Skip to main content
Story Saved

To revisit this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories.

WIRED
Story Saved

To revisit this article, select My Account, then View saved stories

Sign In
    Search
    Search
    • Backchannel
    • Business
    • Culture
    • Gear
    • Ideas
    • Science
    • Security
    illustration of sun and the word "featured"
    • Gadgets to Help You Sleep
    • Tips for Studio-Grade Home Videos
    • Best Retro Gaming Consoles
    • How to Stay Cool Without AC
    • Buying Guides
    • Gadget Lab Newsletter

    Julian Chokkattu Jeffrey Van Camp

    Gear
    07.13.2021 09:00 AM

    The Best Android Phones

    Shopping for a new phone can be an ordeal. Let us take some of the pain out of it with these picks and tips.
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Email
    • Save Story
    • Save this story for later.
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Email
    • Save Story
    • Save this story for later.

    How do you find the best Android phone to meet your needs when there are so many to choose from? It's easy to get swayed by a pretty handset design or a convincing price. Carriers might tempt you with a discount or a 24-month payment plan. But before you make a rash impulse buy, read up. From the bottomless pit of phone choices, we bring you our favorites—including our top pick, the Google Pixel 4A.

    All the phones we've selected here have their own advantages, and we've laid them out as honestly as we can based on our own extensive testing. Be sure to check our other buying guides, including the Best iPhones, Best Cheap Phones, Best Cheap Phone Plans, and How to Pick a Better Cell Phone Carrier, for more mobile recommendations.

    Updated July 2021: We've added the Galaxy A32 5G and new honorable mentions.

    Special offer for Gear readers: Get a 1-year subscription to WIRED for $5 ($25 off). This includes unlimited access to WIRED.com and our print magazine (if you'd like). Subscriptions help fund the work we do every day. 

    If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIRED

    • new samsung galaxy s21 colorways
      Photograph: Samsung 

      First, Some Advice

      Buy Your Phone Unlocked

      We recommend unlocked phones in this guide. When a phone is sold as "unlocked," it means the phone can be used on multiple wireless carriers and networks. When you buy a phone directly from your wireless carrier, usually on a payment plan, it often comes locked to that network. Carriers are legally required to unlock a phone upon request so you can switch networks, but it's a big hassle. Try to pay full price for your phone, or make sure it specifically says it's unlocked. If you feel it's too expensive to buy outright, that's a good sign you should find a cheaper model. Buy it from the manufacturer directly, or investigate your carrier's policies for unlocking phones if they're bought on a payment plan that requires you to use its network.

      Verizon tips: Buying an unlocked phone is smart (it is!), but even if you do the smart thing, networks like Verizon will put up hoops for you to jump through. If you insert your SIM card but still have trouble receiving text messages or something else, contact customer service and have them enable "CDMA-Less roaming." This OnePlus 6T guide may help. The steps should be similar for other phones.

      Why we don't care about 5G: You'll see lots of ads encouraging you to upgrade to a 5G plan and buy a 5G phone. Yes, you do need a new phone that supports 5G to make use of a 5G network (we have a guide that explains it all), but at the moment 5G coverage is still sparse. If it is available in your area, chances are it's not dramatically faster than 4G LTE (yet). Most new phones, even cheap ones, support some form of 5G, but it's still not a reason to upgrade. 

    • Photograph: Google

      Best Overall 

      Google Pixel 4A and Pixel 4A 5G

      The Pixel 4A (9/10, WIRED Recommends) is many things: It's the best cheap phone, the best small phone, the best budget camera phone, and the best Android phone, period. What does all of that cost you? Only $350. Yep. The successor to our previous favorite Android phone is $50 cheaper and better in every way. It has the same great main camera from the flagship Pixel 4, so you can snap excellent photos even at night with Google's Night Sight mode. It runs very smoothly, the battery lasts a full day, and the 5.8-inch OLED screen looks fantastic—especially since Google shaved off the bezels around it. It feels pretty compact too, given the size of the screen.

      The Pixel 4A 5G for $500 is another great choice, but only if you want a bigger phone. It's a small step up in performance and has an additional ultrawide camera, plus support for sub-6 5G (the more accessible type). The polycarbonate bodies make these two more durable than all-glass phones. Not to mention they have headphone jacks! They'll get monthly security updates and Android version upgrades directly from Google for three years (most phones don't). The only downsides: There's no water resistance, no wireless charging, and no storage expansion, so you'll have to make do with the rather generous 128 gigabytes of internal storage.

