The best phone 2024: top smartphones in the US right now

Best phone iPhone 15 Pro Max
(Image credit: Future / Apple)

The best phone you can buy is a phone we know well, whether you want a new Apple iPhone or an Android like a Samsung Galaxy or Google Pixel. We've tested all of the best phones to see which is the easiest to use, which performs the best, and which lasts the longest. No matter what phone you prefer, or how much you have to spend, we have the best choice for you.

The latest phones are packed with new features like AI, amazing cameras, and even screens that fold in half. We've picked the essentials for every price range. If you have more to spend, we recommend the best phones for your top dollar. 

If you need something more affordable, check out our recommendations for less than $600. We also have a list of the best budget phones, if you need to save even more. 

If you're a fan of Apple, Samsung, or Google, you can check out deep dives into the best iPhones, best Samsung phones, and best Google Pixel phones elsewhere on TechRadar. We update this list whenever a new phone review earns a top spot, so check back soon. 

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Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Below, you'll find full write-ups for each of the best phones in our list. We've tested each model extensively, so you can be sure that our recommendations can be trusted.

Best iPhone over $1,000

iPhone 15 Pro Max

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
Best iPhone over $1,000

Specifications

Release date: September 2023
Weight: 221g
Dimensions: 159.9 x 76.7 x 8.25mm
OS: iOS 17
Screen size: 6.7 inches
Resolution: 2796 x 1290 pixels
CPU: A17 Pro
RAM: 8GB (unofficial)
Storage: 256GB/512GB/1TB
Battery: 4,422mAh (unofficial)
Rear camera: 48MP (wide) + 12MP (ultra-wide) + 12MP (telephoto with 5x optical zoom)
Front camera: 12MP

Reasons to buy

+
Gorgeous albeit subtle redesign
+
Excellent photography

Reasons to avoid

-
Pricier baseline (but more storage)
-
Charging should be faster
Buy it if

You want to use Apple Intelligence: The iPhone 15 Pro Max is powerful enough that it will be able to use Apple's upcoming AI features, unlike the basic iPhone 15.

You want the most powerful phone: Apple's A17 Pro chipset is more powerful than anything else on the market, so much so that you're able to play console-quality games on the iPhone 15 Pro Max.

You want a versatile camera system: In addition to its 5x optical zoom capabilities, the iPhone 15 Pro Max features the smartest portrait photography tech around.

Don't buy it if:

❌ You want the best mobile zoom camera: The addition of 5x optical zoom on the iPhone 15 Pro Max is welcome, but the 5x camera on the Galaxy S24 Ultra is arguably better.

You need fast charging: The iPhone 15 Pro Max offers reassuringly-solid battery life and functionally-fine charging, but rivals from every angle offer much faster speeds.

The bottom line

📱 When it comes to iPhones, the iPhone 15 Pro Max is the best of the best. But you'll have to pay handsomely for the privilege of owning one, and Samsung's similarly priced Galaxy S24 Ultra has slightly better cameras. ★★★★½

The iPhone 15 Pro Max is indisputably the best iPhone money can buy right now, so for Apple fans with a bottomless supply of cash, this is the top choice. The smaller iPhone 15 Pro is also an exceptional handset that's worth considering if you prefer its more practical 6.1-inch size, but since the larger iPhone 15 Pro Max offers a 5x periscope zoom lens, the latter phone is the objectively superior device.

Design: As with its smaller sibling, the iPhone 15 Pro boasts a gorgeous titanium design that can withstand unwelcome drops more effectively than its predecessor. The addition of a USB-C port and configurable Action button makes this a more versatile device, too.

Display: The iPhone 15 Pro Max packs an excellent 6.7-inch Super XDR OLED screen (with ProMotion), which is unchanged from the iPhone 14 Pro Max.

Camera: In addition to that aforementioned 5x periscope zoom lens – which marks the first of its kind on an iPhone – the iPhone 15 Pro Max boasts a 48MP quad-pixel main lens and a 12MP ultra-wide lens, making it the most capable and versatile iPhone yet for mobile photographers.

Performance: Apple's all-new A17 Pro chipset delivers mobile gaming performance that's comparable to some high-end PCs (yes, really). Along with the iPhone 15 Pro, the iPhone 15 Pro Max is the most powerful phone on the market.

Battery life: The iPhone 15 Pro Max managed 28 hours of mixed-use in our testing, with the phone recharging to 50% in just over 30 minutes. That's pretty good going for a phone of this size and power, but others charge faster.

Value for money: As with the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra, the iPhone 15 Pro Max is an exceptionally expensive handset that can never truly be considered good value for money. That said, you're still getting a whole lot of phone for the price.

Read our full iPhone 15 Pro Max review

Swipe to scroll horizontally
iPhone 15 Pro Max scorecard
AttributesNotesRating
PriceMore expensive, but you do get more storage for your money.★★★☆☆
DesignThe combination of a titanium body and new smoother curves is an aesthetic and ergonomic win.★★★★☆
DisplayThe screen in bigger (though not higher resolution) and looks better than ever.★★★★★
CameraThis is the best collection of cameras we've ever used on an iPhone.★★★★★
PerformanceThe A17 Pro makes console gaming a reality in an iPhone.★★★★★
Battery lifeAll-day battery life but still waiting for fast charging.★★★★☆

Best iPhone over $600

iPhone 15 review images

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)
Best iPhone over $600

Specifications

Weight: 171g
Dimensions: 147.6 x 71.6 x 7.80mm
OS: iOS 17
Screen size: 6.1-inch
Resolution: 2556 x 1179
CPU: A16 Bionic
RAM: 6GB
Storage: 128GB/256GB/512GB
Battery: 3,349mAh (unofficial)
Rear camera: 48MP (wide) +12MP (ultra-wide)
Front camera: 12MP

Reasons to buy

+
Dynamic Island retires the notch
+
Smooth design and soft-feel, color-infused rear glass

Reasons to avoid

-
No zoom lens
-
No macro capabilities
Buy it if

You want an affordable iPhone: The iPhone 15 strikes a nice balance between price and cutting-edge features, so you don't feel like you're missing out.

