Foldable smartphones have matured dramatically by April 2026, shedding much of their early bulk and fragility to become practical daily drivers with improved durability, battery life and multitasking capabilities. Leading models from Samsung, Google, Motorola and others now compete closely with traditional flagships while offering the unique appeal of a compact device that unfolds into a mini-tablet or stylish flip form factor.
Industry analysts and reviewers from outlets including PCMag, PhoneArena, ZDNet and Wirecutter highlight a clear top tier based on hands-on testing, real-world performance and value. While availability varies by region — with some Chinese brands like Honor and Oppo offering exceptional hardware but limited U.S. support — the following five stand out as the best foldable phones currently on the market.
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7
1. Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 — Best Overall Book-Style Foldable
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 7 earns frequent nods as the top foldable for most users thanks to its ultra-slim profile, premium build and polished software experience. Measuring just over 8mm thick when closed and weighing around 215 grams, it feels remarkably close to a conventional flagship yet unfolds into an expansive 8-inch inner display ideal for productivity, media consumption and split-screen multitasking.
The device features a bright 6.5-inch cover screen with 120Hz refresh rate, allowing full app functionality without unfolding. Powered by the Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy processor, it delivers smooth performance across demanding tasks. Cameras have seen meaningful upgrades, with a standout 200-megapixel main sensor producing sharp, vibrant photos that rival non-foldable competitors.
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Reviewers praise the refined hinge, improved crease visibility and long software support extending years into the future. Drawbacks include a premium price tag often starting near $1,900 and average battery life that may require midday top-ups for heavy users. Still, its ecosystem integration with Galaxy Watch, Buds and DeX mode makes it a compelling choice for Samsung loyalists and power users alike.
2. Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold — Best for Durability and Cameras
Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold stands out for its rugged construction and photography prowess. It boasts a full IP68 dust and water resistance rating — a rarity among foldables — along with enhanced hinge durability and drop protection on the main display. At roughly 258 grams, it feels more substantial than Samsung’s offering but rewards owners with reliable all-day performance.
The Tensor G5 chipset powers intuitive AI features, including real-time call translation, audio magic eraser and Gemini Live integration. Cameras shine with computational photography that delivers natural colors and excellent low-light results, making it a favorite for content creators. The 6.3-inch cover screen and large inner display support seamless multitasking with clean Android 16 software.
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Battery life impresses in testing, often outlasting slimmer rivals. Pricing starts around $1,800, positioning it as a strong value for those prioritizing longevity and photography over the absolute thinnest design. Limitations include slightly warmer performance under sustained loads compared to Snapdragon-equipped devices.
3. Motorola Razr Ultra (2025/60 Ultra) — Best Flip-Style Foldable
For users seeking pocketable convenience with flair, the Motorola Razr Ultra delivers one of the most stylish and functional clamshell experiences. Its vertical fold design snaps shut into a compact square, while the generous external display supports full apps, notifications and even quick camera previews.
Equipped with strong battery life that frequently tops competitor flip models, the Razr Ultra handles daily tasks efficiently on its Snapdragon processor. The inner 7-inch display offers smooth 120Hz visuals, and the overall build feels premium with thoughtful details like a titanium hinge option in select variants. Cameras perform adequately for casual use, though they trail book-style models in versatility.
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Reviewers highlight its fun factor and practicality for one-handed operation. Starting prices often land in the mid-$1,000 range, making it more accessible than premium book-style foldables. Potential downsides include a smaller unfolded screen compared to tablet-style devices and occasional software quirks in the Motorola skin.
4. Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 — Best Compact Flip for Everyday Use
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip 7 refines the flip formula with a larger 4.1-inch edge-to-edge cover screen that finally enables meaningful interaction without unfolding. The 6.9-inch inner display provides ample space when needed, while the overall design remains slim and lightweight for easy pocket carry.
Battery improvements help it last through a full day for moderate users, and the Exynos 2500 or Snapdragon variant (depending on region) ensures snappy performance. New DeX support on the Flip adds desktop-like productivity when connected to external displays. Cameras remain solid for social media and quick shots, with the main 50-megapixel sensor delivering reliable results.
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Priced starting around $1,100, it offers strong value within the Samsung ecosystem. Critics note it can overheat during intensive multitasking and that battery claims sometimes exceed real-world endurance. Its stylish appeal and improved cover screen functionality make it a top pick for fashion-conscious users or those transitioning from traditional bar phones.
5. Honor Magic V5 — Best Ultra-Thin Alternative for Multitasking
The Honor Magic V5 earns acclaim for its exceptionally slim design, measuring under 9mm folded and around 4.4mm unfolded in some configurations. It targets users who want a near-nonexistent crease and premium feel without Samsung’s ecosystem lock-in.
Featuring a large inner display and capable outer screen, it excels at multitasking with smooth software optimizations. The Snapdragon 8 Elite processor paired with generous RAM handles heavy workloads, while a sizable silicon-carbon battery supports fast charging and extended use. Cameras offer competitive performance, particularly in daylight scenarios.
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Availability may require importing in some markets, and software updates could lag behind Google or Samsung. Still, its combination of thinness, battery capacity and vibrant displays positions it as a compelling choice for enthusiasts seeking cutting-edge hardware at potentially competitive pricing.
Buying Considerations in 2026
Foldable phones now address many early criticisms: creases are subtler, hinges more robust and repair programs more widespread. Most top models promise four to seven years of software support, reducing obsolescence concerns. Battery technology has advanced, though heavy multitasking or camera use still drains power faster than slab phones.
Prices remain elevated, with book-style models often exceeding $1,800 and flips starting above $1,000. Trade-in deals, carrier promotions and installment plans can ease the cost. Buyers should consider ecosystem preferences — Samsung for seamless integration, Google for pure Android and AI, Motorola for flip charm.
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Durability has improved markedly, but users should invest in quality cases and screen protectors. Coverage for accidental damage varies by manufacturer and carrier.
Regional factors matter: U.S. buyers enjoy broad carrier support for Samsung, Google and Motorola models, while international shoppers may access superior specs from Honor, Oppo, Vivo or Huawei at lower prices, albeit with potential Google service limitations on some devices.
The Future of Foldables
As 2026 progresses, expectations include further refinements such as even lighter builds, under-display cameras that eliminate notches and possible trifold designs from Samsung and others reaching wider markets. Apple’s rumored foldable iPhone could reshape the segment later in the year or in 2027.
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For now, the market offers something for nearly every preference: productivity powerhouses, stylish compacts and durable all-rounders. Early adopters who hesitated in previous years will find 2026 models far more refined and reliable.
Consumers weighing a purchase should evaluate their primary needs — screen size for work, portability for travel or camera quality for photography — and test devices in-store when possible. With rapid iteration, waiting for carrier deals or next-generation hints may also pay off.
Foldables represent more than a novelty in 2026; they deliver genuine utility that enhances how many people work, create and consume content on the go. Whether opting for the versatile Galaxy Z Fold 7, the rugged Pixel 10 Pro Fold or a fun flip like the Razr Ultra, buyers are investing in devices that continue to evolve the smartphone experience.
The delay in the decision is preventing major expansion on the site
Trevor Bevins, Local Democracy Reporter
07:43, 15 Apr 2026
A map of how Dorset Innovation Park might look(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service)
A significant increase in employment at Dorset’s Innovation Park could materialise next year – once the Ministry of Defence finalises its future spending plans. Councillors have been informed that a delay in spending decisions by the MoD is already preventing one major expansion on the site, which already has planning approval, with other potential developments likely to proceed as soon as funding is confirmed.
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Several of the companies on the site are defence-related including those working on the development of autonomous and semi-autonomous machines for land, sea and air.
The Dorset Council-owned enterprise zone site has recently completed the acquisition of additional land next to the site with discussions also taking place about attracting a hotel after a consultant’s report indicated it should be commercially viable.
Other discussions under way include plans for a new gatehouse, which is currently regarded as a drawback for the Winfrith site, and a proposal to establish a catering outlet, possibly located at the Battlelab.
Councillors on the shareholders committee have also been informed that approaches are being made for a permanent education satellite facility on the park – with discussions having taken place with Bournemouth University, Yeovil College and Plymouth University.
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The shareholders committee was told that Fareham Borough Council, which owns a similar business park, ‘took off’ after securing a permanent higher education facility on its site.
Businesses already operating at the Dorset site are understood to be supportive of securing an education partner, which would assist with their own workplace training programmes, with many indicating it is crucial to future job creation and staff retention.
Outstanding issues include public transport links to the site from the surrounding area, with priority being given to connections from Wool railway station to the Innovation Park – proposals under consideration include establishing a bus route and exploring alternative options such as hire electric bikes and scooters.
Dorset Council’s portfolio holder for finance, Cllr Simon Clifford, told the shareholders meeting he was ‘heartened’ by the progress being made by the company which will eventually assume day-to-day management of the site – a responsibility currently being shared with Dorset Council officers.
Small deep value individual investor, with a modest private investment portfolio, split approx. 50%-50% between shares and call options. I have a B.Sc. in aeronautical engineering and over 6 years of experience as an engineering consultant in the aerospace sector. The latter statement is not relevant in any way whatsoever to my investment style, but I thought to add it for self-indulgent purposes. I have a contrarian investment style, highly risky, and often dealing with illiquid options. How illiquid? Well, you can land a Jumbo on the spread and still have clearance for take-off. From time to time, I buy shares, mostly to not be categorized as a degen by my fellow investor friends, therefore the 50%-50% allocation. My timeframe tends to be between 3-24 months.I like stocks that have experienced a recent sell-off due to non-recurrent events, particularly when insiders are buying shares at the new lower price. This is how I often screen through thousands of stocks, mainly in the US, although I may own shares in banana republics. I use fundamental analysis to check the health of companies that pass through my screening process, their leverage, and then compare their financial ratios with the sector, and industry median and average. I also do professional background checks of each insider who purchased shares after the recent sell-off. I use technical analysis to optimize the entry and exit points of my positions. I mainly use multicolor lines for support and resistance levels on weekly charts. From time to time I draw trend lines, taken for granted, in multicolor patterns. Note: I tried to keep my introduction as real, and authentic as possible. I dislike empty suits, high-level BS, deep-level BS, unnecessary jargon, and self-indulgent, third-person written introductions with an air of superiority.Thanks for reading my introduction!
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of ORCL either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
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The shares of IT companies surged up to 5% on Wednesday, amid overall optimism on Dalal Street and Wall Street following hopes for fresh Iran-US talks, along with easing concerns about AI-led disruption.
After taking a significant beating earlier this year due to AI worries and war-led inflationary concerns, the stocks have partially recovered so far in April. Nifty IT jumped more than 2% to emerge as one of the top sectoral gainers on the markets today.
Fresh hopes for Iran-US peace talks
Pakistani officials cited by the Associated Press indicated on Tuesday that Islamabad has proposed a second round of talks to the United States and Iran, while US Vice President JD Vance earlier said negotiations with Iran “did make some progress” and US President Donald Trump said earlier “we’ve been called by the other side” and “they want to work a deal.”Trump hinted at the second round of talks, saying Iran talks ‘could be happening over the next two days’ in Pakistan, as quoted by Reuters, citing the NY Post. He said that Washington was more ‘inclined’ to go to Pakistan for the peace talks that could possibly bring an end to the nearly seven-week-long war in the Middle East. The renewed hopes for fresh peace talks, after the previous round collapsed over the weekend, boosted investor sentiment.
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Earlier, the raging war in the oil-rich Middle East and the subsequent rally in energy prices had led to inflationary worries in the US. IT companies derive a major portion of their revenue from the US economy, inflationary worries and concerns around subsequent lower demand impacted IT stocks back home on Dalal Street. However, the renewed optimism has boosted investor sentiment.
AI worries
Before the Middle East war, it was artificial intelligence that dampened sentiment for the IT stocks earlier this year. The tech stocks saw a massive decline in February with the launch of new and innovative artificial intelligence tools by AI startup Anthropic, which triggered worries around disruption in the software services. Back on Dalal Street, shares of Infosys, Wipro, TCS, HCLTech and other IT companies, saw a sharp selloff.However, while some doomsday prophets painted a grim picture for IT shareholders, some analysts were quick to point out that an overall replacement of software engineers by AI is unlikely. The new technology would instead increase efficiency across the companies, boosting margins, according to them.
Goldman Sachs released its Q1 earnings on Monday. During an analyst’s call, David Solomon, Chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs, said he is hugely forward-leaning on the power of artificial intelligence to accelerate growth at the bank. “Whenever you have accelerations in new technology, there are going to be bumps, there will be risk issues, and recalibrations. But the power of this technology to use it in an enterprise to increase efficiency is incredibly constructive,” he added. Entrepreneur and financial expert Gurmeet Chaddha highlighted that Solomon claimed that AI taking over enterprise software is not easy.
IT shares rally
Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) shares, which recently fell after its Q4 results, gained more than 3% today to trade at Rs 2,551 apiece.
Wall Street ended higher yesterday, with the S&P 500 jumping more than 1% to close near the record high level it had hit in January. Tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite gained nearly 2% while Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.7%. Microsoft shares gained more than 2%, while Amazon rallied nearly 4%.
Calm before the storm?
Despite the optimism, some caution is warranted. After previous Claude models rattled investor confidence in the sector, Anthropic’s latest release, a preview of a model called Mythos is spooking investors. “Mythos’ significant improvement in software engineering-related tasks is a departure from the trend of incremental improvements between consecutive frontier models,” Kotak Institutional Equities said in a note. “These developments could have implications for IT services firms.”
Additionally, Trump is notorious for his decision flip flops and the peace talks have already once failed, keeping investors on the edge and sentiment fragile.
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(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Papilo, the Swinton-based waste management group, has completed its third acquisition in the last 12 months(Image: Papilo)
A Greater Manchester waste management group backed by private equity firm Palatine has made its third acquisition in a year. Papilo has acquired REKK Recycling, which is based in Uddingston near Glasgow, in a move that also expands its reach across the UK.
Michael Gibson, who joined Swinton-based Papilo as CEO earlier this month, said: “REKK is an excellent strategic addition for Papilo and enhances our geographical presence into Scotland.
“Like ourselves, the company’s ethos is built on best-in-class customer service and on supporting better environmental outcomes through recycling. Founders Steven and John have done a fine job in building the business and I am pleased that along with their team they are remaining with the group for the next phase of growth.”
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Greg Holmes, senior investment director at Palatine Impact Fund said: “REKK is an excellent fit for Papilo – not just geographically, but in its shared commitment to diverting waste from landfill and supporting clients to take a more responsible approach to resource management.
“This is Papilo’s third acquisition in under a year as we build a business of true scale in the circular economy in partnership with the ambitious management team and we are well-positioned to continue that growth through further strategic M&A.”
The transaction, whose value was not disclosed, was funded by Kartesia and Virgin Money. Papilo was advised by Gateley (legal), Fellwood Advisory (debt advisory), MHA Smalley (financial and tax due diligence) and Luminii Consulting (commercial due diligence). Advisers to REKK included KBS (corporate finance) and Mackrell (legal).
The Federal Government publishes the spending and revenue numbers on a monthly basis. The charts and tables below give an in-depth review of the Federal Budget, showing where the money is coming from, where it
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GQG Partners, which has been bullish on the Adani group for quite some time, selectively increased its exposure to key group companies during the January-March quarter, even as stock performance was mixed. Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) and domestic institutional investor Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) largely held steady or trimmed their stakes.
Shareholding data for the March quarter shows GQG marginally increasing its stakes in multiple Adani companies. Its holding in Adani Energy Solutions rose from 4.79% to 4.88%, while in Adani Green it increased from 4.31% to 4.54%. In Adani Enterprises, the group’s flagship entity, GQG’s stake edged up from 3.87% to 3.90%.
These incremental increases signal continued conviction from the marquee investor, which had emerged as a key backer of the Adani group during periods of heightened volatility.
However, in Adani Power, GQG’s stake saw a slight dip from 4.82% to 4.8%, while in Adani Ports, it remained broadly stable at around 2.26%.
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In contrast, FIIs showed signs of caution. Their holdings declined in several key companies during the quarter. In Adani Energy Solutions, FII ownership dropped sharply from 13.47% to 12.23%. Adani Enterprises also saw a reduction from 11.64% to 10.8%, while Adani Green witnessed a slight dip from 11.42% to 11.1%.
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The trimming was in line with the broader sentiment of foreign investors in Indian stocks, which they have been dumping for the past year. LIC, one of the largest domestic institutional investors, largely maintained its positions across most Adani companies, with only minor adjustments. Its stake in Adani Ports declined slightly from 6.79% to 6.63%, while holdings in companies such as Adani Enterprises, Adani Energy and Adani Green remained unchanged. This steady stance reflects a long-term holding approach rather than tactical allocation shifts.Mutual funds, meanwhile, showed renewed commitment with increasing exposure across several stocks. Holdings in ACC rose from 7.84% to 8.01%, while Ambuja Cements saw a notable jump from 8.15% to 8.92%. Adani Power and Adani Green Energy also recorded modest increases.
Despite these shifts in ownership, stock performance across the Adani group has been mixed so far in CY26. Adani Power has been a standout, delivering gains of around 22.9%, supported by strong sectoral tailwinds in thermal power. Adani Energy has also performed well, rising about 12.5%, while Adani Green is up nearly 7%.
On the other hand, several key stocks have lagged. ACC has declined about 18%, while Ambuja Cements is down roughly 20%, reflecting weakness in the cement segment and margin pressures. Adani Enterprises has slipped around 6.8%, and NDTV has seen a similar decline of about 20%. Adani Ports has remained largely flat, indicating a lack of strong directional momentum.
GQG’s continued accumulation in select Adani stocks appears to be a strategic bet on long-term fundamentals, particularly in infrastructure and energy-linked businesses. At the same time, the cautious stance of FIIs suggests that global investors are still evaluating risk-reward dynamics, especially given the group’s capital-intensive expansion plans and evolving regulatory landscape.
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(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
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