Best Android Phone Low Price | Best Cheap Android Phones of 2019


It's 2019, and flagship smartphones are all nearly a thousand dollars or more. But as high-end phones get more expensive, cheaper phones are getting better. Phones under $300 are beautifully designed, with great screens, super-long battery life, excellent cameras, and awesome speakers. We've researched and ranked all of the best cheap Android phones you can buy and with our buyer's guide you'll find the perfect phone for you.

Best Overall: Moto G7


The Moto G7 and its other budget counterparts on this list have awesome, high-resolution touchscreens, reliable software, and great cameras. Some features, like NFC, drive up manufacturing costs, so you have to weigh whether you need NFC-enabled features like mobile payments. And the Moto G7 also lacks the same graphical power as its more expensive competitors, but most games play without issue, even at medium or high settings, because Android games are designed to play on hardware of all sizes and prices.
At the same time, Motorola's given the G7 a computational and memory upgrade, shipping the new Snapdragon 632 along with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage standard, numbers that would have been unheard of in a $300 phone just two years ago.
Motorola has had years of practice making the Moto G line into a budget powerhouse; when it designed the first Moto G back in 2013, it eschewed expensive materials like metal and glass and focused instead on the core experience. Starting in 2016, Motorola began finding ways to add important features like fingerprint sensors, and now the Moto G7 is made from a premium-feeling and resilient plastic frame and is covered on the front and back with Gorilla Glass.
But while the Moto G lineup tends to use less expensive components and materials, Motorola's excellent manufacturing results in a device that does not sacrifice quality.
At the same time, Motorola understands its audience, which is why it includes a dual camera setup to the Moto G7. The second camera adds depth effects like portrait mode without sacrificing the excellent pedigree of the main 12MP sensor.
Finally, if you're in the U.S., the Moto G7 is one of the few sub-$300 phones to work on all four U.S. carriers, and it's even sold at directly at a few carriers, another advantage of Motorola's long-standing relationship with companies like Verizon.

Best Value: Nokia 6.1


The Nokia 6.1 packs a lot of phone into its $229 price tag. It may be a year old at this point, but the phone's got a lot of life left thanks to its Android One software and promise of at least two years of platform updates (it was already updated from Oreo to Pie last October). Unlike the Moto G7, it has a rigid aluminum frame and you can feel the 182-gram heft as soon as you pick it up. The front is covered with 5.5-inch 1080p LCD display in a bit of a dated 16:9 aspect ratio, but that's really the only whiff of antiquity you'll find on this excellent device.
A Snapdragon 630 and 3GB of RAM ensures that there's breathing room for performance — and Nokia's always been excellent about maintaining excellent performance on its budget phones, while releasing regular security patches and bug fixes to round things out — and a 3,000mAh battery keeps the phone alive all day and well into the evening. In our review, we pointed out that the Nokia 6.1 is a huge upgrade over the original Nokia 6, especially in the performance department.
The camera is also pretty good for the price segment, though it's not at the same level as the Moto G7, nor our upgrade pick, the Pixel 3a. But for $229, this is one of the best values in smartphones around.

Upgrade Pick: Google Pixel 3a


The Pixel 3a manages to pack all of the best parts of the standard Pixel 3 into a more affordable package by using a middle-of-the-road chipset and a polycarbonate body. The result is a nearly identical-looking phone for hundreds less that takes incredible photos using the same image processing and Night Sight technology.
While it'll run you an extra Benjamin over the Moto G7, the Pixel 3a is without a doubt the phone you should look at if photography is your main priority. It's not just good for its price, the Pixel 3a takes some of the best photos of any phone on the market, even though it only has one lens. You also get a squeaky clean build of Android with three years of guaranteed software updates. It's also available at three of the four major U.S. carriers, which is a first for the Pixel lineup.

Best Features: Samsung Galaxy A50


Samsung isn't usually associated with good cheap phones — at least that used to be the case — but in 2019 the company has invested tremendously in its new Galaxy A line, bringing the best features of its flagships down to a much more reasonable price bracket. The Galaxy A50 is one such beneficiary, with a beautiful 6.4-inch Super AMOLED display — probably the best on this list — along with a super-fast Exynos 9610 processor, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and a huge 4,000mAh battery.
But the pièce de résistance of the Galaxy A50 is its triple rear camera setup, which includes a main 25MP sensor, an 8MP secondary super wide-angle camera, and a third 5MP sensor for depth. There's also a massive 25MP front-facing selfie camera, too, hidden in the teardrop notch.
To justify its $275 to $350 price (depending on where you buy it), Samsung's included an under-display fingerprint sensor, something missing on all the other phones on this list. Samsung's also making a big deal of its One UI software, which runs on top of Android 9 Pie.

