The best Android phones in 2023

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Best budget: Google Pixel 7a
Google’s Pixel 7a is the best budget Android phone you can buy.

Pros: Stellar performance for its price, premium 90Hz OLED screen, solid battery life, offers wireless charging

Cons: Relatively expensive for a budget phone, costs more for mmWave 5G model, heavy for its size 

Google’s .

Best camera: Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra
Samsung’s Galaxy S23 Ultra is the best Android camera phone thanks its unmatched versatility and excellent photo quality.

Pros: Largest display, excellent four-camera system, improved selfie camera, smooth 120Hz display, S Pen stylus

Cons: Pricey compared to competition, may be too large for some people, some unwanted bloatware

.

Best small phone: Samsung Galaxy S23
Samsung’s standard Galaxy S23 is basically a smaller version of our top overall pick.

Pros: Lightweight, excellent cameras, stellar performance, excellent battery life, smooth 120Hz display

Cons: Occasional shutter lag, slower charging speed (25W) than expected, some unwanted bloatware

The Android phone market is flooded with large screens, and you’d think fans of smaller phones in the 6.1-inch range are underserved, but not when .

The best Android phones compared

Specs

Galaxy S23 Plus

Pixel 7a

Pixel 6a

Galaxy S23 Ultra

OnePlus 11

Galaxy S23

Pixel Fold

Starting price

$900

$500

$350

$1,100

$650

$800

$1,800

Processor

Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 Optimized for Galaxy 

Google Tensor 2

Google Tensor

Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 Optimized for Galaxy 

Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2

Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 Optimized for Galaxy 

Google Tensor 2

Release date

February 2023

May 2023

July 2022

February 2023

February 2023

February 2023

June 2023

Screen size

6.6 inches

6.1 inches

6.1 inches

6.8 inches

6.7 inches

6.1 inches

5.8-inch exterior; 7.6-inch interior

Rear cameras

50MP main, 12MP ultrawide, 10MP 3x zoom

64MP main, 13MP ultrawide

12MP main, 12MP ultrawide

200MP main, 12MP ultrawide, 10MP 3x zoom, 10MP 10x zoom

50MP main, 48MP ultrawide, 32MP 2x zoom

50MP main, 12MP ultrawide, 10MP 3x zoom

48MP main, 10.8MP ultrawide, 10.8MP 5x zoom

Storage

256GB, 512GB

128GB

128GB

256GB, 512GB, 1TB

128GB, 256GB, 512GB

128GB, 256GB, 512GB

256GB, 512GB

How we test Android phones
We put every phone we test through various runs and benchmarks.

We test Android phones as if they were our daily drivers for at least several days, and often much longer. That way, we can get the best anecdotal feel for their performance, battery life, cameras, and new features.

We also conduct standard tests on all the phones we review and include in our guides.

For performance, we put the phones through a gamut of benchmarking apps to check for performance discrepancies between phones, at least on paper. These benchmark tests also help us evaluate how many years a phone could maintain its performance compared to other phones. We use Geekbench 6 for general performance, and the 3DMark Wild Life Stress Test to get a sense of extended heavy gaming performance. 

For camera testing, we photograph a set gamut of scenes with every phone; you may have seen our barn photos over and over again. We take photos with each lens on each phone and compare them to their direct competitors. We even compare premium phone cameras to budget options to evaluate the difference. 

For battery life, we run each phone through a stress test that simulates a mixture of typical daily workloads, like streaming a video and music, as well as high intensity workloads, like playing demanding games. The battery stress test includes five runs of the Geekbench 6 app, two runs of the 3DMark Wildlife Stress Test, two hours of video streaming at a set average brightness, and one hour of music streaming with Bluetooth headphones connected. At the end of the test, we note the remaining battery percentage on the phone.

Best Android phone FAQs

Who owns Android? 

In simple terms, Google owns the Android operating system. Other companies like Samsung and OnePlus can run Android on their phones because Google makes it freely available as an open source operating system for anyone to use on their phones. Even you, the reader, could build your own phone that legally runs the Android operating system.  

The Android operating system looks and works differently on phones from different companies because phone makers modify the operating system by adding their own layers of software on top of Android for users to interact with.

For example, while Samsung phones run the core Android operating system that gives them access to the Google Play Store apps, they also run Samsung’s own user interface (UI) layer called One UI, which adds a distinctive look and feel to the company’s phones. 

Which Android phone gets the most updates?

In general, the best Android phones get a maximum of four years of Android operating system updates, and up to five years of security updates. 

Among the phones on our list, recent flagship phones from Samsung and OnePlus have the best support windows. Samsung has said its flagship Galaxy S23 series phones will get four years of Android software updates and five years of security updates following their February 2023 release. The OnePlus 11 is also slated to get four years of software updates and five years of security patches from its February 2023 release.

On the other hand, Google offers a slightly smaller support window for the Pixel 6a, Pixel 7a, and Pixel Fold, each of which will get three years of Android updates and five years of security updates from their respective release dates. 

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