Android phones come in all shapes, sizes and price points — it's all a bit daunting. That's why we use and test every Android phone available to pick the absolute best ones available, and give you all the information you need to choose the right one.
The Google Pixel 3 XL is easily the best phone Google has ever made, and that also makes it the best Android phone for most people. Simplicity is the name of the game here: the hardware is efficiently designed, the software gets out of your way, and all of the features have a distinct purpose. It also offers the best overall camera experience of any Android — and comes in two sizes to fit any hand (or pocket).
Our pick
Google Pixel 3 XL
The best Android phone for most people.
The Pixel 3 XL focuses on having the fastest, simplest, and most helpful software experience, running on simple and powerful hardware. It accents everything with an amazing camera and a handful of features that make it stand out from the competition.
Who should buy this phone
The Pixel 3 XL is not for those who measure a phone's quality by the level of its specs or the raw number of features it offers. But if you just look at the spec sheet and the features, you're missing out on the bigger picture: the Pixel 3 XL is an amazing phone to use and experience.
The Pixel 3 XL offers an exceptional smartphone experience, whether you're a novice or a pro.
Whether you're a novice or a seasoned pro, Google's software experience is appealing. Android 9 Pie is simple, smooth, easy to use, and doesn't have a bunch of features or extras that get in your way. You won't experience bloatware or unwanted apps, and the deep integration with Google services makes setup and sync effortless. Everything you do on the Pixel 3 XL is fast and easy to manage, and you can do as much, or as little, as you see fit with it.
One of the biggest selling points is its cameras. The rear camera takes the best photos in the business, whether you want to just point and shoot or get deeper into the extra features. On the front, a pair of cameras offers fantastic selfies for just you or a group.
This phone is the complete package. Sure it's missing a couple of the highest-end specs, and it isn't as customizable as the competition, but the pros heavily outweigh those cons.
Is it a good time to buy this phone?
Yes. The Pixel 3 XL was just released, and Google holds to a strict yearly cycle for releasing phones. This will be the latest and greatest from the company for months to come.
Reasons to buy
- Amazing photo quality
- Great selfies
- Super loud stereo speakers
- Simple, intuitive software
- Wireless charging
- Guaranteed software updates
Reasons not to buy
- No headphone jack
- Display notch
There are so many great Android phones available, but the Pixel 3 XL stands out
It should come as little surprise that Google's own Pixel phones offer the best possible Android experience. It starts with the hardware, which is clean, efficient, and robust. The three color options give you choices on the look, but regardless you get great speakers, wireless charging, and solid (if unspectacular) battery life. The screen is also great, with the extra large 6.3-inch OLED panel giving you plenty of room to view everything.
It should come as little surprise that the best Android experience comes directly from Google.
Android 9 Pie is an excellent operating system filled with nice-to-have features, but at the same time isn't weighed down by extra cruft or bloatware that you don't want. It's capable of being a simple and easy to use system, or a super-powerful tool for more advanced users — the choice is yours. In either case you benefit from fantastic performance and smooth animations, plus deep integration with Google's services. You also get three years of guaranteed software updates, plus unlimited Google Photos backups at full resolution — nice perks.
On both phones, you get the same industry-leading camera performance. The rear camera has just a single sensor and lens, but Google's software takes it to new heights. You can take amazing photos with little thought in any scene, and new enhancements to processing give you better digital zoom and multi-frame capture without any configuration or changing of modes. The dual selfie cameras give you flexibility to shoot super-sharp single shots, group wide-angle shots, or uniquely processed portrait mode photos.
Alternatives to the Google Pixel 3 XL
The Pixel 3 XL is a great choice for so many people, but of course there are some potential buyers who don't want to go all-in with the Google way of doing things. That's why there are other phones out there that offer a different experience and are worthy of considering.
Compact pick
Google Pixel 3
The complete Pixel experience, in a smaller size.
This is a pretty simple equation: take the Pixel 3 XL, and scale it down to a size that's much more manageable in one hand. You get all of the same specs, features and camera quality as the larger phone — you just get less screen to work with, and a smaller battery that leads to shorter battery life.
Not everyone wants a huge phone, and the Pixel 3 delivers the same great Pixel experience while keeping the size comfortable for a wide range of hand (and pocket) sizes. The Pixel 3 is small enough to fit in your bag or pocket even with a case on, and you won't find yourself fumbling around to awkwardly wrap your hand around it.
Despite being smaller, the Pixel 3 has all of the same great hardware, specs, features and camera quality as the larger 3 XL. That includes the glass build, wireless charging, screen quality and stereo speakers. The only things you miss out on here is just the sheer size of the 3 XL's screen, and its larger battery. Things may feel a little more cramped in some apps, requiring a little more zooming or scrolling, and at the end of the day you're going to have less wiggle room in the battery. If you're a heavy phone user, the Pixel 3 may not be able to manage everything you throw at it without a midday top-up.
At a discount
Samsung Galaxy S9+
A great all-around phone with mass appeal and amazing hardware and features.
The Galaxy S9+ is the phone anyone can pick up and make their own. You don't miss out on a single spec or hardware feature, and it has one of the best displays and best camera experiences available. And it's cheaper than Google's latest phones.
Samsung makes phones that appeal to the widest possible market, and that's why the Galaxy S9+ is so easy to recommend. It has every hardware feature and spec you could want out of a phone in 2019, and the software is there to make it all work. You can also customize the software to do whatever you want, but that also means it takes a lot more setup and massaging to work just right — and in the end, it still won't match Google's simplicity.
