With enough force, almost every phone can fold in half – not even the best smartphones on sale are immune from brute strength. But only a few can do it without suffering terminal damage. From retro revivals to cutting-edge clamshells, these best flip phones are perfectly pocketable, yet don’t skimp on top-tier hardware.
By hiding a larger screen on the inside, flip phones are half the size of a traditional smartphone. Their outer screens are getting smarter and smarter, too, saving you from constantly flipping the thing open to reply to messages or check incoming emails. Add in increasingly capable cameras and they’re some of the most versatile phones around. We’ve tested the best, and highlighted upcoming models that might be worth waiting for.
Perhaps you prefer a larger book-style foldable with a little more substance? Read about the best foldable phones here.
The best flip phones you can buy today:
1. Samsung Galaxy Flip6
Samsung Galaxy Flip 6 specs | |
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Cover display | 3.4in, 720×748 AMOLED |
Main display | 6.7in, 2640×1080 1-120Hz AMOLED |
Cameras | 50MP + 12MP (rear), 10MP (front) |
Processor | Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 for Galaxy |
Storage | 256/512GB |
RAM | 12GB |
Battery | 4000mAh w/ 25W Wired, 15W wireless charging |
Dimensions | 72x85x14.9mm (folded), 72x165x6.9mm (unfolded), 187g |
Samsung’s flagship flip phone finally has the camera hardware and battery capacity to more closely match the firm’s mainstream Galaxy S24. This otherwise innocuous upgrade keeps pace on performance and adds useful software tweaks that make great use of the form factor. Some of the AI additions are genuinely useful, too.
A considerably beefier battery puts the Flip 6 on par for capacity, and it now has the same optically stabilised 50MP main camera as the S24 as well.
Samsung’s design team hasn’t been asleep at the wheel, either. The Galaxy Z Flip 6 dumps the rounded, polished metal frame for flat sides and a matte finish that shrugs off fingerprints far better.
It’s not perfect, however, we still don’t agree with limiting the cover screen to widgets instead of full apps, unless users jump through a bunch of power tool hoops first. This is something Motorola has nailed with the Razr 50 Ultra (below).
For those firmly in the Samsung camp, though, the Flip 6 has surpassed its predecessor in every respect. If you haven’t given foldables much thought before, this will be the phone to change your mind.
2. Motorola Razr 50 Ultra
Motorola Razr 50 Ultra specs | |
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Cover display | 3.6in 1272×1080 OLED |
Main display | 6.9in 2460×1080 OLED |
Cameras | 50+50MP (rear), 32MP (front) |
Processor | Snapdragon 8S Gen 3 |
Storage | 256/512GB |
RAM | 12GB |
Battery | 4000mAh w/ 45W wired, 15W wireless charging |
Dimensions | 74x171x7mm (open) 74x88x15mm (closed), 189g |
This cream-of-the-crop clamshell marks twenty years since the first iconic Razr. Motorola has added the biggest cover screen you’ll find on any foldable, and lets you run any app you like on it, meaning you can go hours without actually opening the thing up. Fresh new colours, a more weatherproof build and built-in Gemini AI smarts only add to the appeal.
Importantly the Razr 50 Ultra also gets two new outer camera sensors. Twin 50MP snappers promise much sharper, more defined shots than the previous generation, which was merely OK on the photography front. Add in the fact that it undercuts Samsung’s current flip phone (something that surely won’t change once the successor lands), and you’re looking at the best all-rounder on sale in the West today.
3. Motorola Razr 50
Motorola Razr 50 specs | |
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Cover display | 3.6in, 1056×1066 AMOLED |
Main display | 6.9in 2640×1080 AMOLED 120Hz |
Cameras | 50+13MP (rear), 32MP (front) |
Processor | MediaTek Dimensity 7300X |
Storage | 256/512GB |
RAM | 8/12GB |
Battery | 3700mAh |
Dimensions | 171x74x7.3mm (unfolded), 188g |
Motorola’s two-tier approach to flip phones worked well for the previous generation, bringing the cost of entry down significantly. That’s still the case for the Razr 50, except here you’re getting a significantly improved external display. At 3.6in and with access to any app you want, it’s far more useful than the outgoing model’s compact OLED.
Inside MediaTek silicon provides the power, while an even larger battery than the Razr 50 Ultra should easily deliver all-day longevity. It keeps the ultrawide lens from the Razr 40, but upgrades the main snapper to a 50MP unit that should be very competitive among flip phones. A full review will follow soon.
4. Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5
Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5 specs | |
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Cover display | 3.4in, 720×748 AMOLED |
Main display | 6.7in 2640×1080 AMOLED 120Hz |
Cameras | 12+12MP (rear), 10MP (front) |
Processor | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 |
Storage | 256/512GB |
RAM | 8GB |
Battery | 3700mAh |
Dimensions | 165x72x6.9mm (unfolded), 187g |
Sorting some of its predecessor’s biggest snags while retaining the same pocketable proportions, the Z Flip 5 is a winning foldable for the mainstream. It remains a well-made, water-resistant clamshell – only now the gap between the two halves has been banished, and the much larger external display is a whole lot more useful.
Flipped open, the main 6.7in OLED panel is sharp, detailed and bursting with colour. Its multi-tasking potential is good with a two-finger swipe opening multi-window. A Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 CPU keeps pace with 2023’s flagships, and battery life is decent for a clamshell foldable.
Camera hardware hasn’t seen any major upgrades, so it remains behind the best traditional phones in terms of image quality – but the gulf isn’t huge. Samsung’s software does a lot of heavy lifting to make up the difference, so it can usually be relied on to take a stellar snap.
5. Nubia Flip 5G
Nubia Flip 5G specs | |
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Cover display | 1.4in, 466×466 AMOLED |
Main display | 6.9in 2790×1188 OLED 120Hz |
Cameras | 50+2MP (rear), 16MP (front) |
Processor | Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 1 |
Storage | 128/256/512GB |
RAM | 8/12GB |
Battery | 4310mAh |
Dimensions | 170x76x7mm (unfolded), 214g |
It’s not a big name in Europe and the US, but Nubia (formerly a ZTE sub-brand) has been quietly pumping out value champions for a while now. These have largely been RedMagic gaming phones, but the Nubia Flip shows the firm knows a thing or two about foldables as well. A distinctive circular outer screen sets it apart from rivals, and the 4300mAh battery is especially generous given the midrange chipset running the show.
Only one of the two rear cameras is worth talking about, and you don’t get luxuries such as wireless charging or an IP rating. But short of buying second-hand or opting for a previous year’s model, there’s little else out there in flip phone land that’s as light on your wallet.
6. Oppo Find N2 Flip
Oppo Find N2 Flip specs | |
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Cover display | 3.26in 720×362 AMOLED |
Main display | 6.8in 2520×1080 AMOLED 120Hz |
Cameras | 50+8MP (rear), 32MP (front) |
Processor | Mediatek Dimensity 9000+ |
Storage | 256/512GB |
RAM | 8/12/16GB |
Battery | 4300mAh |
Dimensions | 86x75x16mm (folded) 166x75x7.5mm (unfolded), 191g |
Oppo’s first Western-bound flip phone looked set to shake up the market, thanks to some very competitive hardware. It didn’t see nearly the same success as the Galaxy Z Flip series, but can now be picked up for peanuts. That makes it well worth a look for anyone on a budget, despite its internals now being a generation behind.
The design is still gorgeous, the rear cameras are still decent (if not class-leading) and the battery remains one of the largest of any flip phone I’ve tested. That external display doesn’t feel quite so giant any more, though, and the lack of wireless charging is a bit of a downer. Oppo’s version of Android can also be a little too aggressive when it comes to power management.
Upcoming flip phones
Xiaomi Mix Flip
Now released in Europe following a China launch earlier in 2024, the Mix Flip is Xiaomi’s first flip-style folding phone. It’s a bit of a corker, too, based on first impressions: two 50MP external cameras with Leica optics and picture processing mean it takes a fantastic photo, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 CPU is mighty powerful, and it has a simply huge battery compared to other flip phones. The sizeable outer screen cleverly makes room for apps to run at a normal aspect ratio, while leaving room at the side for widgets and notifications. We have one in for testing now, so stand by for a full review.
Samsung Galaxy Z Flip7
It’s all but inevitable Samsung will continue its run of stellar flip phones in 2025 with the Flip7. Little is known about it right now, but that hasn’t stopped fans coming up with a wish list of wants for the official reveal: think being able to use any app on the cover screen, ditching the ultrawide secondary camera for a more useful telephoto zoom, and boosting battery life to compete with more long-lasting rivals.