You want a camera upgrade: Between the new 48MP main camera and some excellent portrait photography capabilities, the iPhone 15 offers strong camera specs for the price.

Don't buy it if:

You want Apple Intelligence: If you want the upcoming Apple AI features, you'll need a Pro model or better.

You want bigger zoom: The 2x optical zoom on offer here doesn't quite compare to 3x optical zoom on the iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro or Samsung Galaxy S23.

The bottom line

📱 If you're not bothered by titanium sides, 120Hz scrolling or high-spec zoom photography, then the standard iPhone 15 offers pretty much everything you could want from a flagship phone, but for significantly less money. ★★★★½

Apple's iPhone 15 marks the most significant step up for a base iPhone in several years, earning its place as the best value phone money can buy today.

Design: The iPhone 15 does what the iPhone 14 did not: it moves the base model forward with a refreshed chassis design, a brand-new (and eye-catching) rear glass panel, and a compatibility-improving USB-C port.

Display: The iPhone 15's 6.1-inch Super XDR OLED display is bright and responsive, however, as on the iPhone 14, its refresh rate is locked to 60Hz. You do get Apple's Dynamic Island this time around, though.

Camera: There are still just two lenses on the back of the iPhone 15, but one of them is vastly improved over the iPhone 14. The 12MP ultrawide is basically the same, but the main camera is now the same 48MP lens that you'll find on the excellent iPhone 14 Pro (and indeed the iPhone 15 Pro).

Performance: The iPhone 15 uses the iPhone 14 Pro's superfast A16 Bionic chipset, which should provide more than enough power for most iPhone owners (for context, the latter was the most powerful handset of 2022).

Battery life: The iPhone 15 is rated for 20 hours of video playback, 80 hours of audio-only, and a 50% recharge in 30 minutes with the optional 20W charger. In our testing, we were able to use the phone casually for a full day. 

Value for money: In recent years, Apple's standard models have felt like minor upgrades that pale in comparison to their respective Pro-level counterparts, but the iPhone 15 bucks that trend by being a genuinely great value product.

Read our full iPhone 15 review

Swipe to scroll horizontally
iPhone 15 scorecard
AttributesNotesRating
PriceApple is finally giving you more for you money.★★★★☆
DesignThe curved edges and smooth, color-infused glass make this a most modern iPhone.★★★★☆
DisplayLosing the notch and gaining the dynamic Island is a net poisitive, as is the lovely and now brighter screen.★★★★☆
CameraA big main camera leap is paired with some truly impressive computational photography.★★★★☆
PerformanceIt's hard to ask for more than the A16 Bionic, unless you need the very best of the best.★★★★☆
Battery lifeDecidedly battery life.★★★★☆

Best iPhone under $600

iPhone 13

(Image credit: TechRadar)
Best iPhone under $600

Specifications

Weight: 174g
Dimensions: 146.7 x 71.5 x 7.7mm
OS: iOS 15
Screen size: 6.1-inch
Resolution: 1170 x 2532
CPU: A15 Bionic
RAM: 4GB
Storage: 128GB/256GB/512GB
Battery: Up to 19 hours
Rear camera: 12MP (wide) + 12MP (ultra-wide)
Front camera: 12MP

Reasons to buy

+
Strong battery life
+
Powerful internals

Reasons to avoid

-
Outdated design
-
No 120Hz screen
Buy it if

You need an iPhone for the best price: If you must use an iPhone, the iPhone 13 is the cheapest modern iPhone that you can buy from Apple.

You want great battery life: The iPhone 13 has very impressive battery life, it was a major improvement over previous iPhones when we first reviewed it.

You want a powerful, affordable phone: The iPhone 13 is a few years old, but that A15 Bionic chipset was plenty powerful when it launched, and it still holds up. 

Don't buy it if:

❌ You want a small phone: If size is your biggest concern, you can still get an even smaller iPhone SE from Apple, with the same A15 Bionic processor inside.

You don't care about iOS: For the same price, you can find a premium Android with much newer specs, it just won't offer the blue message bubbles iPhone fans crave.

The bottom line

📱 The iPhone 13 isn't the cheapest iPhone that Apple sells, but it's so much more modern than the iPhone SE that its an easy pick for the best budget iPhone. You get Apple's latest iOS software and cameras, except for Apple Intelligence, which is only coming to the most expensive, new iPhone models.  ★★★★½

The iPhone 13 wasn't the biggest yearly iPhone upgrade we'd ever seen when it arrived in 2021, but almost every aspect of it is a little better than the iPhone 12, which means it's still a brilliant iPhone overall. More importantly, though, it's the cheapest iPhone (bar the iPhone SE) that Apple still sells.

