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    Home»Technology»Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 review: the thinner, lighter and better folding Android | Samsung
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    Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 review: the thinner, lighter and better folding Android | Samsung

    By Olivia CarterJuly 23, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read0 Views
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    Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 review: the thinner, lighter and better folding Android | Samsung
    Slimmed down and smartened up, the Galaxy Z Fold 7 is a big leap forward for Samsung’s flagship foldable phone. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian
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    Samsung’s latest flagship folding phone looks like it has been put on a diet. The result is a transformation into one of the thinnest and lightest devices available and radically changes how it handles, for the better.

    The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.

    The Galaxy Z Fold 7 measures 8.9mm thick when shut – well within the realms of a standard smartphone if you ignore the camera bump on the back. It easily fits in a pocket but opens up to turn into a folding tablet just 4.2mm thick.

    But at £1,799 (€2,099/$2,000/A$2,899) you pay an awful lot for such a fancy device. It is an expensive, cutting-edge gadget that can, in theory, replace your phone, tablet and PC in one pocketable device.

    The super-thin frame leaves an enormous camera bump protruding about 5.5mm from the back. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

    The seventh-generation foldable solves most of the niggles of Samsung’s previous foldables. It weighs only 215g, which is 24g less than last year’s model and about the same as large slab phones, and is shaped just like a regular handset when closed.

    It fits better in your pocket. Typing messages, answering calls, getting directions and taking photos feel and work like a regular phone. Even the 6.5in screen on the front is top-notch – bright, colourful, crisp and 120Hz smooth – and the improved fingerprint scanner in the power button is accurate and rapid.

    Open it like a book and the Fold 7 is only a hair thicker than the USB-C port. It is impressively thin yet feels solid. It is difficult to see how a device can be made any thinner without ditching the charging port. The flexible 8in OLED screen is smooth, crisp, super bright and almost square, ready for running two apps side by side.

    The outside screen and back are protected by the latest technology in hardened glass, but the inside screen is still covered by a necessarily softer layer than a standard phone that picks up fingerprints easily and is relatively shiny. The crease down the middle of the screen where it folds is very nearly gone, only visible in glare.

    Flex mode allows you to watch films with the Fold 7 half-folded like a mini laptop. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

    Specifications

    • Main screen: 8in QXGA+ 120Hz (368ppi) Amoled flexible display

    • Cover screen: 6.5in FHD+ 120Hz (422ppi) Amoled

    • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy

    • RAM: 12GB

    • Storage: 256, 512GB or 1TB

    • Operating system: One UI 8 based on Android 16

    • Camera: 200+12+10MP rear with 3x telephoto; 10MP+10MP selfie cameras

    • Connectivity: 5G, dual sim, e-sim, USB-C, wifi 7, NFC, Bluetooth 5.4, GNSS

    • Water resistance: IP48 (1.5 metres for 30 minutes)

    • Dimensions folded: 158.4 x 72.8 x 8.9mm

    • Dimensions unfolded: 158.4 x 143.2 x 4.2mm

    • Weight: 215g

    Power for multitasking

    The Fold 7 fully charges in 82 minutes, hitting 60% in less than half an hour using a 25W or greater USB-C power adaptor (not included). Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

    The Fold 7 does not skimp on processing power with the same flagship Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite chip and 12GB of RAM as the S25 Ultra and S25 Edge. That means it flies along in everyday tasks and high-end games and is considerably more powerful than its closest rivals, such as the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold.

    The battery lasts just shy of two days using the two screens for about four hours each and spending several hours on 5G, which is about the same as its predecessors and similar to normal slab phones. It will last longer when just using the outside screen for phone usage, but most people are likely to need to charge it every other day.

    One UI 8 for Android 16

    The Fold 7 can run two apps full size side-by-side, or up to eight in a combination of split-screen and floating windows. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

    The Fold 7 is one of the first Samsungs to run One UI 8 (Android 16) out of the box. It has not changed that much since last year’s software, which is a good thing all round as One UI 7 was great. It includes all the features from Samsung’s S25 line, including the great Now bar at the bottom of the lock screen that shows live sports scores, music, timers and other regular tasks.

