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World of Software > Gadget > Which Motorola Phone Should You Buy?
Gadget

Which Motorola Phone Should You Buy?

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Last updated: 2025/06/18 at 6:58 AM
News Room Published 18 June 2025
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Motorola phones often play third (or fourth) fiddle to Samsung and Google, but the winds are changing. Motorola is now one of the fastest-growing mobile companies in the world, and the company claims its Razr folding smartphones are the number one in the flip category in North America. The company has also been experimenting with colorful Android phones and fun textures, making its devices stand out from the sea of boring glass handsets.

If you’re an interested buyer, picking the best Motorola phone can be tough because the company launches many models each year. I’ve tested almost all of them, and in this guide, I break down the pros and cons and steer you toward my favorite Moto models—from the Razr Ultra to the Moto G Stylus 2025.

Check out our mobile buying guides for more, including the Best Android Phones, Best Samsung Phones, Best Cheap Phones, Best Pixel Phones, and Best Phones With a Headphone Jack.

Table of Contents

Updated June 2025: We’ve added the Motorola Edge 2025.

What’s WIRED About Motorola Phones?

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Motorola phones have a simple Android interface. This means the company hasn’t done much to gunk up the software. It’s simple and easy to use. There’s increasingly a lot of bloatware, but you can easily uninstall almost all of it.

They come with lots of storage. The company stuffs 256 GB as standard into most of its smartphones, even some of the cheap models. Most Android flagship devices still come with just 128 GB. Motorola is also one of the only phone brands to still include a microSD card slot to expand storage on many of its devices, and the Moto G phones retain the headphone jack.

There’s broad carrier support. While some Android phone brands have inconsistent carrier support in the US, like Nothing, Motorola phones often work on most if not all networks (the company lists carrier support details in the Specs section of all its phones). They all work on the big three—T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon. Make sure you buy them unlocked.

The prices dip quite often. Never buy a Motorola phone at its MSRP. They almost always go on sale a few months (or weeks) after launch, sometimes at steep discounts.

What’s TIRED About Motorola Phones?

Motorola’s software updates are lackluster. The company is slowly improving here—it promises to deliver three Android OS updates and four years of bimonthly security updates to its high-end smartphones but still lags behind its peers. Most of the Moto G phones only receive one OS Android update—though this is changing in 2025 with new devices getting two upgrades—along with three years of security updates. Fewer updates mean you miss out on new Android features quickly. Even if a phone is promised updates, they take a long time to arrive.

The cameras are lackluster. Among the things putting Motorola behind the likes of Samsung, Apple, and Google are the cameras. Moto phones can take fine photos but they’re eclipsed by their peers. Motorola made some improvements with its high-end phones but it’s still behind.

There’s no always-on display. Most Android phones have a setting you can toggle on if you want an always-on display that will show a clock on your screen even when the screen is “off.” Motorola has Peek Display, which requires you to move the phone or tap the screen to see anything. It’s not a big deal, but it’s a feature you might miss if you’re coming from another phone. Newer Razr devices finally broke the mold with always-on displays, but it’s still not present in the company’s other products.

The Best Motorola Phone

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Motorola

Razr Ultra (2025)

The Razr Ultra (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is the best reason to get a Motorola phone over the likes of Samsung, Apple, and Google. It’s a statement piece, not just because it’s a compact folding flip phone, but because Motorola offers it in several snazzy and stylish designs. There’s the Mountain Trail, which employs sustainably sourced wood; Scarab, the first use of Alcantara on a smartphone; Rio Red, a leather-inspired finish; and Cabaret, which feels like satin. You’ll be hard pressed to find a phone that looks this fashionable these days.

The spacious 4-inch OLED screen has more customization options than ever, with the ability to add more widgets for glanceable information, so you don’t need to constantly open the phone. Once you do, you’re treated to a large 7-inch AMOLED display that’s sharp, bright, and smooth thanks to the 165-Hz refresh rate. Motorola has improved the Razr Ultra’s durability with a new Gorilla Glass Ceramic mixture for the screens that makes it tougher to crack, and the titanium-reinforced hinge design is supposedly stronger, too. It now has an IP48 rating, offering some proper dust protection.

Motorola has stuffed flagship features through and through (which explains the high price), from 512 GB of internal storage to the Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset powering it all. Performance is not a problem at all, with apps and games operating smoothly. This Razr Ultra also has the biggest battery ever in a Razr at 4,700 mAh, and it reliably lasted me a full day with average use. That said, power users who rack up screen time may find themselves reaching for the charger before bedtime. At least it supports fast charging speeds, and wirelessly.

Razr Ultra (left) in the Mountain Trail wood design. Razr 2025 (right) in the Spring Bud leather-inspired look.