      Note: The Pixel 5A is expected to launch around August. It's unclear whether the price will stay the same. After testing dozens of newer cheap phones, the Pixel 4A is still our favorite, so it remains a worthwhile buy. But if you can, it might be worth waiting for the new model.

      Works on all three major US networks

      $349 at Amazon
      $349 at Target
      $499 at Target (Pixel 4A 5G)
    • Photograph: Samsung

      Runner-Up

      Samsung Galaxy S21

      Samsung's Galaxy S21 (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is double the price of our top pick but brings a host of improvements, like near-flawless performance due to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 chip inside, a 120-Hz screen refresh rate, as well as perks like wireless charging, water resistance, robust 5G support, and so much more. You even get a bevy of cameras to play with—a 12-megapixel main camera, a 12-megapixel ultrawide, and a 64-megapixel zoom—and the results are similar to what you'll see with phones like the Google Pixel 5 and the iPhone 12. The back is made of matte plastic (it doesn't feel cheap), which means you only have to worry about one side shattering if you drop it.

      Its 6.2-inch screen size is excellent; it's not too small or big. Best of all, Samsung will issue four years of Android version upgrades and security updates, surpassing Google's Pixel phones. You do miss out on some features that have been staples on predecessors, like a MicroSD card slot for expanding on the base 128 gigabytes of storage, and a power adapter or earbuds in the box, just like the latest iPhones. Battery life is just OK too, lasting about a day.

      Works on all three major US networks

      $800 at Amazon
      $800 at Samsung
    • Photograph: Samsung

      Best Camera

      Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra

      If you need the best camera on a smartphone, you'll have to pay up. The Galaxy S21 Ultra (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is the Android camera king, thanks to its five excellent shooters that perform well during the day and at night (with the dedicated Night mode). Most notable are the two 10-megapixel telephoto cameras that allow for high-quality optical zoom at 3X and 10X magnification, respectively, meaning you can get closer to your subjects and still get crisp zoomed shots. The ultrawide camera makes it more versatile, and the bigger 108-megapixel sensor can snap some wonderfully detailed shots. That's without talking about video—yes, you can film in 8K, but you don't need to. The quality of 4K HDR clips here is among the best.

      The rest of this phone is very similar to the S21 above, except it's all glass, and it supports the new Wi-Fi 6E standard. It also has a much bigger 6.8-inch screen that has a higher resolution and uses new OLED tech to make it more power-efficient. Battery life will still just get you through a full day, though.

      Works on all three major US networks

      ★ Google's Pixel 5 Is Cheaper ($699): The Pixel 5 (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is your next best bet if your budget is limited. The main camera lets you snap well-lit photos at any time of day—put it on a tripod in a dark area and you can even capture a starry sky—and the ultrawide sensor gives it additional versatility. It can best the S21 Ultra in some areas, like portraits. Not bad for hundreds less.

      $1,200 at Amazon
      $1,200 at Samsung
    • Photograph: OnePlus

      Another Great Phone

      OnePlus 9 and 9 Pro

      The OnePlus 9 and OnePlus 9 Pro are OnePlus' most expensive phones yet (8/10, WIRED Recommends), but they finally improve a component that has long plagued the company's predecessors: the camera. Thanks to a partnership with esteemed camera brand Hasselblad, the photos these phones capture have more natural-looking colors. This, paired with improved image sensors, make for a surprisingly respectable camera system for photos and video. (The ultrawide camera on both is one of the best around.) 

      The OnePlus 9 Pro's image quality has a sizable lead over the standard OnePlus 9, but photos still aren't as consistent as our picks above, nor are they dramatically better. The rest of the hardware is excellent as usual, with solid battery life, wonderfully bright 120-Hz AMOLED displays, the ability to recharge the phone to 100 percent in 29 minutes (plus speedy wireless charging), and impressive performance. However, neither phone has a real standout feature—they don't have the smarts of Pixel phones or 10X zoom like on the S21 Ultra. Thankfully, bending to pressure from Samsung and Google, OnePlus now promises it will provide three Android OS upgrades and four years of security updates for its flagship phones, including the 9 series.

      Works on all three major US networks (no 5G support on AT&T)

      $729 at OnePlus (OnePlus 9)
      $1,069 at OnePlus (OnePlus 9 Pro)
    • Photograph: Samsung

      Best Under $300

      Samsung Galaxy A32 5G

      It's hard to find faults with Samsung's sub-$300 Galaxy A32 5G (8/10, WIRED Recommends). The MediaTek chip inside delivers reliable performance and sub-6 5G support, the main camera is surprisingly decent, and you get two days of battery life. The screen is the weak link. It has a 90-Hz refresh rate, but it's not the sharpest, and it's not OLED like the Pixel 4A, so you don't get inky blacks or an always-on display. It still gets plenty bright in sunny conditions though. 