In our review, we found that the phone's battery life was particularly impressive, with the iPhone 13 making it through every day that we used it without needing a top-up before bed.

We were also impressed by its design, which includes a smaller notch (versus the iPhone 13), and by the sheer amount of power that this phone still has to offer, which comes as a result of its A15 Bionic chipset. At launch, Apple claimed that the iPhone 13 had a 50% faster CPU than the competition, and while that’s hard to confirm, this is certainly a speedy phone.

The lack of a 120Hz screen, which saw its iPhone debut on the iPhone 13 Pro and Pro Max, is a shame, and it's doubly upsetting that even its successor didn't move past 60Hz. Even so, this is still a superb device with plenty of life left in it. If you're looking for a cheap iPhone to see you through the next couple of years, this is it.

Read our full iPhone 13 review

Best Android over $1,000

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra from the back with S Pen mostly withdrawn

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

4. Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra

Best Android over $1,000

Specifications

Release date: January 2024
Weight: 232g
Dimensions: 162.3 x 79.0 x 8.6mm
OS; Expected Upgrades: Android 14 / One UI 6; 7 years of upgrades
Screen size: 6.8-inch
Resolution: QHD+
CPU: Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 Mobile Platform for Galaxy
RAM: 12GB
Storage: 256GB / 512GB / 1TB
Battery: 5,000mAh
Rear camera: 200MP (wide) + 12MP (ultra-wide) + 10MP (telephoto with 3x optical zoom) + 50MP (telephoto with 5x optical zoom)
Front camera: 12MP

Reasons to buy

+
Incredible performance and features
+
Better cameras than ever before

Reasons to avoid

-
AI features can be useless at worst
-
Big, heavy, and more expensive
Buy it if

You want more than just a smartphone: The Galaxy S24 Ultra gives you more than any other smartphone. It can act as a laptop replacement, a drawing tablet, and an entire camera bag.

You want to feel the future: The Galaxy AI features can sometimes feel magical, especially if you use the language translation and some of the better summary features. There are definitely more AI features to come, so this phone could get better with time. 

Don't buy it if:

You don't need all of that phone: If you don't need everything and more, you can spend less and still get a great phone. It just won't be Ultra.

You prefer elegance and simplicity: The Samsung software is really showing its age, especially against newer and simpler phones like the elegant iPhone 15 Pro running iOS 17, which is sociable and fun, not confusing. 

The bottom line

📱 The Galaxy S24 Ultra takes smartphone features to the extreme. You won't find a more capable, adaptable, and clever device for any price, but that price is mighty steep. If you don't need everything, you can keep reading, but if you want the best phone, the best cameras, and the best overall, the Galaxy S24 Ultra is the phone to beat. ★★★★½

Samsung's Galaxy S24 Ultra takes smartphone features to the extreme, then keeps going. It's a top-performing phone, the best phone you can buy overall in so many ways. It has better battery life and performance than the iPhone, more versatile cameras than any other Android, and it packs features we don't see in smartphones these days, like the Samsung DeX desktop environment. 

Design: The differences between the Galaxy S24 Ultra and last year's phone are subtle but significant. The S24 Ultra is a big slab of phone, now more flat than before, and that makes it easier to see in bright light and easier to use, especially with the S Pen. Unfortunately, it's still a gigantic device, and titanium didn't help Samsung shed weight. 

Display: You won't find a better all-around display on a smartphone than the bright OLED screen on the Galaxy S24 Ultra. You can find a bit brighter, a bit faster, but the anti-glare finish helps in bright light, and Samsung's display is colorful and sharp for every task.

Camera: Samsung has done more work behind the scenes on its Galaxy S24 Ultra cameras than on the spec sheet, and the results pay off with better images in every setting. Portrait and landscape photos are much better, but even zoom shots have been improved, though we do miss that extra 10X zoom.

Performance: If you need the fastest phone, this is the one to buy. In our benchmark tests and real world gaming and photo editing, the Galaxy S24 Ultra was the fastest phone we've ever used, even beating the iPhone 15 Pro, which is a first for Android phones since Apple starting baking its own chipsets. 

Battery life: You can easily use the Galaxy S24 Ultra for two days of normal use, and it lasted through a full day of intense usage with no trouble. The battery hasn't gotten any bigger, Samsung is just better at managing power on this phone than ever before.  

Value for money: The Galaxy S24 Ultra is more expensive than last year, and you don't get a lot more for the money, but what you get is a big deal. Samsung promises seven years of software updates, including major Android OS updates, and that makes this phone a better value than any Samsung Galaxy Ultra to come before. 

Read our full Galaxy S24 Ultra review

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra scorecard
AttributesNotesRating
PriceEven more than last year, with fewer deals to find, but you get the best when you pay for it.★★★☆☆
DesignIt looks like last year, but the screen is flat which makes it less reflective, but also sharper. Just as heavy, even with titanium. ★★★★☆
DisplayYou won't find a better display on a smartphone worth buying, and the anti-glare finish really helps outdoors. ★★★★★
CameraBetter camera performance all around, even if the spec sheet looks a bit suspicious. Still the best, most versatile camera system. ★★★★★
PerformancePerformance that can top an iPhone 15 Pro, for the first time in recent memory putting Android ahead of Apple. ★★★★★
Battery lifeBetter power management this year means the Galaxy S24 Ultra has some of the best battery life we've ever seen on a smartphone. ★★★★★