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

The cameras are a nice improvement—you can get pretty great photos from the 50-megapixel primary camera and the 50-megapixel ultrawide. You need to stay still in low light, especially since Motorola confusingly hides the Night mode function in the “More” tab of the camera app. (It doesn’t automatically kick in in low light.) The best part is that you can use the superior primary cameras—typically on the “back” of the phone, but are now at the front—to snap selfies and see previews on this external screen. They’re some of the sharpest selfies you’ll snap.

Video capture is also much better on the Ultra than on any other Motorola phone. Once you enable Dolby Vision (and you do have to tap it manually), you can get well-exposed footage that’s not too grainy or shaky. The camera results, whether in photo or video, still don’t quite match the competition at this price, but this is still Motorola’s best camera system to date.

The software experience is great, except for all the artificial intelligence features Motorola is marketing. Copilot! Perplexity! Gemini! Moto AI! There’s a boatload of options, even a dedicated AI button, though I haven’t found Moto AI too helpful. The best perk is Pay Attention, which makes the phone start recording with real-time transcriptions—handy for interviews, but that’s a common feature on most phones, and Motorola’s implementation is inferior. It’s also a shame that Motorola’s software update policy is still not as good as the competition.

As always, I recommend waiting for a big sale event, as Motorola phones are frequently discounted. The Razr Ultra is the most expensive Razr to date, but I think it’ll be a great buy once it comes closer to $1,000 or $1,100. It barely takes up any room in your pocket or purse, will look more fashionable than any other smartphone out there, and you’ll feel super satisfied ending a phone call with a flip.


The Best Cheap Folding Phone

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

You don’t need to spend $1,300 to get a good folding flip phone. The Razr 2025 (8/10, WIRED Recommends) wins the “Most Improved” award because performance is finally not as choppy as on prior models. Mind you, it’ll still stutter here and there, but that’s not a defining aspect of this phone anymore. My experience with it wasn’t massively different from the Razr Ultra—battery life is roughly the same, lasting a full day with average use, and the screens are nice and bright, even if they’re slightly smaller.

Cameras are its weak point compared to the Ultra. You can get some nice photos, but they’ll struggle more in high-contrast scenes, look grainy in low light, and feel a bit more processed. Skin tones and colors are also not as accurate as with the pricier sibling, and video capture is noticeably worse. Still, considering the $700 price for a folding smartphone, it’s an incredible value, while still managing to look gorgeous.


Best Moto G Phone

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Motorola

Moto G Stylus 2025

The Moto G Stylus 2025 is the best Moto G phone right now, which might be a given considering it’s the priciest model in the family. Still, for $400, it’s one of the best smartphone values on the market. As the name suggests, it comes with a built-in stylus—the only other phone with that feature is Samsung’s $1,300 Galaxy S25 Ultra.

This is a slim and beautifully blue phone. My mom said it looked nice. Even a stranger stopped me to ask what phone I was using! The Surf the Web blue really pops with the vegan leather back, though you can get it in a more muted Gibraltar Sea color. You’ll notice a headphone jack on the bottom, a rarity in today’s smartphone climate, and pop open the SIM tray to find a spot to add a microSD card, another rapidly disappearing feature. Motorola also includes 256 GB of storage, a nice bump compared to pricier smartphones that offer only 128 GB.

You get a 120-Hz AMOLED 6.7-inch screen that’s plenty bright in sunny conditions, and satisfactory, stutter-free performance with the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset. It might not feel the speediest, but this is the smoothest-performing Moto G; I’ve rarely seen choppy animations in the interface. Speaking of, there’s a good deal of bloatware apps in the Android 15 operating system, but they’re easy to uninstall.

The 5,000-mAh battery in tow has frequently lasted a full day for me with roughly 35 percent left by bedtime, with average to high use. It’s not quite a two-day phone. You can top it back up fairly quickly with Motorola’s 68-watt TurboPower charging system, but I’ve largely juiced it with my Qi wireless charger with no problems.

I’ve been impressed with the 50-megapixel main camera. It takes crisp photos in good lighting, and in low-light settings, Motorola’s Night mode does a nice job of preserving details and shadows. The catch is you need to be very still—any movement and you’ll end up with a blurry shot. (I have a few of those in my camera roll.) I think most people will be happy with the results.

The problem? There is a significantly better phone for just $100 more: the Google Pixel 9a. Google will support that device for seven years, and it also comes with flagship-grade performance, better cameras, and more smart software features. The Moto G Stylus will only get two Android OS upgrades and three years of security updates. This is precisely why you should buy it on sale. Wait for this Moto phone to drop to $300 or $330.

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