There’s little reason to pay top dollar for a smartphone. These iPhones and Android devices—ranging from $150 to $500—stood up to WIRED’s testing.
Wireless carriers in the US go out of their way to make expensive smartphones seem affordable. AT&T will advertise a Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra for just $36 a month, but don’t let them fool you. Over 36 monthly installments, you’re still spending more than a thousand bucks for a phone. Your pricey device may also keep you locked into the network, unable to switch wireless carriers until the phone is paid off.
Forget the spendy option and get a seriously great affordable smartphone instead. Every year, I test a dozen or more devices to find the best cheap phones that perform where it counts and aren’t annoyingly slow. Our top pick, the Google Pixel 8A, costs $499 and is as good as almost any device, and our other choices strike a great balance between price and luxury. There’s even a folding phone in this guide!
Google’s Pixel 8A (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is the best smartphone you can buy for the money. At just $499, you get a little of everything—from wireless charging to top-of-the-line performance. It’s powered by Google’s Tensor G3 processor, the same that’s inside the flagship Pixel 8 series, and that also means this midrange smartphone will get seven years of software support—a rarity at this price. That means you can expect to get Android OS upgrades with new features plus security patches for a long time.
This Pixel has a better OLED screen than its predecessor, meaning it gets even brighter and plenty visible on the sunniest days, and the 120-Hz screen refresh rate makes every interaction feel fluid. The 6.1-inch screen is fairly compact, so it’s great if you’re eyeing a small phone. The whole thing also just looks pretty—budget and midrange phones tend to look super boring, but the Pixel 8A has a smart design with a matte rear texture. Plus, the new Aloe color is gorgeous. Phones are personal, and they should look pretty!
Performance has been flawless in my testing—I covered Google I/O with this as my primary device, taking photos, navigating, using the Google Recorder app, and posting to social media. The downside is battery life. The 4,492-mAh battery cell can last a day with average use, but heavy users will likely need to top up before bedtime. Keep a portable power bank handy.
The cameras are the highlight of the Pixel series, and the Pixel 8A lives up to this legacy—it’s easily the best camera phone for the money. It has a 64-megapixel main camera that snaps detailed, colorful, and sharp photos in any lighting condition. Joining it is a capable 13-MP ultrawide, and the 13-MP selfie camera is solid, though the fact that it’s fixed focus means your face is never perfectly sharp. The only issue I’ve run into is that Real Tone, which is Google’s image-processing algorithm for different skin tones, hasn’t been as accurate as on prior Pixels, specifically on brown skin. (Google says it’s looking into it.)
But the top reason why I heartily recommend Pixel phones is because of the smart software features you won’t find on any other sub-$500 smartphone. I’ve detailed many of them here, but you can use Magic Editor to move a subject a little to the left of the frame and erase an unwanted object in the shot. You can use Best Take to fix that group shot where your eyes were closed. Google’s Call Screen technology nips spam calls in the bud, and Assistant Voice Typing is still my favorite voice-to-text system and I miss it every time I switch phones.
Other perks include secure face unlock and fingerprint unlock—both work with sensitive apps that require biometric authentication so you have more unlocking options. There’s also NFC for contactless payments and an IP67 rating that protects it from the elements.
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