Motorola positions Razr Fold as a €1,999 flagship with 6,000mAh battery
Motorola unveiled the Razr Fold as a premium foldable priced at €1,999 with Snapdragon 8 Gen 5, a 6,000mAh silicon-carbon battery, triple 50MP cameras, and bundled Moto Pen Ultra.

Motorola is pitching its new Razr Fold as a flagship-class foldable, unveiling a specification set and price that signal a direct challenge to rivals. The company lists a €1,999 price—about $2,350—bundled with the Moto Pen Ultra, and highlights a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 chipset, a 6,000mAh silicon-carbon battery, a 6.6-inch external display and an 8.1-inch 2K LTPO internal display.
Motorola’s product materials stress photography and battery life as central selling points. The Razr Fold carries a triple 50-megapixel rear array that the company describes as including a 50MP 1/1.28-inch Sony LYTIA main sensor, a 50MP ultrawide that covers a 122-degree field of view and doubles as a macro, and a 50MP 3x periscope telephoto with optical image stabilization. The external cover camera is listed at 32MP while an internal selfie camera is 20MP. The phone also supports Dolby Vision recording and, the company says, “impressively steady video stabilization.”
Charging figures and software support underline Motorola’s premium claims. The phone is specified with 80W wired charging and 50W wireless charging, and Motorola says the Razr Fold will receive up to seven years of OS upgrades and security updates. Company copy also touts on-device AI features such as Catch me up and Next Move and positions flexible layouts and stylus support as productivity enhancers. Marketing text calls the device “a phone that’s effortlessly functional without compromise.”
Battery technology is a headline feature. Motorola’s materials describe the battery as a 6,000mAh silicon-carbon cell and note that, when offered in North America, the Razr Fold will be the first foldable sold there to use that technology. The company also points out that other manufacturers have pushed capacity higher recently; an industry comparison cites an Honor model with a 6,600mAh cell.
Motorola presents the Razr Fold as a compact but roomy device, with the cover display intended to preserve a candy-bar experience and the internal 8.1-inch panel to supply a larger canvas for multitasking and media. The company emphasizes the Moto Pen Ultra in the bundle and the role of adaptive interfaces for work and creativity.

Durability and other specifications appear in published lists but contain notational oddities that merit verification. The phone is shown with IP48 and IP49 ratings for dust and water protection; those codes are atypical and should be confirmed against official technical documentation. Motorola’s brief launch notes say the Razr Fold will go on sale first in Europe, while the company also emphasizes the North American milestone for battery technology—details on exact regional timing have not been provided.
The pricing and feature set arrive amid strong momentum for Motorola’s clamshell Razr family. Counterpoint Research data cited by the company indicates Motorola shipped 253 percent more Razrs last year than in 2023, and Motorola executives report that one in four Razr Plus buyers shifted from iPhones. That positioning—multiple Razr tiers from roughly $700 up to this €1,999 model—gives Motorola flexibility to target both value and premium buyers.
Taken together, the Razr Fold’s chipset, battery, camera hardware, charging speeds and extended update promise make it look every bit a flagship contender. Some analysts caution final market positioning will depend on regional pricing, detailed hardware variants and official launch timing. Key verification items remain IP rating format, full regional availability and the exact terms of the seven-year update promise.
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