Motorola’s Edge 70 is the blueprint for future thin phones
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I’ve always been skeptical of ultra-thin phones. Why sacrifice camera quality and battery life just to slim down a device by a few millimeters? This was exactly my thought when I first encountered Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Edge earlier this year.

However, the Motorola Edge 70 might just have changed my mind. It’s an affordable alternative to the S25 Edge or iPhone Air, now available in the UK and Europe for £699/€799 (approximately $920). Unfortunately, it won’t be released in the U.S., according to Nicole Hagen, Motorola’s head of global product marketing.

Although it’s merely a third of a millimeter thicker than the Air—hardly noticeable—it addresses some of that phone’s shortcomings by featuring a larger battery and a more robust design. While it introduces a few of its own minor issues, it offers a more convincing direction for the future of thin phones compared to what Apple and Samsung have offered.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 lying on a wooden table showing the camerasPhoto of Motorola Edge 70 lying on a wooden table showing the cameras

We seem to be in the era of silicon-carbon batteries, as this is the second time in recent weeks that a manufacturer has been lauded for packing a high-capacity battery into a compact space. While the Oppo Find X9 Pro uses this technology to fit a substantial 7,500mAh battery into a standard-sized phone, Motorola opts to use it to equip a standard-sized battery in an exceptionally thin device.

The Good

  • Super-slim design
  • Great battery life
  • Durable silicone design

The Bad

  • Stuffed with ads and bloatware
  • Basic cameras
  • Midrange processor
  • Only four years of OS updates

The Edge 70’s 4,800mAh battery rivals those found in many flagship phones, surpassing the iPhone Air’s “all-day battery life” and continuing well into a second day. While it may not last a full two days without light usage, even heavy users will find it challenging to deplete the phone’s battery in a single day.

The Edge 70’s 4,800mAh battery is as big as many flagships’, breezing past the iPhone Air’s “all-day battery life” to last well into a second day. It won’t last a full two days unless you use it lightly, but heavier users will struggle to run the phone dry in a single day.

The silicon-carbon battery fixes the single biggest fear most prospective buyers have about this year’s wave of thin phones, comfortably outclassing the 3,149mAh battery in Apple’s Air or the 3,900mAh cell in Samsung’s Edge. Those phones force buyers to give up battery life. Motorola’s does not.

The Edge 70 tops up quickly with 68W wired charging, and 15W Qi wireless is also available. There isn’t Qi2 support, though Motorola includes a magnetic plastic case with the phone in EMEA if you’re jealous of the Qi2-enabled Pixel 10 phones.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 standing on a wooden table in front of some glasses, showing how thin the phone is

The camera bump isn’t too thick, and I like the way it slopes out of the body.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 lying on a wooden table with a stack of six credit cards that is the same thickness

It’s six credit cards thick, if that helps any.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 lying on a wooden table in front of some glasses, showing how thin the phone is

That blue button is a shortcut for (you guessed it!) AI stuff.

Slim as the case is, it inevitably detracts from just how thin the Edge 70 feels. I’ve only used Samsung and Apple’s thin phones in passing, and after sticking with this phone for a week, I was surprised to find that thin feeling never really got old. I marvel at the phone every time I pick it up, that it can be so thin, so light, so comfortable in the hand.

I’m sure the Air and S25 Edge feel much the same. Where Motorola diverges is in how it built the Edge 70, with an aluminum frame and textured silicone rear that feels less vulnerable than the glass backs of its rivals. This is the only phone of the three to have both an IP68 rating and meet the tougher IP69 standard, and it also meets the MIL-STD-810H military testing standard for durability.

That’s not to say the Edge 70 is indestructible — far from it, especially since the Gorilla Glass 7i used on the screen is more vulnerable than the ceramic-hardened versions on those other phones. But free of the fear of shattering the back, I’ve found myself more carefree about using the phone as is, rather than trapping that thin design in a bulky case.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 standing on a wooden table in front of cocktail glasses, showing the cameras

The camera accents match the AI button.

So that’s that; the Edge 70 has solved thin phones for good. If only, eh? It may have improved on some of Samsung and Apple’s failings, but not all of them — and it introduces a few of its own.