Best Android over $600

Google Pixel 8 Pro standing on a table

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
Best Android over $600

Specifications

Release date: October 2023
Weight: 213g
Dimensions: 162.6 x 76.5 x 8.8mm
OS: Android 14
Screen size: 6.7-inch
Resolution: 1344 x 2992
CPU: Google Tensor G3
RAM: 12GB
Storage: 128GB/256GB/512GB/1TB
Battery: 5,050mAh
Rear camera: 50MP (wide) + 48MP (ultra-wide) + 48MP (telephoto)
Front camera: 10.5MP

Reasons to buy

+
Great materials and matte finish
+
Call screening is natural and very useful
+
Incredible seven years of updates

Reasons to avoid

-
Android settings and features are confusing
-
AI features feel creepy and impersonal
-
Cameras don’t beat the iPhone 15 Pro
Buy it if

You’ve taken a lot of bad photos and videos: The Pixel 8 Pro can fix whatever photos you have in your Google Photos library, even if you took them with a different phone in the past.

You’re a die-hard Android fan forever and ever: Good news, Android fan, this phone will last longer than any other Android. If you want an Android that will get updates in 2030, this is the first.

You want a receptionist to answer your calls: The call screening feature really works (if you can find it), and it gives you a quick, written transcript of what your caller wants before you decide to answer.

Don't buy it if:

Your friends all have iPhones: With iOS 17, Apple is making a compelling argument for sticking with the same phone everybody around you is buying.

You want the absolute best cameras: While the Pixel 8 Pro is impressive, and the iPhone 15 Pro Max is a serious upgrade, nothing beats the Galaxy S24 Ultra for camera capabilities and quality.

You are a journalist or reporter: The camera editing tools on the Google Pixel 8 Pro may create questions about credibility from the shots it makes, and the summary tool is factually inaccurate.

The bottom line

📱 The Google Pixel 8 Pro is the best Pixel that Google has ever made, and it represents Google’s vision for the future of mobile technology, though that vision does seem a bit clouded and unfocused at times. It has a fantastic display that’s bigger and brighter than its competitors at this price, and the photography features, bolstered by Google’s machine learning, are unmatched. ★★★★

The Pixel 8 Pro is Google’s most ambitious Pixel yet, with some serious camera upgrades that will satisfy even pro photogs, and a Tensor G3 chipset custom built to run Google’s machine learning features. Google is so confident in this phone’s performance that it is promising an unprecedented seven years of major updates, longer than any other phone maker supports its phones, currently. 

Design: The Pixel 8 Pro is more rounded on the corners, and more flat on the display. This makes the phone easier to hold, while also giving you a better view of your content. The finish is lovely, and the colors are more classy and inviting than unusual and modern. This is the nicest Pixel phone Google has made so far, which is good because it has largely made the same phone three times now.

Display: The Pixel 8 Pro display is a standout feature this year, and Google has even endowed it with its own branding: Super Actua. The Pixel 8 Pro can reach 2,400 nits at peak brightness, and still pumps out 1,600 nits when you aren’t in direct sunlight. In almost every way, the Pixel 8 Pro display beats that of the iPhone 15 Pro Max.

Camera: Compared to the iPhone 15 Pro Max, some photos looked better when shot with the Pixel 8 Pro, but others, especially night pics and low-light images, looked better taken with the iPhone. That’s surprising, but there are still some reasons for Google to brag. Only the Pixel 8 Pro has Magic Editor, which combines generative AI with Google's Magic Eraser to fix and change images with a little too much ease. 

Performance: In terms of raw performance, pushing games and graphics to new heights, the Pixel 8 Pro does just fine, but it won’t win any competitions. It handled all of my favorite games and ran high-resolution videos smoothly, but everything looked better on phones like the iPhone 15 Pro or Android phones like the Galaxy S24 Ultra.

Battery life: The Pixel 8 Pro had no trouble lasting through a full day of use. That should come as no surprise, since it has a larger battery than either the Samsung Galaxy S23 Plus or the Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max. Google really packed in the biggest cell it could fit, and you’ll need to buy a gaming phone to find bigger.

Value for money: Google can be liberal with discounts, especially around the sales season. More than with any other brand, I recommend waiting for a deal when you’re considering a Pixel phone, because as good as the phone is now, it feels like an even better buy for a few hundred dollars or pounds less. 

Read our full Google Pixel 8 Pro review 

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Google Pixel 8 Pro score card
AttributesNotesRating
PriceMore expensive than last year, but still competitive compared to other Android phones, especially with longer software support.★★★★☆
DesignThe same old look, now refined with a matte finish and nicer colors. It’s the nicest Pixel yet, but the Pixel look is getting stale.★★★★☆
DisplayThe standout feature on the Pixel 8 Pro, this bright and sharp display is just as good as the iPhone 15 Pro Max, and maybe better.★★★★★
CameraGreat all-around camera features, with some unique AI editing tools that are more like Photoshop creation than photography. Still, undeniably good pics.★★★★☆
PerformanceGood enough performance for now, but it’s unclear if this phone will live up to Google’s seven-year promise, or if Android will cut corners to fit into the Pixel 8 Pro in the future.★★★☆☆
Battery lifeExcellent battery life thanks to a very large cell inside and solid power management keeping that bright display under control.★★★★☆

Best Android under $600

Google Pixel 8a in aloe green showing

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
Best Android under $600

Specifications

Weight: 188g
Dimensions: 152.1 x 72.7 x 8.9mm
OS: Android 14
Screen size: 6.1-inch
Resolution: 1080 x 2400
CPU: Google Tensor G3
RAM: 8GB
Storage: 128GB
Battery: 4,492mAh
Rear camera: 64MP + 13MP
Front camera: 13MP

Reasons to buy

+
An affordable way get Google's AI magic
+
Cheap but still gets seven years of Android OS updates

Reasons to avoid

-
Battery life could be better
-
Not the best performance, but AI-capable
Buy it if

You want to save money on a Pixel 8: The Pixel 8a is so close to the Pixel 8 in performance and quality that it hardly makes sense to spend more. 

