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World of Software > Gadget > Best Cheap Phones 2025: Our favourite affordable handsets tested and ranked
Gadget

Best Cheap Phones 2025: Our favourite affordable handsets tested and ranked

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Last updated: 2025/06/09 at 10:25 AM
News Room Published 9 June 2025
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Flagship phones are undoubtedly tempting, offering capable cameras, powerful performance and impressive displays to boot, but they also come with a high price tag to match. What can you do if your budget doesn’t quite extend to flagship prices?

That’s where we at Trusted Reviews come in, with our hand-picked selection of the best affordable phones for less than £400/$400 in 2025.

Cheap, affordable phones don’t have the best reputation, but that’s based mainly on old stereotypes. Yes, in the 2010s, cheap phones were pretty terrible; they had low-res screens, disappointing cameras and sluggish performance, but that’s not the case in 2025.

Nowadays, you don’t have to break the bank to get a phone with a 120Hz refresh rate, fast charging and pixel-packed screens – all features previously exclusive to flagship-level phones. Of course, there are still plenty of devices that could let you down with subpar battery life and bloated software, but none of those have made it to our prestigious list.

All of the below devices have been tested by one of our reviewers for at least a week, but often longer, to reliably gauge their performance in key areas, including camera performance, build quality and battery life, so you know that you can count on our buying advice.

We’ve also included specific categories, like best camera and best battery life, to help you decide which phone is best for your needs at a glance.

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We also have other best lists for those looking for something a little more specific. Our best camera phone round-up focuses on a device’s photographic and videography skills, while our best mid-range phone list focuses on slightly pricier devices between £400/$400 and £700/$700. A SIM-only plan might also be worth considering, if you’re in the market.

SQUIRREL_ANCHOR_LIST

Learn more about how we test mobile phones

Every phone we review goes through a series of uniform checks designed to gauge key things including build quality, screen accuracy, battery life, performance and camera prowess.

These include formal synthetic benchmarks and scripted tests, plus a series of real-world checks, such as how much battery it loses per hour streaming video.

We also make sure to use every phone we review as our primary handset for at least 4 days to ensure our review is as accurate as possible. You can see a more detailed breakdown of our testing methodology in our how we test phones guide.

Pros

  • Great bright display
  • Good main camera performance
  • Excellent battery life and charging
  • Great IP69 protection

Cons

  • Some performance foibles
  • Curved screen is a bit dated now
  • Moto AI isn’t that exciting
  • Apps tray clutter

Pros

  • Distinctive, attractive design
  • Cohesive software experience with useful widgets
  • Strong battery life
  • Vibrant, colour-rich and bright display with smooth refresh rates

Cons

  • Only IP64 water-resistance
  • Ultrawide camera is quite poor
  • Only 3 years of major software updates

Pros

  • Good screen
  • Interesting design
  • Versatile cameras

Cons

  • Not the absolute best photo quality
  • Other smartphones are more powerful
  • Side buttons are a little small

Pros

  • Plenty of power
  • Excellent charging speeds
  • Great value for money

Cons

  • Bloated software
  • Average camera performance
  • Some connectivity concerns

Pros

  • Greatly improved cameras
  • Brighter screen with better colours
  • Slightly quicker
  • NFC Payment support

Cons

  • Only IP54 rated
  • Back isn’t replaceable
  • Essential Space could cost money soon

Pros

  • An eye-catching design
  • All-day battery life
  • Just about powerful enough to game on

Cons

  • 720p resolution
  • 2MP macro lens isn’t great
  • Plenty of pre-installed bloatware

Pros

  • Lovely screen
  • Good main camera
  • IP68 rated
  • Affordable price point

Cons

  • No headphone jack
  • A lot of bloatware
  • Slower charging than its predecessor


  • Great bright display

  • Good main camera performance

  • Excellent battery life and charging

  • Great IP69 protection


  • Some performance foibles

  • Curved screen is a bit dated now

  • Moto AI isn’t that exciting

  • Apps tray clutter

All you need to know about the Motorola Edge 60 FusionMotorola Edge 60 Fusion Review is that if you don’t have much of a budget to work with but you value a phone’s aesthetic above all, then this is easily the one you should consider buying first. There are three Pantone infused colourways available: Slipstream, Amazonite and Mykonos, and they all look great. Plus, all that style doesn’t come at the expense of durability thanks to an official IP69 rating.

Stop staring at the phone’s gorgeous backing and you’ll notice that it has a similarly eye-catching 6.67-inch pOLED display. The screen does have a cascading effect at the sides which, depending on how you feel about these types of screens, might be a boon or a turn-off. If you want a flat display then you might want to consider giving the Honor 400 a look.

