Sure, we’ve already taken stock of the best overall smartphones in 2025, but that doesn’t mean we can’t give them a little more shine.
Specifically, it’s time to talk cameras. Apple, Samsung, Google, and others released some excellent handsets in the past calendar year, but there’s a lot that goes into deciding whether or not a phone is good. Processing power, battery life, AI features, and a bunch of other little odds and ends factor into our reviews, but for a lot of people, all of those things are secondary to the cameras.
So, with that in mind, let’s focus on cameras as we close out 2025. Here are our favorite smartphone cameras of the year.
The best smartphones of 2025 include some surprises
Best overall: iPhone 17 Pro/Pro Max
Big surprise here.
Credit: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
It almost feels like a cop-out to give this award to the highest-end iPhone released in 2025, but the fact of the matter is that we didn’t test out any phone cameras in 2025 that impressed us more than the iPhone 17 Pro models. If you don’t trust me, listen to what our reviewer Stan Schroeder had to say about it.
“The triple 48-megapixel camera system on this phone is the best I’ve ever tried. The main sensor captures rich and detailed photos,” Schroeder wrote. “Low light photography is so good that you can snap a shot in near-total darkness and get a photo that looks like it was taken during the day.”
The low light photography is impressive.
Credit: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Schroeder said the iPhone 17 Pro Max was capable of taking good shots under a lot of different conditions. Low light photography was impressive, in particular, as were the zoom capabilities. He said that photos taken at up to 8x zoom looked crisp, which is no small feat. Apple always brings its A-game when it comes to cameras, and the iPhone 17 Pro is no different.
Looks good!
Credit: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Best cheap Android camera: Google Pixel 9a
No bump this time, though.
Credit: Joe Maldonado/Mashable
Google’s Pixel phones have always delivered on the camera front, and the Pixel 9a is no exception, especially considering its lean $500 price point. As I noted in my Pixel 9a review, it’s now the budget smartphone to beat in 2025, thanks in large part to the competent camera array.
By the numbers, it’s nothing spectacular. The rear camera array consists of a 48MP wide lens and a 13MP ultra-wide lens, which are fairly standard smartphone megapixel counts, and come in below what you’d get on a more expensive Pixel 9. Still, thanks to Google’s software wizardry and some smart feature inclusions, the Pixel 9a can produce plenty of gorgeous shots with vibrant, bright colors.
Hard to tell this came from a cheap phone.
Credit: Alex Perry/Mashable
I’d also like to shout out Google for including Macro Focus in the Pixel 9a, which wasn’t in the previous Pixel A-series phones. This feature lets you place the lens just an inch or two away from your subject and capture fine details. It’s a really nice thing to have on a $500 phone.
This is what Macro Focus can do.
Credit: Alex Perry/Mashable
Best cheap iOS camera: Apple iPhone 16e
Just one lens.
Credit: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
There hasn’t been a flagship iPhone release in 2025 yet (wait for September), so the only Apple product we can give any props to right now is the iPhone 16e.
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Apple’s $600 budget-minded handset has just one solitary camera lens on the back, measuring in at 48MP. However, don’t let that description sell it short. As our reviewer Stan Schroeder demonstrated, it can take very nice-looking shots with clear details and natural colors.
Ahoy.
Credit: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Schroeder also shouted out its competent low-light photography, which isn’t incredible, but gets the job done for a phone of that price.
Looks good.
Credit: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Best affordable flagship camera: OnePlus 15
Kinda generic looking, but that’s not the point.
Credit: Joe Maldonado/Mashable
At $899, the OnePlus 15’s affordability is definitely relative. This is not a Pixel 9a in terms of price, or even an iPhone 16e. That said, for less than $1,000, you get a trio of 50MP lenses on the back with 7x optical-quality zoom. That’s shockingly close to the iPhone 17 Pro in terms of specs, and the results are also pretty satisfactory.
Nice.
Credit: Alex Perry/Mashable
Colors are vivid, image clarity is sharp, and you’ve got pretty much all of the modes you’d want, including a nice macro photography option. OnePlus has a habit of making phones that just…do what you want a phone to do, without asking for too much in return. I would say the OnePlus 15’s camera array fits that description pretty well, to the point where there isn’t much else to say about it.
Macro is great.
Credit: Alex Perry/Mashable