You want to try AI on the cheap: Google Pixel phones have the best AI features so far, and the Pixel 8a is the most affordable Pixel to get all of the best features first.

You want a cheap phone that lasts: With a promise to update this phone with new Android for the next seven years, this is the cheapest way to keep a phone longer than ever before. 

Don't buy it if:

You need serious performance: You can find better performance for less, like the OnePlus 12R, but you won't get all the Google goodies with it.

You need versatile cameras: Don't be fooled by the 64MP sensor, the Pixel 8a can only produce 16MP images. They look good, but there aren't a lot of options.

You really need a seven year phone: In seven years this phone will get Android updates, but if you need a phone that will actually perform well for that long, buy the fastest thing possible. 

The bottom line

📱The Pixel 8a continues Google's grand A-series tradition of offering the latest Google features, along with the latest Google processor inside, on an affordable phone (that will probably get a great discount sooner or later). This year is better than ever, thanks to Google's promise to support the Pixel 8a for seven years.  ★★★★

The Pixel 8a is a confident entry into Google's budget-friendly A-series family, bringing the same Tensor G3 processor and, shockingly, the same promise of seven years of Android OS updates that you'll find on the Pixel 8 and Pixel 8 Pro. 

Design: The Pixel 8a is recognizably a Pixel phone, but it's the biggest departure from the norm that we've seen in a long time. The colors are not subdued, unless you're boring and you get black or porcelain. The edges are much more rounded and curved, making it a stylish phone, not a boring slab.  

Display: There's a bright display on the Pixel 8a, and it performs about as well as the Pixel 8, which had bragging rights for its impressively vibrant 'Actua' display. For the price, you can find a bigger screen, but the smaller size is part of the appeal. 

Camera: Photos taken with the Pixel 8a look very similar to the photos we took with the Pixel 8 Pro ... until you zoom in close. Google has done a great job with color and light balance on this phone, and even though it lacks the detail and zoom power of more expensive phones, especially more expensive Pixel phones, the Pixel 8a will produce photos that are crowd-pleasing and easy to share. 

Performance: The Tensor G3 chip doesn't have the raw power of a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 or any recent Apple Bionic chipset, but it's good enough to drive Google's Gemini Nano LLM on the device, and it can handle Google's interface with ease. With a promise to support the phone for seven years, we hope this processor holds up. Time will tell. 

Battery life: The Pixel 8a has better battery life than its predecessor phones, but that isn't saying much. It still could use a battery boost, plus faster charging. If you need a lot of battery, look elsewhere. It's the Pixel 8a's weak point. 

Value for money: This phone is a great value at launch, but Pixel A-series phones have a history of amazing discounts. In the past, we saw the Pixel 7a drop from $499 to $349 in the US on Amazon. We'll be following the deals closely on this one.  

Read our full Google Pixel 8a review

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Google Pixel 8a score card
AttributesNotesRating
ValueThe same price as last year (in the US at least), and a good value for Google’s long-term software updates and Android support. 5 / 5
DesignUnimpeachably a Pixel, but with great color and a nice finish, it feels both premium and youthful at once. I especially appreciate IP68 water resistance. 5 / 5
DisplayGreat, bright display, just like the screen we loved on the Pixel 8. It could be bigger, sharper, faster, but it’s very bright, and that’s good enough. 4 / 5
SoftwareGoogle’s AI features are getting more useful and more prevalent, and with seven years of Android updates, this is a phone to watch for a long time. It could get even better. 4 / 5
CameraPhotos look very similar to Pixel 8 Pro shots, until you zoom in close. Still great for a phone at this price. The AI editing features are the real standout. 3 / 5
PerformanceGoogle’s Tensor G3 has us questioning whether this phone will last seven years, but for now it’s capable of running all of Google’s best features… with help from the cloud, of course. 3 / 5
BatteryThe battery is smaller than the Pixel 8, and battery life suffers. Charging is also a bit slower, whether wired or wireless. If you need more screen time, we have other suggestions. 3 / 5

More everything

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 half folded

(Image credit: Future)
More everything

Specifications

Release date: July 2024
Weight: 239g
Dimensions: 68.1 x 153.5 x 12.1mm
OS: Android 14 / OneUI 6.1.1
Screen size: 7.6-inch QXGA+ Dynamic AMOLED
Resolution: 2160 x 1856 pixels
CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 for Galaxy
RAM: 12GB
Storage: 256GB / 512GB / 1TB
Battery: 4,400mAh
Rear camera: 50MP (wide) + 12MP (ultra-wide) + 10MP (3X optical zoom)
Front camera: 10MP

Reasons to buy

+
Big main screen and wider cover screen
+
Best foldable from Samsung yet

Reasons to avoid

-
Not dust resistant
-
Only a minor camera upgrade
-
Very expensive
Buy it if

You want a tablet in your pocket: The Galaxy Z Fold 6 lets you carry both a 6.3-inch smartphone and a mini tablet, without feeling like you're overloaded.