Despite what the camera bump would have you believe, there are actually two cameras on the rear of the Edge 60 Fusion, a 50MP sensor and a 13MP ultra-wide. The latter of these two sensors isn’t too much to write home about, but that main wide-angle lens snapper can do the trick with wonderfully vibrant shots on a sunny day.

Even though it feels incredibly light in the hand, weighing just 178g, the Edge 60 Fusion boasts a large 5200mAh battery which, from our testing, only dropped 6% after an hour of streaming Netflix. Pair that with super fast 68W charging and it’s hard to imagine you’ll have any complaints in the battery department.

Unfortunately, the one area where the Edge 60 Fusion really trips up is the feature that Motorola seems to be pushing the most right now: Moto AI. There’s a dedicated button to quickly summon Motorola’s take on artificial intelligence, but it just isn’t anywhere near as useful as Google Gemini, so it would have been nice to see Motorola focus its efforts elsewhere.

SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10207599


  • Distinctive, attractive design

  • Cohesive software experience with useful widgets

  • Strong battery life

  • Vibrant, colour-rich and bright display with smooth refresh rates


  • Only IP64 water-resistance

  • Ultrawide camera is quite poor

  • Only 3 years of major software updates

The Nothing Phone 3a is the follow-up to the hugely popular budget-focused Nothing Phone 2a from 2024, and just like its predecessor, there’s a lot to love. It not only retains the iconic Nothing design DNA but new features that help it truly stand out from the competition.

If you’re looking for a unique-looking phone on a budget, the Nothing Phone 3a fits the bill and then some with its iconic transparent design, which gives you a good look at the internals on the rear panel. Like the others in the collection, it also sports the Glyph interface that flashes in time to ringtones and texts and doubles up as a handy camera timer.

Still, the most important aspect of the Phone 3a is the tech, and Nothing has excelled once again. The 6.7-inch 120Hz AMOLED screen is bright and accurate, with a whopping 3000nits peak brightness when watching HDR10+ content and an impressive 1300nits in regular high-brightness mode.

That’s flanked by a triple camera setup comprised of a 50MP wide, 8MP ultrawide and, rather surprisingly, a 50MP 2x telephoto lens.

The latter is still rare at the price point, and while it can’t quite compete with the periscope lens of the more premium Nothing Phone 3a Pro, it delivers excellent results in daylight. The 50MP main is similarly capable, though it performs way better in low-light scenarios. The ultrawide has taken a hit, dropping down from 50MP on the previous generation and it’s easily the weakest of the trio as a result, but it’ll still take a decent wide-angle shot.

That’s backed up by the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 which allows it to outperform the competition in tests, and a 5000mAh battery delivers all-day battery life. There’s also the dot-matrix-inspired Nothing OS to appreciate, complete with Nothing’s new Essential Space, essentially its own spin on AI with some pretty handy features.

SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10207339


  • Good screen

  • Interesting design

  • Versatile cameras


  • Not the absolute best photo quality

  • Other smartphones are more powerful

  • Side buttons are a little small

The Motorola Edge 50 Neo is similar to the Edge 50 Fusion in many regards; it’s similarly thin and lightweight, at 8.1mm thick and 171g, and it sports speedy 68W fast charging, but there are key differences that make it stand out.

For one, it boasts a range of Pantone-certified colour options with the Pantone logo clear for everyone to see on the vegan leather-clad rear. These give the phones a distinctive look not only compared to the Fusion, but most other budget-friendly phones.

Most importantly, however, the Edge 50 Neo offers a surprisingly capable camera setup comprised of a 50MP main, 13MP ultrawide, and 10MP 3x telephoto, the latter of which is rarely seen at the price point. Performance is solid from the main sensor, which is able to handle both well-lit and low-light scenarios with ease. The auxiliary lenses don’t quite match up, but the ability to get closer to the action with the 3x sensor is very much appreciated.

Elsewhere, the Edge 50 Neo is a fairly compact device with a 6.4-inch OLED screen that makes it easy to use one-handed, though it’s equally not as well suited for gaming and binging as larger alternatives. It also means that it has a slightly smaller 4310mAh battery than the standard 5000mAh we see in 2025, though it’s more than enough to power the smaller display and get through a day unaided.

SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10207600


  • Plenty of power

  • Excellent charging speeds

  • Great value for money


  • Bloated software

  • Average camera performance

  • Some connectivity concerns

The Poco X7 Pro delivers proper flagship-level performance that’s perfect for gaming without the associated price tag. That’s down to the use of the Dimensity 8400-Ultra, which sits just under MediaTek’s flagship 9000 series chips, complete with either 8- or 12GB of RAM.

Combined, the phone is slick and fast in daily use, and it can also handle demanding 3D games like CoD Mobile for extended periods with a large liquid cooling system under the hood. Gaming-specific software features allow access to common settings from within games to boost that experience further.

