Motorola has stepped into the high-stakes foldable phone arena with the Razr Fold, revealing a device that combines sleek design with serious imaging firepower. Unveiled at MWC 2026, this is Motorola’s first book-style foldable, and it’s already making waves by clinching a DXOMARK Gold label with an impressive score of 164-the highest for a foldable camera system so far. At nearly €2,000, Motorola is betting big that a premium camera experience can sway consumers skeptical of foldable compromises.
A foldable designed to impress beyond novelty
Foldables have often struggled to marry style, durability, and flagship performance without sacrificing one or two. Motorola’s Razr Fold aims to rewrite that narrative by packing a pair of vivid OLED screens-a 6.6-inch cover display with a blistering 165Hz refresh rate, and an 8.1-inch internal LTPO panel at 120Hz-both hitting extreme brightness levels exceeding 6,000 nits. The device remains surprisingly slim at 4.6mm when open, defying the bulk often linked to foldables.
Under the hood, a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 chipset teams up with 16GB of LPDDR5X RAM and up to 1TB of storage, while running Android 16 with Motorola’s promise of seven years of updates-a nod to longevity that’s rare in pricey foldables. Battery capacity is generous at 6,000mAh, supporting fast 80W wired and wireless charging. Motorola clearly sees this not just as a niche gadget but as a primary device contender.
Setting a new bar for foldable cameras
Foldables have traditionally lagged behind flat-screen flagships in camera prowess, often due to engineering constraints. Motorola switched gears here, featuring a triple 50MP rear setup: a Sony LYTIA main sensor with optical image stabilization (OIS), a wide-angle lens with macro support, and a periscope telephoto with 3x optical zoom and OIS. Complementing the rear shooters, a 32MP selfie camera sits on the cover display and a 20MP unit inside. This arrangement supports 8K video capture with Dolby Vision, along with AI-driven tweaks to enhance dynamic range and low-light clarity, justifying its top DXOMARK accolade.
Such optics show Motorola’s intent to tackle the foldable category not just with eye-catching design but genuine photographic claims, something Apple, Samsung, and others flirt with but rarely nail across an entire foldable family. The Razr Fold’s camera success could accelerate consumer confidence in foldables as everyday photography tools rather than fragile statement pieces.
Price and global ambitions
Retailing at €1,999 in Europe, Motorola’s Razr Fold positions itself among the premium foldable contenders, with availability set to expand to North America and China soon. Color choices reflect Pantone’s color expertise with Blackened Blue and Lily White shades, keeping style at the forefront. Yet, at this price point, Motorola faces stiff competition from Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold series and the emerging hype around Apple’s rumored foldables, which could overshadow Motorola’s bold offer.
Motorola’s seven-year update promise is a rare standout feature that may appeal to buyers wary of foldable longevity and software abandonment. Still, convincing consumers that foldables can match or even surpass traditional phones in camera quality and user experience remains the critical hurdle.
Motorola’s Razr Fold challenges the notion that foldables must compromise-they’re proving you can have large, vibrant displays and camera excellence in a refined foldable package. The question now is if the wider market is ready to pay the premium for that combination or continue to tread cautiously, watching Samsung and potentially Apple steer the foldable narrative.