Foldable have you curious: If you've been waiting to buy a foldable phone, the Galaxy Z Fold 6 gives you everything you might want, and it's Samsung's best yet. 

You want to try cool AI features: Samsung's Galaxy AI can be very fun, especially cool new features like sketch to image, which works great on the big Z Fold 6 display. 

Don't buy it if:

You have rent to pay: The Galaxy Z Fold 6 is unbelievably expensive, more than buying a premium phone and pro tablet together.  

You need the best cameras: The only way the Galaxy Z Fold 6 isn't the best phone ever is in the cameras. The Galaxy S24 Ultra is still tops for image quality. 

The bottom line

📱 The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is versatile and powerful, and its the most premium and refined foldable phone Samsung has created so far. Galaxy AI offers fun new features and impressive power, though its still more of a gimmick than a necessity. If you can handle the high price tag, you won't find a better all-around mobile computer than the Galaxy Z Fold 6.  ★★★★½

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is Samsung's latest tablet foldable phone, and it offers every feature Samsung is known for, including a water resistant design, plenty of productivity features, and amazing displays inside and out. It's the most expensive phone you'll find by far, but you get more than twice the device with the Z Fold 6. 

Design: The Galaxy Z Fold 6 is stronger and more durable than before, though it still isn't dust resistant. The crease is hardly visible and the premium finish looks fantastic, especially in the brighter colors. 

Display: Amazing displays inside and out, with a huge inner screen and a big, bright cover display that's almost as large as whatever phone you're currently carrying. You can even use an S Pen, though you'll need the special version for Fold that doesn't scratch the foldable display.  

Camera: Cameras on par with a great budget phone, not the best flagship phones you can buy. That's disappointing, but you'll still take good photos, especially selfies. Editing your images is more fun than ever with useful AI tools, including a sketch to image that turns your doodles into photo additions. 

Performance: Incredibly performance from the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 for Galaxy chipset that is made extra fast for Samsung's best phones. Even the iPhone 15 Pro Max can't beat this phone in every benchmark, as Android finally pulls up neck-and-neck with the best iPhone in terms of raw power. 

Battery life: Battery life wasn't bad, but it was a bit disappointing considering the size of this phone. You'll get better battery from a flat phone, but the Galaxy Z Fold 6 still lasted all day in our testing. 

Value for money: Nope, keep walking, this phone is for people who want the best, the most, and the coolest, price tag be darned. You get the most amazing mobile device when you buy the Galaxy Z Fold 6, and you'll pay for the privilege. 

Read our full Galaxy Z Fold 6 review

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Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 score card
AttributesNotesRating
ValueMore expensive than ever but there's no denying it's a two-for-one mobile device that's stuffed with power, fun, utility, and AI3.5 / 5
DesignThe best foldabe design Samsung has ever produced. Sharp and pro-looking at every level4.5 / 5
DisplayA wider cover display and noticeably improved Main screen prove a formidable combo4.5 / 5
CameraStill good camera array but Samsung could've done more for its flagship foldable4 / 5
PerformanceThe best Qualcomm has to offer with a ittle bit more that shows in benchmarks and day-to-day performance4.5 / 5
SoftwareA good blend of Android 14, foldable-friendly utility and Samsung's OneUI4.5 / 5

More battery life

OnePlus 12R review front angled

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

8. OnePlus 12R

More battery life

Specifications

Release date: January 2024
Weight: 207g
Dimensions: 163.3 x 75.3 x 8.8mm
OS: Android 14, Oxygen OS 14
Screen size: 6.78-inches
Resolution: 1264 x 2780 pixels
CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2
RAM: 8GB / 12GB / 16GB
Storage: 128GB / 256GB
Battery: 5,500mAh
Rear camera: 50MP (wide) + 8P (ultrawide) + 2MP (macro)
Front camera: 16MP

Reasons to buy

+
Excellent battery life
+
Display is outstanding
+
Plenty of features

Reasons to avoid

-
No seven-year update promise
-
Not many MP on those cameras
-
Can't charge wirelessly
Buy it if

You watch and play: With great performance, a dazzling display, and long battery life, this is a phone that's great for gamers and folks who binge-watch shows.

You miss curvy phones: Samsung phones and iPhones have gotten a bit flat, but the OnePlus 12R has a curved display and an elegantly curved design.

You want long battery life: Let's cut to the chase, this phone lasts a long time, and that's one of the best reasons to buy it. That huge battery lasts and lasts.

Don't buy it if:

You need the best camera: The main camera is great, but those other cameras have tiny little sensors that don't produce images that you'll want to share.

You need to get wet: The OnePlus 12R is sadly not IP67 rated for water resistance, unlike many other phones in this price range. If you need durability, look somewhere else. 

The bottom line

📱 The OnePlus 12R brings the OnePlus bargain phone formula to more markets, and folks looking for the best battery life on a phone that performs as well as many premium flagships should stop looking. It doesn't have the best camera options, and it's not the most durable, but it delivers performance with style. ★★★★

The OnePlus 12R is the bargain phone version of a great phone that was already a good bargain. For an even lower price, the OnePlus 12R gives you a bigger battery than the OnePlus 12, but you lose out on many of the best camera features. It's still a great choice.