That’s paired with a bright, vivid 6.67-inch AMOLED display that’s more than large enough to game on, and the super-smooth 120Hz refresh rate helps things feel more responsive still. It’s also fairly high-res at 1.5K, and the screen is completely flat.

The phone’s gaming focus is completed by a massive 6000mAh battery that easily lasts a day, if not two days, depending on what you’re up to. Considering 30 minutes of gaming used just 5%, you’ll be able to game to your heart’s content. And, with 90W fast charge support, it’ll get a full recharge in under an hour.

There are weak points, of course; the dual 50MP main and 8MP ultrawide lenses are nothing to get excited about, and Xiaomi’s HyperOS 2 is both full of bloatware and about as far from stock Android as you can get. However, if you care about performance above all else, it’s the ideal cheap option.

SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10207601


  • Greatly improved cameras

  • Brighter screen with better colours

  • Slightly quicker

  • NFC Payment support


  • Only IP54 rated

  • Back isn’t replaceable

  • Essential Space could cost money soon

The CMF Phone 2 Pro is a follow-up to the Nothing sub-brand’s original CMF Phone, and it fixed most of our complaints about the original modular phone.

With a modular design, the CMF Phone 2 Pro is one of the more unique offerings in the budget smartphone market. Though you can no longer easily replace the back panel, the Accessory Point returns, allowing you to attach lanyards, kickstands and more.

You can also add new macro and fisheye lenses to the new triple camera setup, transforming the look and feel of your photos.

Modular design aside, the CMF Phone 2 Pro offers a surprisingly rounded experience.

The 6.67-inch AMOLED display has a 120Hz refresh rate and a boosted 3000 nits of peak brightness. Arguably more importantly, the screen can now display over a billion colours with 10-bit colour support, reducing banding and providing more accurate colours overall.

The single 50MP camera was arguably the weakest area of the original CMF Phone, but with a combination of 50MP main, 50MP 3x telephoto and 8MP ultrawide lenses, the CMF Phone 2 Pro is wholly more capable. Don’t expect flagship-level performance, but there is a notable jump.

Throw in a boosted Dimensity 7300 Pro processor, a 5000mAh battery with enough juice to last two days, and Nothing’s charming Nothing OS 3.2, and you’ve got a stand-out budget smartphone.

SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10207602


  • An eye-catching design

  • All-day battery life

  • Just about powerful enough to game on


  • 720p resolution

  • 2MP macro lens isn’t great

  • Plenty of pre-installed bloatware

What if you want a decent entry-level phone for less than £200 that simply does the job? The TCL 40R 5G fits the bill.

The budget-focused device offers all the main staples of a solid budget smartphone experience with 5G connectivity, a good-looking design, long battery life from a 5,000mAh cell and decent (though not quite snappy) everyday performance.

There’s a large 6.6-inch LCD display with a 90Hz refresh rate great for scrolling and binging, though its sub-1080p resolution can make elements look a little soft. The main 50MP rear camera is capable of delivering surprisingly sharp images for the price, at least.

It might not be able to compete with more premium options on the market, but for the £199 price tag, you won’t find much better right now.


  • Lovely screen

  • Good main camera

  • IP68 rated

  • Affordable price point


  • No headphone jack

  • A lot of bloatware

  • Slower charging than its predecessor

At its core, the Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 Pro is a great phone. Working in the phone’s favour is an excellent 6.67-inch OLED display. With Dolby Vision and HDR10+ support, not to mention a peak brightness of 3000nits that makes the phone easy to use outdoors, it’s quite amazing that Xiaomi has managed to cram all of this screen tech in at the budget end of the market.

The main 200MP sensor is also nothing to be sniffed at, delivering wonderfully detailed shots in the daytime, and still managing to hold its own after the sun goes down. Because of that high megapixel count, you do have some leeway when it comes to cropping in, and zooming in up to 3x still delivers decent shots, but you won’t want to go any further than that.

One thing we genuinely didn’t expect was an official IP68 rating, given that the grading was previously held back for last year’s Pro Plus model, but it’s still great to see it trickle down here. This means that you can use the phone around the sink and you won’t have to worry if takes a tumble in with the soaking dishes.

 

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FAQs

Which cheap phone has the best camera?

Our favourite cheap phone for the camera is the Motorola Edge 50 Neo, though the Nothing Phone 3a isn’t too far behind.

Can I get 5G on these phones?

Yes, all of the phones in the above list offer 5G connectivity so you’ll be able to get these data speeds as long as you have network coverage and a compatible SIM card.

