Choose your foldable fighter.
A foldable phone isn’t for the faint of heart. They’re generally heavier, pricier, and have less capable cameras than a standard slab-style phone. And while they’re far less fragile than when they first debuted, foldables are still susceptible to the kind of damage a regular smartphone can shrug off. You really don’t want any dust getting in that hinge. But if you’re an adventurous sort of gadget lover, then a folding phone is a rewarding investment.
There are basically two kinds of foldables at the moment — the kind that fold like books and the ones that fold clamshell style, like your old flip phone. Here’s 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 that’s useful for checking information quickly. When you need to do regular phone stuff, you unfold it.
How we test phones
There’s 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 — stress testing the battery, using GPS navigation on my bike while streaming radio, taking rapid-fire portrait mode photos of my kid — 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 it’s mostly painless.
Top-notch software support
The phones listed here have powerful processors and enough RAM to keep up for years, so it’s 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.
A fantastic camera
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 — and many include all three. Stabilization for the main camera unit to help in low light is a must in this category.
Best-in-class build quality
An IPX8 rating has become standard for foldables, meaning they can survive full water immersion. But X stands for “not dustproof,” and no folding phone maker has figured out how to fully protect these devices from dust yet — what with the moving parts and all. Devices with an IP48 rating aren’t dustproof either; they’re only rated to withstand solid particles 1mm or bigger, which is larger than dust.
Value
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 it’s particularly feature-rich for its price or last year’s model if it’s still sold new and this year’s device doesn’t offer many upgrades.
So while they all fit in one category of folding tech, they’re suited to two very different kinds of people — 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, you’d be wise to get the manufacturer’s extended warranty with your purchase; fixes can be expensive, and you won’t be able to walk into just any phone repair shop to get them. If you don’t opt for the warranty, you’ll 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 haven’t scared you off by this point, then you’re probably the kind of person who will have a heck of a good time with a foldable. I’ve 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.
Best book-style foldable
Screen: 8-inch, 2076p, 120Hz OLED inner screen; 6.3-inch, 1080p, 120Hz OLED cover screen / Processor: Tensor G4 / 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: 4,650mAh / Charging: 21W wired, 7.5W wireless / Weather resistance: IPX8
The Pixel 9 Pro Fold is only Google’s second folding phone, but it’s more refined than you might expect from a sophomore effort. Where the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6’s long and narrow outer screen suffers from Remote Control Syndrome, the Pixel 9 Pro Fold feels like an ideal form factor. The outer screen matches the dimensions of a regular phone, and the whole package is light enough that you can sometimes forget you’re holding a phone that folds in half.
There are some shortcomings. Like other folding phones, the 9 Pro Fold has a slightly downgraded camera system compared to its slab-style siblings. You still get a good 48-megapixel main and a 5x optical zoom, but don’t expect to be able to push it too hard in dim lighting. And like other foldables, there’s no formal dust resistance; just IPX8 resistance to full water immersion. Google’s multitasking software isn’t as flexible as Samsung’s either, and you can fit two apps side-by-side on the screen rather than the Z Fold 6’s anything-goes approach.
It’s not perfect, but no folding phone is. The hardware matters a lot on a device like this, and Google got the hardware very right with the 9 Pro Fold.
Read our full Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold review.
Best flip-style foldable
Screen: 6.7-inch, 1080p, 120Hz OLED inner screen; 3.4-inch, 720p, OLED cover screen / Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 / Cameras: 50-megapixel f/1.8 main with OIS; 12-megapixel ultrawide; 10-megapixel selfie (inner screen) / Battery: 4,000mAh / Charging: 25W wired, 15W wireless / Weather resistance: IP48
Boring isn’t always better, but in the case of the Galaxy Z Flip 6 versus the Motorola Razr Plus, I think boring wins the day. The Flip 6 lacks some of the imaginative UI touches you can get on Motorola’s flip phone, and the file folder-shaped outer screen feels more cramped than Motorola’s approach to fill the space — minus camera lenses, of course. But it’s more reliable, is scheduled to get seven years of software updates, and Samsung’s extended warranty offers good coverage for that extra peace of mind. Not the most titillating stuff, but it matters.
As you might guess from the name, the Flip 6 is far from Samsung’s first flip-phone rodeo. It comes with some thoughtful updates, like a true always-on display for the cover screen and a tweaked UI for adding widgets more easily. The cameras are good, though far from the best you can get for $1100, and the battery goes all day. Its IP48 rating means there’s some protection from small particles, but dust is still a concern. Power users will need to download Good Lock to get the most out of the cover screen, but it’s perfectly capable out of the box for someone less adventurous. A bit boring? Yes, but that’s okay.
Read our full Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 review.
The foldable that’s the most fun
Screen: 6.9-inch 1080p OLED 165Hz inner screen; 4-inch 1080p 165Hz OLED outer screen / Processor: Qualcomm 8S Gen 3 / Cameras: 50-megapixel f/1.7 main with OIS; 50-megapixel 5x telephoto; 32-megapixel selfie / Battery: 4,000mAh / Charging: 45W wired, 15W wireless / Weather-resistance rating: IPX8
Motorola’s foldable leans into the Razr nostalgia, from the name to a bright pink finish (it comes in other colors, too). But this isn’t the flip phone you carried around in 2004; it’s a modern take on an old favorite, and a good one. The cover screen fills the entire front panel with two camera cutouts, taking advantage of every square millimeter of space. The result is an experience that you can easily bend to your wishes, whether you want to glance at walking directions or type out a quick text without opening your phone. It’s a powerful tool if you’re willing to put up with the inherent wonkiness of a very small screen.
With the phone open, you also have a perfectly adequate flagship Android phone, but a few things stop me from recommending it as the best flip phone, full stop. Camera processing is inconsistent: images can look weirdly low in contrast, and portrait mode is uninspiring. Motorola offers three years of OS upgrades, plus an additional year of security patches, which is okay. But the company has a reputation for releasing upgrades slowly — Samsung offers a better track record for speed and more years of OS upgrades. It’s not the best all-around pick, but it sure is a fun time.
Read our full Motorola Razr Plus (2024) review.
The best foldable for multitaskers
Screen: 7.6-inch, 1856p, 120HZ OLED inner screen; 6.3-inch, 968p, 120Hz OLED outer screen / Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 Cameras: 50 megapixel f/1.8 main with OIS, 10-megapixel 3x telephoto with OIS, 12-megapixel ultrawide, 10-megapixel outer selfie, 4-megapixel inner selfie / Battery: 4,400mAh / Charging: 25W wired, 15W wireless / Weather-resistance rating: IP48
The Galaxy Z Fold 6 is an excellent foldable in its own right. It has a top-notch Qualcomm processor, full water resistance, and a reliable camera system. It uses a tall-and-skinny form factor for the outer screen that I’ve never been able to get quite comfortable with, so it’s not my pick for the best overall book-style foldable, but it excels in one aspect where other devices fall short: multitasking.
Samsung, as usual, embraces chaos in the Galaxy Z Fold 6’s interface, to the device’s advantage. You want to run apps? How about three of ‘em on the same screen? Plus a little floating window you can plop down in the middle? Go for it. Other foldables allow multitasking to some degree, but none are as permissive as Samsung’s.
You can easily resize apps running on the inner screen, move them around, and save them so you can return to that combination later. Oppo (and by extension, OnePlus) offers a well-regarded UI that also allows you to use three apps — either all at once or with one minimized to the side to be quickly pulled back onscreen. Lots of people prefer it, and if your brain craves order more than chaos then it might be the better option. But there’s nothing quite like the experience that the Z Fold 6 offers on any other phone.
Read our full Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 review.
The best “I can’t believe it’s this thin” foldable
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
Let’s get the bad news out of the way first: if you live in the US or Europe, you can’t 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 “global” release, then you’re in luck: you can pick up the world’s thinnest book-style folding phone, and the rest of us are all very jealous of you.
The Find N5 isn’t all about thinness. Its Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset is highly capable, the phone is fully water-resistant, and battery life is excellent. But let’s be real, its uniquely thin profile is the big selling point. It’s hard to overstate how slim it is: just barely thicker than a standard slab-style phone, and only slightly heavier. That matters when you’re 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 — not a benefit you have to make many other sacrifices for. Oppo delivers this in spades, and I just wish more of us could… find it.
Read our full Oppo Find N5 review.
Other foldables to consider
The OnePlus Open strikes a great balance in its form factor and offers a clever UI for multitasking that has won plenty of fans since it debuted. But the phone lacks wireless charging and full water resistance — it’s only splash-resistant — and OnePlus’ software support policy isn’t as strong as Google and Samsung’s.
The regular Motorola Razr 2024 is a good option if you’re interested in a flip phone but don’t want to pay $1,000 for one. The cover screen is a bit smaller, but it’s still spacious enough to do most of the things you can use the Razr Plus for. Complaints about Motorola’s slow software rollouts still apply here, though.
Finally, the Huawei Mate XT gets an honorable mention on its sheer wow factor alone. The “trifold” phone — as it’s been dubbed — contains three screen segments and two hinges, putting it in a category of its own right now. It’s only available in China and a few other countries that don’t include the US or the UK, and it’s monstrously expensive at €3,499. But it’s cool as heck and may be a sign of things to come from other manufacturers.