The Motorola Razr 60 Ultra is the flip foldable the newer Razr 70 Ultra is built on, sharing its exact dimensions, 199g weight and 165Hz screens while now sitting at a lower price. For buyers weighing the two, the differences come down to battery size, peak brightness and which Android version ships in the box.
Razr 60 Ultra: Display
The 7-inch foldable LTPO AMOLED runs at 165Hz with a 1224 x 2912 resolution and measured 1,489 nits of maximum brightness in GSMArena's lab test, with the 4,500-nit peak reserved for HDR content. The 4-inch external cover screen is a 165Hz LTPO OLED under Gorilla Glass Ceramic, large enough to run full apps without opening the phone.
The internal panel has a plastic front, softer than conventional flagship glass, which remains the standing compromise of the flip format.
Razr 60 Ultra: Camera
The dual rear camera pairs a 50MP f/1.8 main sensor with OIS and a 50MP 122-degree ultrawide, with a 50MP selfie camera inside; video reaches 8K at 30fps with Dolby Vision HDR.
There is no telephoto, so zoom relies on crops from the main sensor, and that puts it behind similarly priced bar phones for distant subjects.
Razr 60 Ultra: Battery
The 4,700mAh battery recorded an active use score of 15:10 hours in GSMArena's lab, strong for a flip foldable, with 68W wired charging, 30W wireless and 5W reverse wired.
The newer Razr 70 Ultra carries a 5,000mAh cell in the same body, so buyers choosing between the two are trading roughly 300mAh against the price difference.
Razr 60 Ultra: Size, Weight and Build
Unfolded, the phone measures 171.5 x 74 x 7.2mm; folded, it is 88.1 x 74 x 15.7mm at 199g, with a 6000-series aluminium frame, stainless steel hinge and an eco leather back in four Pantone shades including Rio Red and Mountain Trail.
The IP48 rating handles immersion but only blocks dust above 1mm, and the EU label's Class D free-fall rating is a reminder that a case is not optional on this phone.
Razr 60 Ultra: Performance
The Snapdragon 8 Elite with up to 16GB of RAM and storage up to 1TB delivers flagship-class speed, and everyday performance should be indistinguishable from the Razr 70 Ultra, which uses the same chipset platform at a slightly higher clock.
It ships on Android 15 where the 70 Ultra ships on Android 16, so buyers of this model start one version behind from day one.
Razr 60 Ultra: Who Should Buy
Buy the Razr 60 Ultra if you want the full-size flip foldable experience at the lowest price it has ever been; the hardware differences against the newer model are small enough that value buyers lose very little. Anyone who intends to keep the phone for many years should weigh the Razr 70 Ultra instead, which starts a software generation ahead with a larger battery. Buyers comparing the two on monthly cost will find current network pricing in the table above.