Test Data

  Motorola Edge 60 Fusion Nothing Phone 3a Motorola Edge 50 Neo Poco X7 Pro CMF Phone 2 Pro TCL 40R 5G Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 Pro 5G
Geekbench 6 single core 1047 1164 1052 1575 1003 706 1020
Geekbench 6 multi core 3019 3273 3031 5884 2910 1840 2908
Max brightness – – – 3200 nits – 400 nits –
1 hour video playback (Netflix, HDR) 6 % 5 % 11 % 7 % 7 % 20 % 11 %
30 minute gaming (light) 8 % 5 % 17 % 5 % 5 % 15 % 7 %
Time from 0-100% charge 55 min 56 min 45 min 48 min 65 min 180 min 100 min
Time from 0-50% charge 25 Min – 16 Min 23 Min 26 Min 75 Min 50 Min
30-min recharge (included charger) – – 75 % – – 19 % –
15-min recharge (included charger) – – 44 % – – 9 % –
30-min recharge (no charger included) 61 % 74 % – 71 % 57 % – 30 %
15-min recharge (no charger included) 33 % 41 % – 33 % 29 % – 15 %
3D Mark – Wild Life 847 1057 – 3706 852 1203 874
GFXBench – Aztec Ruins 17 fps 25 fps – 63 fps 22 fps 2 fps 17 fps
GFXBench – Car Chase 23 fps 28 fps – 78 fps 29 fps 3 fps 22 fps

Full Specs

  Motorola Edge 60 Fusion Review Nothing Phone 3a Review Motorola Edge 50 Neo Review Poco X7 Pro Review CMF Phone 2 Pro Review TCL 40R 5G Review Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 Pro 5G Review
UK RRP £299.99 £329 £329 £309 £219 £199 £299
USA RRP Unavailable – Unavailable – $289 $220 Unavailable
EU RRP – – €499 – – – –
AUD RRP – – AU$699 – – – –
Manufacturer Motorola Nothing Motorola Xiaomi Nothing TCL Xiaomi
Screen Size 6.67 inches 6.77 inches 6.4 inches 6.7 inches 6.77 inches 6.6 inches 6.7 inches
Storage Capacity 256GB, 512GB 128GB, 256GB 256GB, 512GB 256GB, 512GB 128GB, 256GB 128GB, 64GB 256GB, 512GB
Rear Camera 50MP main + 13MP ultrawide 50 MP, f/1.9, 24mm (wide); 50 MP, f/2.0, 50mm (telephoto); 8 MP (ultrawide) 50MP + 10MP + 13MP 50MP + 8MP 50MP + 50MP + 8MP 50MP + 2MP + 2MP 200MP + 8MP + 2MP
Front Camera 32MP 32MP 32MP 20MP 16MP 8MP 20MP
Video Recording Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
IP rating IP69 IP57 IP68 IP68 IP54 No IP68
Battery 5200 mAh 5000 mAh 4310 mAh 6000 mAh 5000 mAh 5000 mAh 5110 mAh
Wireless charging – – Yes – – – –
Fast Charging Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Size (Dimensions) 73 x 8 x 161 MM 77.5 x 8.4 x 163.5 MM 71.2 x 8.1 x 154.1 MM 75.2 x 8.3 x 160.8 MM 78 x 7.8 x 164 MM 75.4 x 9 x 164.5 MM 74.4 x 8.4 x 162.3 MM
Weight 178 G 201 G 171 G 195 G 185 G 192 G 190 G
ASIN B0F48H546B – B0DBW1HSF5 B0DKP4M9DS B0F2T4LT17 B0BTZ6MKC6 B0DKY54C4G
Operating System Android 15 Android 15 Android 14 Android 15 Nothing OS 3.2 (Android 15) Android 12 HyperOS 2 (Android 15)
Release Date 2025 2025 2021 2025 2025 2023 2025
First Reviewed Date 26/05/2025 04/03/2025 31/10/2024 31/01/2025 05/05/2025 27/06/2023 22/04/2025
Resolution 1220 x 2712 2392 x 1080 1256 x 2760 1220 x 2712 1080 x 2392 720 x 1612 1220 x 2712
HDR Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes – Yes
Refresh Rate 120 Hz 120 Hz 120 Hz 120 Hz 120 Hz 90 Hz 120 Hz
Ports USB-C USB-C USB-C USB-C USB-C, microSD card slot USB-C, 3.5mm headphone jack USB-C
Chipset MediaTek Dimensity 7300 Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 MediaTek Dimensity 7300 MediaTek Dimensity 8400-Ultra MediaTek Dimensity 7300 Pro MediaTek Dimensity 700 Mediatek Dimensity 7300 Ultra
RAM 12GB 12GB, 8GB – 12GB, 8GB 8GB 4GB 12GB, 8GB
Colours Pantone Slipstream, Pantone Amazonite, Pantone Zephyr, Pantone Mykonos Blue Blue, White Nautical Blue, Latte, Grisaille, Poinciana Black/Yellow, White, Green White, Black, Orange, Light Green Purple, Black Lavender Purple, Coral Green, Midnight Black
Stated Power 68 W – – 90 W 33 W – 45 W

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