Best Build Quality: Nokia 7.1


The Nokia 7.1 brings a ton of value to a $350 unlocked phone. From the dual camera setup that shoots impressive low-light photos to the premium-feeling 6000-series aluminum design, you would be forgiven for thinking this device costs double its actual retail price.
The best part isn't even the hardware — the phone ships with Android 9 Pie on board, and thanks to Android One, will get two years of platform updates and security patches. The downside is that it's only compatible with GSM carriers like AT&T and T-Mobile in the U.S., meaning that if you're on Sprint, Verizon, or one of their prepaid subsidiaries, you're out of luck.

Best Battery Life: Moto G7 Power


If you're more into viewing content than worrying about how good that content looks, the Moto G7 Power is the better choice than the Moto G7 — or practically any other budget handset. It's got a massive 5,000mAh battery that keeps it going longer than practically any phone on the market, but trades in some screen resolution — its 6.2-inch display is only 720p, compared to the 1080p panel on the main Moto G7.
Other than that, though, the Moto G7 Power has the same basic specs as the G7 — a Snapdragon 632 processor and 3GB of RAM, as well as a rear fingerprint sensor and a 12MP rear camera. It also features Motorola's excellent Android software, which takes Google's stock Android Pie and adds a bunch of Moto Experiences, including an unmatched ambient display and some handy gestures.
But really, at $249 the main draw here is the price — and the amount of crazy uptime you're going to get with this phone. If you're not the kind of person who likes to charge their phone every night, or just uses it all the time, this is the one to get.

source : androidcentral

Best Under $200: Nokia 4.2


If you were impressed by the Nokia 7.1's build materials for the money, the Nokia 4.2 features the same design, and similar construction (the frame is metal but the body is plastic) for just over half the price. Its tiny teardrop notch means you get an almost all-display device, and you still get Android 9 Pie thanks to the phone being part of the Android One program.
There's a fingerprint sensor along the back, and a dedicated Google Assistant button on the side for quick voice commands. The power button doubles as a notification LED, glowing different colors to denote specific apps, and remarkably, this $190 phone has NFC to allow for Google Pay — something you almost never see in this price range.
You do have to sacrifice a bit of performance, but in the end, Nokia's latest is a steal at under $200.

Best Under $100: Alcatel 1X


There's not much fancy or extravagant about the Alcatel 1X; it's all plastic, and has a mere 1GB of RAM. But if all you need is a basic smartphone to make calls, browse the web and social media, and take a few photos of questionable quality, the 1X is a great option.
It runs Android Go Edition, a scaled-back version of the operating system that's optimized to run well on low-level hardware. That hardware isn't all bad, either; the 5.3-inch display is refreshingly easy to use in one hand, and has a modern 18:9 aspect ratio for squeezing in as much content as possible. You also get a rear-mounted fingerprint sensor, and the 1X is compatible with both AT&T and T-Mobile's networks.

Best With a Caveat: Honor 8X


Honor is a Huawei subsidiary but is increasingly releasing great phones that stand out on their own. The Honor 8X is one of the best budget phones you can buy, but it's not really available in the U.S. Instead, it's marketed in European and Asian markets, and competes with the likes of Xiaomi, OPPO and Vivo for the increasingly-important slice of the low-cost market. As a result Honor packs a lot of great features into the 8X, including a fast processor, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and a fantastic dual camera setup on the back. There's also a massive 3750mAh battery on board to ensure all-day uptime.
The blue version also has this gorgeous pattern on the glass back that refracts light and makes it beautiful to look at and a joy to hold.

Best Outside the U.S.: Xiaomi Redmi Note 7


If you don't know the Redmi brand from Xiaomi, you should probably learn about it. The company doesn't officially sell its products in the U.S., but the Chinese company has been expanding like crazy into India and parts of Asia and Europe. The Redmi brand is its budget line, taking on Honor, OPPO and Vivo, and the Redmi Note 7 is one of the best deals you can find.
Like the Honor 8X, if you're in the U.S. you're buying a phone that wasn't really made for that market — but it will work great on AT&T and T-Mobile (and their sub-brands Cricket and Metro, along with other MVNOs). But Xiaomi is a company that you should probably learn more about, because the Redmi Note 7, with its Snapdragon 660 processor, 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage — all for under $200 — is one of the best deals in town.
The back has a massive 48MP camera, along with a second 5MP sensor for depth, and the 6.35-inch display is incredible for the price.

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