      There's a MicroSD card slot to expand on the base 64 gigs, NFC for contactless payments, a side-mounted fingerprint sensor, and a headphone jack. Oh, and unlike most other cheap phones, Samsung promises two Android OS upgrades and four years of security updates. Now that's what I call raising the bar. 

      Works on all major carriers

      $280 at Samsung
      $280 at Target
    • Photograph: Motorola 

      Best Battery Life for Cheap

      Motorola Moto G Power (2021)

      Need the longest possible battery life for the least amount of money? Go for Motorola's new Moto G Power (the 2021 model). The 5,000-mAh battery inside will stretch its life span between charges to almost three full days. The rest of the phone isn't a drastic improvement over the 2020 version, but the cameras perform slightly better in low light thanks to a new Night mode in the app. The screen has a lower resolution and is dim outdoors, but it's still fine for watching videos and shows. And it's powerful enough to run most apps and games without much trouble. A headphone jack and MicroSD card slot to add more to the 64 gigs round out the feature set.

      The flaws from its predecessor are unchanged, such as the lack of NFC for contactless payments and only one promised upgrade to Android 11 (though it will still get two years of security updates). There's also no 5G support. If those don't outweigh your need for a cheap, long-lasting phone, then you'll find no better. It frequently dips to $230.

      Works on all three major US networks

      $250 at Amazon
      $250 at Target
    • Photograph: Asus

      Best for Gamers and Audiophiles

      Asus ROG Phone 5

      If you spend a lot of time on your phone playing mobile games, then you might benefit from using Asus' latest gaming phone (7/10, WIRED Recommends). It has two touch-sensitive buttons on the edges you can use to map to any game, so you don't need to tap the screen and block it with your fingers. Alternatively, use Asus' Kunai 3 Gamepad—or an Xbox, PlayStation, or Stadia controller—to map physical buttons to all your games. It makes for a much more ergonomic mobile gaming experience. 

      That's just the tip of the iceberg. It's one of the most powerful Android phones around, especially when you toggle on X Mode, which enhances performance. It has excellent speakers, not to mention a Quad DAC for the headphone port so you can get high-quality audio with your favorite headphones. It also does a great job of dissipating heat and keeping the phone cool; if you buy Asus' Aeroactive Cooler 5, you can comfortably game for even longer. And the 6,000-mAh battery allows the phone to keep up. 

      It has the usual gaming phone flaws, like a camera system that won't knock your socks off. It also lacks wireless charging, is bulky and heavy, and is not supported on Verizon. (On T-Mobile and AT&T, you only get LTE and sub-6 5G.) But if you're a veritable mobile gamer and you wish more phones had headphone jacks, the ROG Phone 5 is for you.

      Works on AT&T and T-Mobile

      $1,000 at Asus
    • Photograph: Samsung

      The Phone With a Stylus

      Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra

      The Galaxy Note 20 Ultra (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is one of the biggest Android phones you can get right now, with its ginormous 6.9-inch screen, but it's also the only high-end phone that comes equipped with a Bluetooth stylus. Pull the so-called S Pen out from the bottom and you can use it to take notes, draw, remotely snap photos, and even control your favorite apps by waving it around in the air. Samsung has made the stylus more responsive as a writing implement this time around, so it feels more natural to scribble with it than ever before.

      The rest of the phone is equipped with top-notch features, from a beautiful AMOLED screen with a 120-Hz refresh rate and powerful performance to more than a full day of battery life, 5G, and three extremely capable rear cameras. This is the phone for power users, and it costs a hefty $1,300. If you don't care for the stylus but still want a Samsung phone, stick with our Galaxy S21 recommendation above.

      Note: Rumors suggest a new Galaxy Note will not arrive this year, but the Note 20 Ultra is still your best bet for a phone with a stylus. 

      Works on all three major US networks

      $1,200 at Samsung
      $1,200 at Amazon
    • Photograph: Asus

      Honorable Mentions

      Other Good Phones

      We test a ton of Android phones. We like the following ones, but you'll be better off with one of the options above. If you haven't yet done so, check out our Best Cheap Phones guide for more options.