But the GS9+ does most things just as well as the Pixel 3 XL, and even bests it in of a couple areas: namely its higher display brightness, expandable storage and headphone jack. Being several months old, it's also much cheaper. You'll pay about $715 for the Galaxy S9+, which is a considerable savings over the Pixel 3 XL and enough of a discount to make many people consider it.
Special stylus
Samsung Galaxy Note 9
An incredible phone with a huge price to match.
The Galaxy S9+ is great, but the Samsung Note 9 is even greater. It does everything the GS9+ does, but adds in a larger screen, more storage, longer battery life and an S Pen stylus. And it's about $200 more because of it.
The Galaxy Note 9 is easily the best Note phone Samsung has ever made, and for once it's actually better than the latest Galaxy S phone in every way. The battery has jumped up to 4000mAh, which gives you effortless all-day battery life, and the rest of the experience is the same as what the Galaxy S9+ offers.
That means you get top-end specs, a great camera, an industry-leading display and so much more. And the Note has an S Pen, which remains unmatched in the smartphone world. The problem is its $1000+ price tag, which is a tough pill to swallow when you can get almost the same experience for about $200 less with the Galaxy S9+. That makes this an "upgrade" and not the standard recommendation.
Great value
OnePlus 6T
Most of the flagship experience for a fraction of the price.
OnePlus just keeps doing it: a flagship-level phone with amazing hardware, specs and capabilities for hundreds of dollars less. You get a big screen, top-notch internals, excellent battery and actually capable cameras for under $600.
For just $549, you're getting a lot of phone in the OnePlus 6T. Solid hardware and a full spec sheet rival the competition, and the 6.41-inch AMOLED screen is no slouch. The cameras are a step down, but they're consistently above average. And its OxygenOS software is actually capable of challenging Google's in simplicity and speed.
The OnePlus 6T isn't perfect, and has many shortcomings when compared head-to-head with the other phones on this list. But with a price tag that's $300 less, it's hard to complain. Given its price it's shocking how close the OnePlus 6T gets to the competition, and there's a good chance you'll be willing to forego a few nice-to-have extras to save so much money.
Feature-packed
Huawei Mate 20 Pro
Filled with features … unless you're in the U.S.
Huawei aims straight for the highest end of the market with the Mate 20 Pro, going all-out in size, specs and capabilities. This 6.39-inch monster has all of the latest specs, plus a downright massive battery, great triple camera setup and gorgeous color options.
Huawei is doing its best Samsung impression, and in many ways besting it. The Mate 20 Pro is filled with features, specs, a huge battery and one of the best cameras available. But like Samsung's latest phones, it comes with a software experience that's a bit grating, if not entirely frustrating, to people who've spent most of their time with other systems.
But the real issue, as is the case with all modern Huawei phones, is that you can't get the phone in the U.S. unless you make the decision to get a grey-market import. It's a shame, because the Mate 20 Pro is a compelling do-it-all option for people who want to break the mold of just defaulting to the Galaxy Note 9.
Budget pick
Moto G6
This is the best budget Android phone for most people, giving you all of the basics at an incredible price.
The Moto G6 is a budget-priced winner in every respect. From the modern design to the dual camera setup and excellent performance, the Moto G6 represents the pinnacle of Motorola's dominance in the budget phone space.
In a world filled with great low-cost Android phones, the Moto G6 stands above the rest — and that makes sense, because Motorola has been dominating this space for years. The Moto G6 is just over $200, yet offers a modern design and many of the same software features as the higher-end smartphones on this list.
It offers a big screen, good battery life, surprisingly good performance and a nicer camera than you'd expect for the money. It has modern conveniences like a USB-C port and fast charging, plus bonuses like a 3.5mm headphone jack. Motorola's software is also fantastic, with a clean interface and useful features you'll take advantage of every day.
Bottom line
The Google Pixel 3 XL is the best overall Android phone available today. It has amazing performance, simple and powerful software, great cameras and no clear issues or downsides. Its hardware matches the competition in terms of quality and features, and finally isn't let down by a subpar screen. It's also available in a compact size with the standard Pixel 3. Samsung's Galaxy S9+ and Note 9 offer compelling alternatives to those who want more features and can manage the software, while the Huawei Mate 20 Pro is an interesting high-powered alternative for those in Europe. For a flagship-level phone at a great price, the OnePlus 6T is an excellent choice.
Credits — The team that worked on this guide
Andrew Martonik is the Executive Editor, U.S. at Android Central. He has been a mobile enthusiast since the Windows Mobile days, and covering all things Android-related with a unique perspective at AC since 2012. For suggestions and updates, you can reach him at andrew.martonik@androidcentral.com or on Twitter at @andrewmartonik.
Daniel Bader is the Managing Editor of Android Central. As he's writing this, a mountain of old Android phones is about to fall on his head, but his Great Dane will protect him. He drinks way too much coffee and sleeps too little. He wonders if there's a correlation.
Jerry Hildenbrand is Mobile Nation's Senior Editor and works from a Chromebook full time. Currently he is using Google's Pixelbook but is always looking at new products and may have any Chromebook in his hands at any time. You'll find him across the Mobile Nations network and you can hit him up on Twitter if you want to say hey.
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