Design: We like the stylish looks and even the round camera bump on the recent OnePlus models, and the OnePlus 12R looks snazzy and comes in a nice blue color, in addition to grey and violet. Unfortunately, OnePlus hasn't gotten the message that water resistance is very important, so this phone can only handle a light rain, not a serious dunk.
  
Display: The OnePlus 12R has a remarkable display that is big, bright, and colorful. It's incredibly bright, in fact, with a standard 1,600 nits of brightness normally, but under very specific conditions portions of the display can peak up to 4,500 nits, which is beyond dangerous for eyeballs. Still, you get the point, it's very bright. 

Camera: The big 50MP main camera is nice, but the other two cameras, an 8MP ultra wide and a laughable 2MP 'macro' camera, are forgettable. That's fine, stick with the main lens and you'll take good shots, but don't expect to win any competitions. 

Performance: OnePlus didn't skimp on the processor, and the OnePlus 12R gets the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2, the best Snapdragon we saw for most of 2023. Performance was great, whether playing games or ... ok, we mostly played a lot of games. It's a really nice screen for games. 

Battery life: With a big 5,500 mAh battery inside, the OnePlus 12R delivers the best battery life of any premium smartphone we've tested. It edged out the Galaxy S24 Plus by an hour in our rundown tests, and beat the iPhone 15 Pro Max by more than four hours of active time. If you need longevity, this is a great choice. 

Value for money: With a low price of $499.99 / £649 at launch, the OnePlus 12R could have easily been our pick for the best bargain phone, but instead our best battery life pick is also a great bargain. It delivers top-notch performance, the only real sacrifice is durability. 

Read our full OnePlus 12R review

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OnePlus 12R score card
AttributesNotesRating
ValueSo long as you're happy with the OnePlus 12R's weaknesses, there's a lot of great smartphone for your money here.4 / 5
DesignBeautiful fit and finish hides lackluster ingress protection against dust and water.3.5 / 5
DisplayA superb display, that's stunning, bright, power efficient and smart. As long as you're happy with the size and resolution, there's little wrong here.5 / 5
SoftwareOxygenOS 14 on the 12R is full of features without feeling overwhelming. The phone's long-term update roadmap is behind the curve, though.4 / 5
CameraA superb main 50MP snapper should cover you for most things, but the secondary cameras don't justify their presence on the 12R, especially that macro snapper.3.5 / 5
PerformanceLast year's flagship silicon still packs plenty of punch, supported by OnePlus' efforts with the Trinity Engine. Thermals could be better, despite the company's claims, though.4 / 5
BatteryA big battery that results in the brand's best longevity to date in our tests. No wireless charging is the only misstep here.4.5 / 5

More gaming

Asus ROG Phone 8 from the back

(Image credit: TechRadar)
More gaming

Specifications

Release date: January 2024
Weight: 225g
Dimensions: 163.8 x 76.8 x 8.9mm
OS: Android 14
Screen size: 6.78-inches
Resolution: 1080 x 2400 pixels
CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3
RAM: 16GB / 24GB
Storage: 512GB / 1TB
Battery: 5,500mAh
Rear camera: 50MP (wide) + 13MP (ultra-wide) + 32MP (3X optical zoom)
Front camera: 32MP

Reasons to buy

+
Subtle design, for a gaming phone
+
Incredible performance

Reasons to avoid

-
Can't sustain top performance
-
No port for cooling this year
-
Only two years of Android updates
Buy it if

You want a gaming phone that doesn't scream: The Asus ROG Phone 8 Pro is a serious gaming phone, but unlike the last few ROG Phone models, this one won't scream to the world that you wish you had a spaceship

You want more than a gaming phone: Usually you have to skip features like wireless charging, or IP68 water resistance, when you choose a gaming phone. Not with the ROG Phone 8 Pro. 

You want to play games all day: Sure there are other Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 phones, but few with this much RAM, and none with better cooling, so the ROG Phone 8 Pro is made to keep pushing faster and faster. 

Don't buy it if:

Your want a cheap gaming phone: The ROG Phone 8 Pro is packed with features, and features don't come cheap. You can find similar performance cheaper without all the niceties. 

You want a thin phone: With great cooling inside and a huge battery, you know the ROG Phone 8 Pro is going to be a thick phone when you buy it. If you need thinner, you'll have to make sacrifices. 

You want a phone that lasts year: Only two years of Android updates? Come on, Asus, Samsung and Google are offering up to seven years on phones this expensive. Time to step up. 

The bottom line

📱 The Asus ROG Phone 8 Pro is a great gaming phone with blazing performance like you'd expect, but it's also a great phone all around, something we couldn't say about previous hardcore gaming phones. The cameras are better, water resistance is a huge addition, and it looks stylish. Plus, it has great battery life. ★★★★

The ROG Phone 8 Pro is a gaming phone all grown up. It's a gamer dressed for a corporate job. It still has some fancy lights, and it can burn the competition in any benchmark or multiplayer game, but it won't stand out in a meeting and make everyone thing you aren't mature enough to send a work email. 

Design: The ROG Phone 8 Pro is understated and classy, whereas the past ROG Phone models have looked positively intergalactic. Instead of a multi-color display, the ROG Phone 8 Pro gets a white LED display that flashes fancy patterns. We especially love that this model is IP68 water resistant for added durability. 

