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Motorola's 2026 Razr Ultra Needs These Features to Win Me Over

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Why This Matters

Motorola's Razr Ultra continues to be a key player in the foldable phone market, offering premium features that appeal to consumers seeking a stylish and functional flip phone. As the company prepares to release the Razr Fold and the upcoming Razr Ultra, price and feature enhancements could significantly influence its competitiveness against rivals like Samsung. These developments highlight the ongoing innovation and growing consumer interest in foldable devices, shaping the future of mobile design and functionality.

Key Takeaways

Foldable phones may be niche, but Motorola's Razr lineup stands out as a leader in the category. With fun colors, varied textures and that satisfying flip-phone snap, clamshell phones are a popular choice for people looking to get away from more predictable mobile designs. It's likely we'll see the next generation of Razr phones later this month, hopefully with some key upgrades that could help the devices stand out even more.

The Razr Ultra is Motorola's most premium clamshell offering. Last year's model had a 4-inch cover display and a 7-inch internal display, two 50-megapixel rear cameras (as well as a 50-megapixel selfie camera) and a generous 4,700-mAh battery. As CNET's Patrick Holland put it, the 2025 Ultra was also "flipping expensive," at $1,300. But those first-rate features make it a worthy rival to Samsung's $1,100 Galaxy Z Flip 7, another popular choice in the foldable phones space.

Motorola is doubling down on foldables with the imminent release of its first book-style phone, the Razr Fold. With a sleek design and an impressive 6,000-mAh battery, it's likely to give Samsung a run for its money in another foldable sector as comparisons with the Galaxy Z Fold 7 inevitably pour in. The Razr Fold is slated to launch in North America this summer.

In the meantime, we'll likely learn more about the 2026 Razr Ultra as the anticipated springtime release date looms. That gives me some time to dream up what I'd like to see Motorola add to its premium flip phone to make it an even stronger contender in an increasingly competitive space.

A lower price would be great

Phones are expensive, and foldable phones are even more so -- which is why many people avoid getting one in the first place.

The 2025 Razr Ultra's $1,300 price is prohibitive, even if it is a great phone that comes with an impressive 512GB of storage. The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 isn't much better at $1,100 for 256GB of storage, but that still shaves off several hundred dollars. (Motorola has now discounted last year's Razr Ultra to $800, presumably as it clears stock ahead of upcoming releases.)

It would be great if Motorola made the Razr Ultra's pricing a little more competitive not only against the Z Flip 7, but compared to other premium slab phones. That might entice more people to dip their toe into foldable waters if they're on the fence. Yes, there are more affordable options such as the 2025 baseline Razr and the Razr Plus, but the Razr Ultra being priced the same as Samsung's top-of-the-line S26 Ultra powerhouse is hard to justify.

As phones become more advanced, they're also getting pricier -- and that's without a RAM shortage that threatens to hike prices as well. The Samsung Galaxy S26 and S26 Plus start at $100 more than last year's, though the baseline model now comes with a higher 256GB base storage level. I hope Motorola steers clear from finding reasons to up the cost of its phones, too.

More years of software and security updates, please

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