The best argument against spending $1,000 on a smartphone is the quality of what $400 buys you in 2026. Mid-range chips have caught up to last year’s flagships. Camera quality at the $350-500 price point would have been considered excellent two years ago. AMOLED displays, in-display fingerprint sensors, and 5G are now standard at prices that were unthinkable three years ago. The question is no longer whether you can get a good phone for under $500 – it is which of the genuinely excellent options you should choose.

Our Testing Approach

We tested each phone for a minimum of one week as a daily driver, covering navigation, social media, photography, video streaming, mobile gaming, and prolonged phone calls. Battery life was measured in standardised video playback tests and real-world mixed usage. We also evaluated software update policies, build quality, and long-term value.

1. Google Pixel 9 – Best Value Flagship (Frequently $499)

The Google Pixel 9 launched at $799, which places it outside this guide’s scope at full price. But Google runs aggressive promotional pricing through its own store, carrier partners, and seasonal sales that regularly bring the Pixel 9 to $499 or below. When it hits that price – and it frequently does – nothing else in the under-$500 market comes close. You get a true flagship experience: Google’s best computational photography, the full suite of Google AI features including Gemini integration, a 6.0-inch OLED display with 120Hz, and Tensor G4 performance that handles everything from gaming to machine learning tasks locally.

The software update commitment is exceptional: seven years of OS and security updates means a Pixel 9 bought today at $499 will receive support through 2033. At the $300-500 price point where many devices receive only two or three years of updates, this longevity argument alone justifies paying $499 instead of $350 for a lesser phone. The 4,700mAh battery delivers genuine all-day performance, and the 27W wired charging fills it in about 60 minutes.

Best for: Buyers who want flagship performance and are willing to wait for a sale. Check Google’s store regularly – sales happen multiple times per year.

2. Nothing Phone 2a – Best Under $400

At $399, the Nothing Phone 2a is the easiest recommendation in the under-$500 category for buyers who do not need the absolute best camera. The transparent back with Glyph lighting is the most distinctive design in the market at any price – it generates more comments from strangers than phones costing three times as much. But the Nothing Phone 2a’s appeal goes beyond aesthetics: Nothing OS is clean, fast, and genuinely free of the bloatware and duplicate apps that clutter most Android devices below $500.

Nothing Phone 2a
Nothing Nothing Phone 2a

The Nothing Phone 2a is the most interesting $399 phone you can buy. The Glyph interface is genuinely distinctive and Nothing OS is refreshingly uncluttered. Ca...

7.9
Camera
7.7
Battery
8.3
Performance
7.8

The Dimensity 7200 Pro chip provides smooth, responsive performance for everything from social media to casual gaming. The 5,000mAh battery is the standout spec: in real-world use it regularly delivers 48 hours between charges for moderate users, removing charge anxiety from daily life. The 45W wired charging fills it from zero in about 55 minutes. The 50MP main camera produces excellent daylight photos, though it trails the Pixel and iPhone significantly in low light and portrait processing.

Nothing has also improved its software update commitment: the Phone 2a now receives three years of OS updates and four years of security patches – better than most competitors at this price, though short of Google’s offering.

Best for: Anyone who values design, software cleanliness, and battery life above camera quality. The best-looking phone under $500, full stop.

3. Samsung Galaxy A55 – Best Samsung Under $500

Samsung’s Galaxy A55 5G brings the aesthetic language of the flagship S-series to a $449 price point without the compromises you would expect. The 6.6-inch Super AMOLED display with 120Hz refresh rate is one of the best screens at any price under $500 – colour accuracy, brightness, and panel quality are noticeably above competitors. IP67 water resistance (submersible to 1 metre for 30 minutes) is an unusual inclusion at this price and provides meaningful protection against everyday accidents.

Samsung Galaxy A55
Samsung Samsung Galaxy A55

The Galaxy A55 is the best mid-range Samsung offers - a beautiful display and great battery life in a surprisingly premium-looking body. Processor performance i...

7.8
Camera
7.5
Battery
8.5
Performance
7.6

The Exynos 1480 chip is competent for everyday tasks and handles the 50MP main camera’s output efficiently. Daylight photography is impressive; low-light performance is adequate. The optical image stabilisation on the main camera – not always present at this price point – makes a meaningful difference in sharp handheld shots. Samsung guarantees four years of OS updates and five years of security patches, which is strong in this category.

The one weakness is charging speed: 25W wired charging is slower than competitors in this price bracket, and wireless charging is absent. If you are frequently in situations where you need to quickly top up your battery, this is worth considering.

Best for: Samsung fans, anyone who prioritises display quality and water resistance, and buyers who want a phone that looks and feels more expensive than it is.

4. OnePlus 12 – Best Performance Under $500 (with Trade-in)

The OnePlus 12 launched at $799 but is now regularly available at $499 through OnePlus directly and through carrier trade-in promotions. At that price you get Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 – the same chip found in Samsung’s S25 Ultra – which makes it the fastest phone available for under $500 in our tests. The 100W SUPERVOOC wired charging fills the 5,400mAh battery in under 30 minutes: charge for 15 minutes during your morning routine and you have enough power for the entire day without carrying a charger.

The Hasselblad-branded triple camera system produces strong results in daylight and competitive low-light performance. OxygenOS is clean and fast, with minimal bloatware and excellent customisation options. The 6.82-inch AMOLED display with 4,500 nits peak brightness is excellent. The primary weakness is the software update policy: three years of OS updates falls short of Google and Samsung, which matters for buyers who keep phones for four or five years.

Best for: Performance-focused buyers, fast charging enthusiasts, and anyone willing to trade long-term software support for best-in-class speed at the price.

What to Look For in a Budget Phone

Verdict

Spending over $500 on a smartphone is a personal choice, not a necessity. Every phone on this list delivers a genuinely excellent experience for most users in most situations. The Pixel 9 at $499 is the best value in tech if you can catch it on sale. The Nothing Phone 2a at $399 is the best everyday phone for buyers who do not prioritise extreme camera quality. The Galaxy A55 is the best Samsung experience accessible to most budgets. And the OnePlus 12 offers flagship-tier performance at a mid-range price for those who prioritise speed above all else.

Motorola Edge 50 Pro
Motorola Motorola Edge 50 Pro

The Motorola Edge 50 Pro offers the fastest charging speed at its price point and a beautiful 144Hz display. The Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 is capable but not the faste...

8.3
Camera
7.9
Battery
8.4
Performance
8.5
Samsung Galaxy A35
Samsung Samsung Galaxy A35

The Galaxy A35 is Samsung's entry into mid-range at $349, offering a large Super AMOLED display and long battery life. Performance and camera are basic but the ...

7.4
Camera
7.1
Battery
8.2
Performance
7.0
Samsung Galaxy A17 5G
Samsung Samsung Galaxy A17 5G

The Samsung Galaxy A17 5G offers a compelling package for its price, primarily excelling in battery life and display quality. However, performance limitations a...

6.8
Camera
6.5
Battery
8.0
Performance
6.7
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