The Motorola Razr 70 is a clamshell foldable that folds a 6.9-inch main screen down to a pocketable square. It sits at the more affordable end of Motorola's current Razr range, below the pricier Razr 70 Ultra, and pairs a 3.6-inch cover display with a mid-range MediaTek chip. It suits buyers who want the compactness and novelty of a flip phone without paying flagship-foldable prices.
Razr 70: Display
Unfolded, the Razr 70 uses a 6.9-inch foldable LTPO AMOLED at 120Hz with Dolby Vision and HDR10+, rated to a 3,000-nit peak for HDR content. The 3.6-inch external AMOLED runs at 90Hz and handles widgets, notifications and the cameras while the phone is closed.
The cover display is smaller than the 4.1-inch panel on the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip7 and refreshes at 90Hz rather than 120Hz, so the outside screen is less roomy and less fluid than Samsung's.
Razr 70: Camera
The rear cameras are a 50MP f/1.7 main with optical stabilisation and a 50MP f/2.0 ultrawide, with a 32MP selfie camera inside. Both rear lenses can be used from the cover screen, for higher-quality selfies while folded.
There is no telephoto lens, so zoomed shots rely on digital cropping, and the mid-range sensors mean low-light results are likely to trail those of conventional flagships at a similar price.
Razr 70: Battery
A 4,800mAh silicon-carbon battery is large for a compact flip and bigger than the 4,300mAh cell in the Galaxy Z Flip7. Charging is 30W wired and 15W wireless.
Independent battery-life testing is not yet available for the Razr 70, so endurance is unconfirmed, and 30W wired charging is modest next to the faster-charging bar-style phones at this price.
Razr 70: Size, Weight and Build
Folded, the Razr 70 measures 88.1 x 74 x 15.9mm and opens to 171.3 x 74 x 7.3mm, at 188g, in Pantone Hematite, Sporting Green and Bright White. It uses an aluminium frame with a titanium hinge and a Gorilla Glass Victus cover, and carries an IP48 rating alongside MIL-STD-810H durability testing.
The IP48 rating means it resists water immersion but is only protected against solid particles larger than 1mm, so it is not fully dust-tight like a typical IP68 bar phone, and the folding main screen uses a plastic top layer that needs more care than glass.
Razr 70: Performance
The MediaTek Dimensity 7400X with a Mali-G615 MC2 GPU and 8GB of RAM is a mid-range platform aimed at everyday use rather than heavy gaming. Storage is UFS 3.1 and the phone ships on Android 16.
This is where the Razr 70 gives most ground to the Galaxy Z Flip7, which runs the more powerful Exynos 2500 and is backed by up to seven major Android upgrades. Buyers who want the longest guaranteed software support will find Samsung's commitment hard to beat here.
Razr 70: Who Should Buy
The Razr 70 suits buyers drawn to the compactness and novelty of a clamshell foldable who want to spend less than flagship flips cost. Anyone upgrading from an older bar-style phone gains a genuinely different form factor, though those who want the most powerful chip, the larger cover screen or the longest software support should weigh up the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip7 instead.
Buyers comparing storage tiers or contract length will find current pricing in the table above.