The cameras are the most obvious compromise, though less than you might think. The 50-megapixel main camera isn’t bad, even doing a decent job in dim conditions, though the combination of dark skies and bright lights at an evening soccer game proved too much for it to process perfectly. Unlike the iPhone Air, you get an ultrawide lens alongside it, though there’s still no telephoto — what looks like a third camera is really only a light sensor. You can get a half-decent telephoto for less in the likes of the Galaxy S25 FE or Xiaomi 15T Pro.

1/9

Simple photos in bright light come out well from the main camera.

Spec-heads might also take umbrage with the Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chipset inside. It’s not a bad chip, but you’ll find flagship silicon in similarly priced devices. It’s plenty of power for most people, but on paper it’s less capable than other phones at this price, even if competitive gamers are likely the only ones who’ll notice.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 standing on a wooden table in front of some glasses, showing the app drawer with preinstalled Motorola apps

Expect lots of preinstalled apps.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 standing on a wooden table in front of some cookbooks, showing the app drawer with an ad to download MoneyGram

And a few ads for apps you haven’t installed.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 standing on a wooden table in front of some cookbooks, showing the live lock screen with an ad for a recipe

This looks like my lockscreen, but it’s an ad too.

Motorola’s take on Android is the bigger problem, and it’s probably the only version of the operating system getting worse.

Quite simply, a £699 phone — hell, any phone — shouldn’t ship packed to the rafters with ads and bloatware. There are at least 14 Motorola-branded apps preinstalled, and other apps including Candy Crush Saga, Microsoft Copilot, Monopoly Go, Pinterest, and something called Toon Blast.

Worse, the first slot in the app drawer is taken up by a games “folder” that actually just suggests more time-killers I should download, including gems like Block Blast! and Stack Ball. Above that, a suggestions row dynamically recommends three of my own apps I’m likely to need at that moment in time based on my past behavior (which is useful enough), along with a fourth app I don’t have and never want, ranging from payment app MoneyGram to the musical Simply Guitar.

I’m not done yet! The Live Lock Screen is the most egregious of all. Suggested during setup, this replaces your lock screen with a cycling stream of images paired with links to articles from the web on a predefined set of broad interests like “food” or “tech.” These are ads in disguise, but every three or four, you’re rewarded with something more overt — usually a full-screen banner advertising Temu.

It’s easy to turn all of this off and uninstall the apps, but it shouldn’t be there in the first place. Motorola is embarrassing itself by including it.

Photo of Motorola Edge 70 standing on a wooden table in front of some cookbooks

All the phones’ colors come with a small Pantone swatch on the back.

I’m not sure if the way its compromises shake out make the Edge 70 a better phone than the iPhone Air. But as I look forward to where this form factor might go next, Motorola’s phone feels like a better blueprint than Apple’s, and suggests that adopting a silicon-carbon battery is what’s required to elevate the Air’s second generation.

The Edge 70 preserves battery life while shaving down the bulk, and feels just tough enough to risk going case-free so all that hardware R&D doesn’t go wasted. The cameras are basic, but so are the iPhone’s, and it may be underpowered, but who’s buying the year’s third-thinnest phone and hoping for a powerhouse? You want it to feel great and last all day, and on that count, the Edge 70 has nailed it.

Photography by Dominic Preston / The Verge

Agree to Continue: Motorola Edge 70

Every smart device now requires you to agree to a series of terms and conditions before you can use it — contracts that no one actually reads. It’s impossible for us to read and analyze every single one of these agreements. But we started counting exactly how many times you have to hit “agree” to use devices when we review them since these are agreements most people don’t read and definitely can’t negotiate.

To use the Edge 70, you must agree to:

  • Google Terms of Service
  • Google Play Terms of Service
  • Google Privacy Policy (included in ToS)
  • Install apps and updates: “You agree this device may also automatically download and install updates and apps from Google, your carrier, and your device’s manufacturer, possibly using cellular data.”
  • Motorola privacy statement

There’s also a variety of optional agreements, including:

  • Provide anonymous location data for Google’s services
  • “Allow apps and services to scan for Wi-Fi networks and nearby devices at any time, even when Wi-Fi or Bluetooth is off.”
  • Send usage and diagnostic data to Google
  • Google’s Generative AI Prohibited Use Policy if you opt in to using Gemini Assistant
  • Allow Motorola to collect app usage data
  • Allow Motorola to collect device data
  • Motorola Live lockscreen privacy policy and terms of use

Other features, like Google Wallet, may require additional agreements.

Final tally: five mandatory agreements and at least seven optional agreements.

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