      • ZTE Axon 30 Ultra for $749: ZTE fell off the map for a while because it was, you know, literally banned for violating US sanctions. But the ban was lifted, and the company is finally churning out phones again. The Axon 30 Ultra is pretty phenomenal for the price. You get the powerful Snapdragon 888 chip inside, a full day of battery life, and a 144-Hz OLED screen. I found the triple-camera array takes pretty decent photos, but it's nowhere near the best. ZTE is only saying it will upgrade it to Android 12, with roughly 3 years of security updates. Oh, and it doesn't work on Verizon.
      • Asus Zenfone 8 for $630: If you're after the smallest, most powerful phone around, then look no further than the Zenfone 8. The 5.9-inch screen is tiny next to most flagship phones—and this is a flagship, thanks to the Snapdragon 888 inside. You also get a 120-Hz AMOLED screen, a headphone jack, and a full day of battery life. It doesn't work on Verizon, though, and the camera system is just OK. Our review has more details.
      • Samsung Galaxy A52 5G for $500: It's not the most exciting phone, but the A52 5G (7/10, WIRED Recommends) is reliable. I think the Pixel 4A 5G is a better buy, but if you want a bigger screen, a 120-Hz refresh rate, IP67 water resistance, or a MicroSD card slot, then stick with Samsung. It'll get three OS upgrades and four years of security updates too. Our review has more details.
      • OnePlus 8 for $399: OnePlus discounts its older phones when a new model arrives, and this is a great price for last year's OnePlus 8. It has decent cameras, speedy performance, 5G support, a great 90-Hz screen, and OK battery life. Our review has more details.
      • Motorola One 5G Ace for $400: Motorola phones have some of the best battery life around, and the Ace takes the cake in this price range. It bests the competition like the Pixel 4A and the Nord N10 with two-day battery life, and you get better performance, 5G connectivity, NFC for contactless payments (rare on a cheap Moto), plus a large 1080p display. Unsurprisingly, the cameras are the weak link here; they suffer in low light. The Moto G Stylus 5G is also a similarly great option for the same price if you want a stylus, but it doesn't have NFC.
      • OnePlus Nord N10 5G for $300: The Nord N10's Snapdragon 690 is powerful enough to handle most tasks, and it has a sprawling 90-Hz 6.5-inch screen, plus a decent camera system. It supports 5G, but only on T-Mobile. The Galaxy A32 5G or Pixel 4A are better phones, but this is a good alternative.
    • Photograph: LG

      Avoid These Phones

      Half-Hearted Endorsements

      There are many phones we've previously recommended that are right on the edge. They're either getting old (two-plus years) or their internals are too weak. We worry they won't have software support beyond this year, or that the next Android update will render them too sluggish. We've also added to this list some newer phones that we just can't recommend after testing.

      First off, you should not buy any LG phones. The company has shut down its mobile division (RIP), and while it's promising to support its existing phones for a few years, there are just too many nicer options. Outside of LG, we can't recommend the Pixel 4, Nokia 7.2, Samsung Galaxy S10, and Moto G (2020) anymore. They're all usable, but you're better off with the devices listed above or in our Best Cheap Phones guide.  Other phones we've tested and don't recommend include the Nokia 8.3, Samsung Galaxy A51, and OnePlus Nord N200.

    Julian Chokkattu is the reviews editor at WIRED, covering personal technology and reviewing consumer products. Previously he was the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, steering coverage and reviews of smartphones and smartwatches, and an intern at TechCrunch. He graduated from Rutgers University with a bachelor's degree in English... Read more
    Reviews Editor
    • Twitter
    Jeffrey Van Camp is an editor for WIRED, specializing in personal technology reviews and coverage. Previously he was the deputy editor of Digital Trends, helping to oversee the site’s editorial operations, and before that, its mobile editor. He’s covered tech, video games, and entertainment for more than a decade, and... Read more
    Reviews Editor
    • Twitter
    TopicsShoppingbuying guidessmartphonesandroidphones
    WIRED

    WIRED is where tomorrow is realized. It is the essential source of information and ideas that make sense of a world in constant transformation. The WIRED conversation illuminates how technology is changing every aspect of our lives—from culture to business, science to design. The breakthroughs and innovations that we uncover lead to new ways of thinking, new connections, and new industries.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • YouTube
    • Instagram
    • Tiktok

    • Subscribe
    • Newsletters
    • FAQ
    • Wired Staff
    • Press Center

    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Customer Care
    • Send a tip securely to WIRED
    • Jobs
    • RSS
    • Site Map
    • Accessibility Help
    • Condé Nast Store
    • Condé Nast Spotlight

    © 2021 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement and Your California Privacy Rights. Wired may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices