At CES 2026, I got the opportunity to go hands-on with the ‘Motorola Razr Fold,’ the company’s Samsung Galaxy Fold competitor. While we’re still learning more about what the device has to offer, as Motorola will reveal specifications later this year, I still wanted to give it a shot.
Motorola’s take on a foldable is interesting, but familiar. At this point, if you’ve held one book-style foldable, you’ve held them all, but the Razr Fold has some nice touches. I like how the handset feels in your hand with the soft-touch rear that’s reminiscent of the vegan leather available on the company’s Razr flip-style phones. Additionally, while the camera bump is pretty large, I like how the leather goes up to meet the camera module, and your hand naturally fits below it. Also, Pantone Lily White and Pantone Blackened Blue both look like good colour options.

The Razr Fold’s cover display offers a 6.6-inch panel, and it seemed to offer a good aspect ratio, so that you can type easily on the device. When you open up the device, you get a beautiful 8.1-inch 2K display, which is slightly bigger than both the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and the Pixel 10 Pro Fold. The screen looked nice, and you could only see a crease from certain angles.
The phone also has a triple camera setup with three 50-megapixel sensors, one of which offers a 3x periscope lens. Further, the Razr Fold offers a 32-megapixel external selfie camera and a 20-megapixel internal shooter. I wasn’t able to test out the camera experience, but Motorola seems pretty confident in this camera setup as it’s the same found in its flagship Motorola Signature handset (not coming to Canada or the U.S.).
The handset feels and looks extremely nice, and while Motorola has been in the foldable game for years with its flip-style Razr series, and even its Rizr prototype, this is the company’s first book-style folding phone, and it’s pretty impressive at that. Samsung’s first folding phone was a mess, and Google pretty much scrapped its first Fold design. It’s good that Motorola waited until it could offer a solid experience.

However, there’s still a lot we don’t know about the Razr Fold, such as its battery capacity, how much RAM it has, its processor and more. Additionally, it’s going to be interesting to see if Motorola can carve out a path into the book-style foldable market. Globally, the company already has a lot of competition. In North America, Motorola might have the best chance, but it’ll have to offer something great if it’s going to compete against the likes of Google, with a fully IP68-rated foldable and Samsung, which showed off a creaseless foldable at CES 2026. And with reports that Apple is also working on a foldable this year, hopefully, the Razr Fold will offer an experience that allows it to stand out.
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