    Samsung does a better job than rivals at making the most of the multiple modes and multitasking possibilities opened up by the folding tablet form. You can have up to eight apps open on the internal screen at any one time, and have different home screen layouts for each screen. You can force apps into almost any size or shape, use apps in a partly folded mode, move them between the front and internal screens, and many other small features.

    The Fold 7 also has all the AI tools from the S25 series, including Google Gemini, Circle to Search, writing and drawing tools, transcription and audio editing tools, and so on. Some are good, others can be safely ignored just like most buzzy AI features. Samsung will provide Android and security updates until 31 July 2032.

    Camera

    Shooting photos is easiest with the Fold 7 closed, but you can shoot with it open or half-folded for hands-free photos. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

    The large camera lump on the back holds the 200-megapixel main, 12MP ultra wide and 10MP 3x telephoto cameras. The Fold 7 also has two 10MP selfie cameras, one in each screen.

    The main 200MP camera is the best of the bunch, matching that from the S25 Edge. It is a top-drawer camera capable of capturing great images across a range of lighting conditions, and is a significant upgrade on previous generation Folds.

    The 12MP ultra wide camera is solid and capable of taking some very good closeup, macro photos, which is always fun. The 3x telephoto camera is equally good, producing great portraits, but it gets a bit soft and grainy indoors and can’t match the 5x zooms on top slab phones. The selfie cameras are a similar story, with great detail in good light that quickly becomes a bit grainy indoors. You can shoot selfies with the main camera using the outside screen as a viewfinder when the phone is open, which produces much better results.

    The camera app has plenty of modes, is straightforward to use and shoots equally solid video. Overall, the Fold 7 has a great camera system that is not a significant downgrade on flagship slab phones, which is thoroughly impressive.

    Sustainability

    The Fold 7 looks like a regular slab phone from the front or the back. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

    The battery has an expected lifespan of at least 2,000 full-charge cycles with at least 80% of its original capacity.

    The phone is generally repairable. Inside screen repairs cost about £500. Samsung offers a self-repair programme, as well as Care+ accidental damage insurance that reduces the cost of repairs to £139.

    The Fold 7 is made from recycled aluminium, cobalt, copper, glass, gold, lithium, plastic, rare-earth elements and steel, accounting for 13.7% of the weight. Samsung offers trade-in and recycling schemes for old devices, and breaks down the phone’s environmental impact in its report.

    Price

    The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 costs from £1,799 (€2,099/$1,999.99/A$2,899).

    For comparison, the Galaxy Z Flip costs £1,049, the Galaxy S25 Edge costs £1,099, the S25 Ultra costs £1,249, and the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold costs £1,399.

    Verdict

    The Galaxy Z Fold 7 is an incredible, extremely expensive piece of technology that feels like a giant leap over previous models, removing many of the niggles and compromises that had become synonymous with foldables.

    By being so much thinner, lighter and normal-sized when shut, it feels just like a regular handset. Open it up and the internal screen is the best on a foldable yet. The crease is virtually gone, it is bright, crisp and makes the most of multitasking.

    The camera sticks miles out the back but generally doesn’t get in the way except to make the phone wobble on a table – a compromise worth making for a top-quality camera system. You even get the same chip, solid battery life and great software as Samsung’s top regular phones.

    That leaves the relative fragility of the folding form, lacking proper dust resistance and having a softer internal screen, and the eye-watering price, as the biggest compromises. If you are not sold on the idea of having a phone that is also a tablet in your pocket, I don’t think this will convince you.

    But the Fold 7 is the best folding phone available and the major upgrade Samsung needed after a few rather repetitive years.

    Pros: a phone and tablet in one, super thin and light, just like a regular phone when closed, great software with powerful multitasking abilities, fantastic tablet screen, top performance, solid battery life, water resistance, long software support.

    Cons: extremely expensive, no dust resistance, more fragile than a regular device and costly to repair, limited zoom camera compared with the very best normal phones.

    You can easily forget the Fold 7 opens, as it feels and works like a regular smartphone using the outside display. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

    Android Fold folding Galaxy lighter review Samsung thinner
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    Olivia Carter
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    Olivia Carter is a staff writer at Verda Post, covering human interest stories, lifestyle features, and community news. Her storytelling captures the voices and issues that shape everyday life.

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