Display: The ROG Phone 8 Pro can refresh its display up to 165Hz, which may be faster than any game can draw frames. It relaxes on the resolution, but gamers know that it's all about smoothness and framerates, and that's where the ROG Phone 8 Pro excels. Oh, and it's incredibly bright, in case you accidentally find yourself outside. 

Camera: The cameras on past Asus ROG phones were an afterthought, but with bigger sensors and even a unique gimbal stabilization system, the ROG Phone 8 Pro delivers respectable photo and video recording capabilities. 

Performance: Of course the ROG Phone 8 Pro wouldn't be our top gaming phone if it didn't deliver the top performance, and there's no phone that will beat you if you're carrying this monster in your pocket. With the Aero Active cooler attached, it can deliver top performance even longer, though the Red Magic 9 Pro did offer better sustained driving at top speeds, thanks to slightly better cooling. 

Battery life: To add style the ROG Phone 8 Pro drops a little battery weight, and this is a sad omission for gaming fans. Last year's ROG Phone had a battery that was larger, and the Nubia Red Magic 9 Pro is bigger still, at 6,500mAh, versus the 5,500mAh on the ROG Phone. Ahh well, you'll just have to charge this one more. 

Value for money: Yeah right, you don't buy a Ferrari because it's a great value, and you don't buy a ROG Phone because it's cheap. You buy it because it's the fastest phone around, and you can't put a price on being the fastest. 

Read our full Asus ROG Phone 8 Pro review

To ensure you're getting the best deal, browse our Asus promo codes for potential discounts.

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Asus ROG Phone 8 Pro score card
AttributesNotesRating
ValueThe ROG Phone 8 Pro is not a cheap phone by any stretch, but as a top-level gaming phone that also mixes it with flagship phones, it’s a unique proposition.4 / 5
DesignAsus has brought the ROG Phone design on leaps and bounds. It’s still not subtle, but it’s more practical and less overtly ‘gamery’.4.5 / 5
DisplayBig, bright, responsive, and color-accurate, though now also interrupted by a punch-hole cut-out.4.5 / 5
CameraThe first gaming phone with a genuinely decent (if still not top tier) all-round camera system, complete with dedicated telephoto.4 / 5
PerformanceOne of the fastest phones on the market right now, with a surfeit of RAM and strong cooling.5 / 5
SoftwareRelatively solid and uncluttered, with options to get closer to stock if you wish. Only two years of updates promised, though.4 / 5
BatteryA slight step back in capacity and stamina from its predecessor and closest gaming phone rival, but still a strong performer.4.5 / 5

FAQs

What is the best phone in 2024?

The best premium smartphone is the iPhone 15 Pro Max for iPhone fans and the Galaxy S24 Plus for Android fans. Those phones do everything you might possibly need a phone to do, with excellent performance and battery life. Most people don't need premium performance, so the best iPhone for most people is the iPhone 15, and the best Android for most people is the Google Pixel 8.

How do I choose the best phone?

The first thing you need to decide when buying a new smartphone is how much you want to spend. The smartphone market varies dramatically, from very high-end handsets that cost well over four-figures, to much cheaper phones that can be found for only a few hundred. We have options on our list at both ends of the price spectrum.

Once you've decided how much you want to spend, you should decide whether you want to try one of the best Android phones or go for one of the best iPhones. Often, the platform decision has more to do with your work, your friends and family and what they use to share photos and messages, and what sort of computer or devices you already own.

If you're looking for something outside the norm, we have plenty of unique options, as well. There are phones with a built-in pen for writing, and phones that fold in half to be more compact. There are large phones, small phones, and Max-sized phones. We have phones with space-level zoom, and phones that specialize in touching portraits.

No matter what phone you choose, you can be sure that we've thoroughly tested and vetted every phone on this list, and we know you'll be satisfied with any of these devices in your pocket.

How we test

We've only included phones on this list that we've thoroughly tested, and our testing regiment is deep and detailed. We test every aspect of a phone that you might use from day-to-day, then we dive deeper to discover all of the hidden features.

We test phones for battery life and charging, speed and performance, and especially for camera capabilities. We make sure that phones deliver on their manufacturer's promise. If it says a phone can charge in 30 minutes, we break out the stopwatch.

We've seen every phone around, so we have a good idea of how each model stacks up to one another. We use both iPhone and Android, from the most expensive models to the most affordable, so we know what you're getting, no matter what you pay. We make sure the phones deliver what we'd expect for the cost.

Once we're done, we don't stop. We keep updating our reviews as we learn more, and as the phones are updated. Our reviews are always fresh, so check back before you buy to make sure you're getting the latest opinion on the best phones you can buy.

Philip Berne
US Mobiles Editor

Phil Berne is a preeminent voice in consumer electronics reviews, starting more than 20 years ago at eTown.com. Phil has written for Engadget, The Verge, PC Mag, Digital Trends, Slashgear, TechRadar, AndroidCentral, and was Editor-in-Chief of the sadly-defunct infoSync. Phil holds an entirely useful M.A. in Cultural Theory from Carnegie Mellon University. He sang in numerous college a cappella groups.

Phil did a stint at Samsung Mobile, leading reviews for the PR team and writing crisis communications until he left in 2017. He worked at an Apple Store near Boston, MA, at the height of iPod popularity. Phil is certified in Google AI Essentials. He has a High School English teaching license (and years of teaching experience) and is a Red Cross certified Lifeguard. His passion is the democratizing power of mobile technology. Before AI came along he was totally sure the next big thing would be something we wear on our faces.