in luck: you can pick up one of the worldโs thinnest book-style folding phones, and the rest of us are all very jealous of you.
The Find N5 isnโt all about thinness, either. Its Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset is highly capable, the phone is fully water-resistant, and battery life is excellent. It utilizes silicon-carbon battery technology to accommodate a large (by foldable standards) 5,600mAh battery, which easily holds up after a long day of heavy use. Whatโs even more impressive is that, like the aforementioned Z Fold 7, the Find N5 is still barely thicker than a standard slab-style phone and only slightly heavier. That matters when youโre using the phone via the cover screen for long periods of time or stashing it in the side pocket of your yoga pants. When a foldable is only about as heavy and bulky as a regular phone, using the inner screen feels like getting away with something fantastic โ not a benefit you have to make many other sacrifices for. Oppo delivers this in spades, and I just wish more of us couldโฆ find it.
Read our full Oppo Find N5 review.
Other foldables to consider
- The latest Huawei Mate XTs gets an honorable mention for its sheer wow factor alone. Itโs Huaweiโs second trifold phone and features some minor upgrades over the original, which we found to be a great foldable thatโs far too expensive. The second-gen Mate XTs is cheaper than the original at 17,999 yuan (about $2,520) and adds several new features, including stylus support, an upgraded Kirin 9020 chipset, and an improved 40-megapixel ultrawide.
- The Motorola Razr Plus 2025 is relatively new to the scene, replacing last yearโs model. Although the two devices look identical, there are a few notable changes. The biggest difference is that the $999 Razr Plus 2025 now features a titanium hinge, rather than stainless steel, promising better durability and a less noticeable crease when the device is open. Additionally, the Razr Plus 2025 offers IP48 dust and water resistance, whereas last yearโs model featured an IPX8 rating. While we havenโt tested the newest model, it appears to be a solid alternative to the Ultra.
- The standard Motorola Razr 2025 is a more affordable entry point into the world of foldables, starting at $699. The Razr 2025 offers improved performance, battery life, and durability โ the kind of bumps we expect year after year. It boasts a smaller cover screen compared to the Razr Plus and Ultra, but still offers a spacious 6.9-inch internal display. We havenโt tested the Razr 2025, but its relatively budget-friendly price is a good option for jumping into the foldable market.
- The Galaxy Z Fold 7 is an excellent alternative to the Pixel 10 Pro Fold. The slim, lightweight foldable is just 8.9mm thick when folded shut, which is nearly as slim as standard slab-style devices. It has a spacious inner display thatโs great for multitasking, and the battery can last a full day with moderate use. That being said, the Z Fold 7 has a starting price of $1,999 and doesnโt offer full dust and water resistance, making the hinge more susceptible to damage. Read our review.
- The trifold foldable is nearly among us. Samsungโs Galaxy Z TriFold launches on January 30th for $2,899, with two hinges that open to reveal an inner screen measuring 10 inches diagonally. The outer display, meanwhile, measures 6.5 inches and features a normal 21:9 aspect ratio, which is similar to what youโd find in a standard smartphone. The upcoming foldable also features a ceramic-glass, fiber-reinforced polymer back panel thatโs designed to resist cracking, plus an IP48 rating, meaning itโs fully water-resistant but not dust-tight. Expect to see a review for this one soon.
- Motorolaโs Razr foldables are a fantastic evolution of the popular flip phone, yet theyโre not the only direction the company is taking. At CES 2026, it announced a book-style foldable called the Motorola Razr Fold. The company hasnโt shared pricing details, but we hope it will be one of the more affordable options upon its release. It has a 6.6-inch outer screen, with an 8.1 2K LTPO inner display. It also sports three 50-megapixel rear cameras, a 32-megapixel selfie cam on the cover screen, and an additional 20-megapixel selfie camera on the inner screen. Itโs coming this summer, so stay tuned for more info.
Update, January 29th: Adjusted pricing / availability and added info about the Motorola Razr Fold and Samsungโs Z TriFold to the โWhatโs coming nextโ section. Brandon Russell and Cameron Faulkner also contributed to this post.