By
Fergus Halliday Contributing Editor
Updated

Samsung Galaxy S22 review

The Samsung Galaxy S22 was originally released in February of 2022. While the device has been replaced by newer Samsung flagships, the S22 still offers powerful features at a friendlier price.

We're still impressed with the S22's premium design, beautiful display, and its solid performance. While we also liked the device's camera capabilities, we felt there was room for improvement as it seemed similar to the features of the Galaxy S21. The only aspect of the device we were disappointed in was the battery life. Power users may struggle to last a full day on a single charge.

Read on to see our full review of the Galaxy S22 and find out if this budget-alternative to the Galaxy S23 is right for you.

Samsung Galaxy S22 review: The verdict


Samsung Galaxy S22

Samsung’s most affordable and pocket-friendly flagship fails to make the most of its own form-factor. Even if it includes all the usual premium perks and features, the Galaxy S22 can’t help but feel like a small fry in a big phone’s world. That said, with the release of the Galaxy S23, the Galaxy S22 is now available at a cheaper price from carriers and retailers. 

What we love
  • Premium feel
  • Pocket friendly
What could be improved
  • Display
  • Camera
  • Battery
The essentials
  • Performance: Solid. On par with the rest of the Galaxy S22 lineup.
  • Battery: Smaller, but not better. Will struggle to last a full day for heavier users.
  • Screen: A very good Samsung display, even if it’s lower resolution than the Galaxy S22 Ultra.
  • Camera: A side-grade on the Galaxy S21 that fails to close the gap between Samsung and Apple.

The Galaxy S22: A small phone in a big world

The current circuit of Android smartphones has blurred the definitions and expectations of consumers when it comes to what they should expect from premium or flagship handsets, and the Galaxy S22 is something of a victim of this ambiguity.

Somewhere along the line, the highest of high-end smartphones became defined by the notion of bigness. I’m not just talking about physical size here, but also how consumers think about the possibilities that a larger form factor allows for.

While more physical size isn’t always better, it does tilt the odds in your favor when it comes to building something that’s just a little bit better than last year’s best smartphone ever. Who needs innovation when you’ve got bigger numbers on your side? A bigger screen is just the opening offer.

A larger device can support larger batteries, extra camera lenses, and sometimes even more forgiving thermal efficiencies. And as larger handsets have become the norm, there’s a case to be made that the expectations around factors like battery life have shifted around them.

In the midst of this trend, it feels like Samsung has conceded that the smaller form-factor here makes the Galaxy S22 especially appealing to those who find the shift towards larger handsets off-putting. If you’re looking to choose this device over the Galaxy S22+ or Galaxy S22 Ultra, chances are the size is a part of the reason why. Unfortunately, Samsung seems to have taken this for granted, rather than using it as an opportunity.

It’s not enough for Samsung to have simply made a smaller Galaxy S22+. The phone needs to thrive against competition like the Google Pixel 6 or the iPhone 13

Looking for the newest Samsung?

The Galaxy S23 is the newest flagship device from Samsung. It includes a 50MP camera and offers incredible advancements in low-light photography. The device is powered by the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 processor, a special chip designed specifically for the S23.

Check out our Samsung Galaxy S23 review and discover if this is the right phone for you. 

Samsung Galaxy S22 review

Galaxy S22 design: Size matters


More iterative than innovative, the Samsung Galaxy S22 is more or less a dead-ringer for last year’s Galaxy S21. Like that device, the design of the S22 is peppered with the usual features you’d expect out of a flagship smartphone. There’s the latest Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 8GB of RAM, up to 256GB of onboard storage, IP68 water resistance, Gorilla Glass Victus protection, Qi wireless charging, an in-display fingerprint sensor, 5G connectivity, and 25W fast-charging.

These are all nice to have, but almost every single one can be just as easily found in last year’s Galaxy S21. Samsung has made a few touch-ups that leave their latest handset looking a little sharper, such as a slighter smaller screen and a glass back. However, the most recognizable element detail of the company’s latest glass sandwich remains the camera module perched on the back of it.

This shoulder-mounted feature isn’t quite as fashionable as the iPhone’s square-shaped camera bump, nor as egregious as the dashboard found on the back of the Google Pixel 6, but does serve to distinguish the design of the Galaxy S22 from its various contemporaries. Without it, there’s not a lot that sets the S22 apart from the many other Android smartphones with thin bezels and a centered hole-punch selfie camera.

Well, except for the size. The 6.1-inch AMOLED display on the Galaxy S22 boasts a 120Hz dynamic refresh rate and a 1080p+ resolution. Arguably, this ends up being the device’s defining characteristic.

If you want an Android phone with a 6.1-inch screen, you don’t have many places to go. As a result, the Galaxy S22 ends up close to being the de facto flagbearer for high-end Android smartphones with smaller/small-ish screens.

In some ways, the closest competition for this device isn’t the iPhone 13, it’s the iPhone 13 mini.

Samsung Galaxy S22 review

Galaxy S22 camera specs: A side-graded camera with new tricks


The camera on the Galaxy S22 is identical to the one on the Galaxy S22+, but it’s a clear step down from the Galaxy S22 Ultra and only a slight improvement on the Galaxy S21 and S21 Ultra.

Both the Galaxy S22 and Galaxy S22+ sport a 10-megapixel selfie camera backed up by a triple-lens rear camera that features a 50MP primary lens, a 12MP ultra-wide lens, and a 12MP telephoto lens. The Galaxy S22 Ultra adds a fourth 10MP into the mix and bumps up the megapixels on the primary lens to 108MP and the front-facing camera to a borderline-excessive 40MP.

While the overall lens setup here is slightly different from the one found in last year's lineup, Samsung has improved the Galaxy S22’s camera kit with new software features. Unfortunately, the best of these improvements and new features, like “Adaptive Pixel” AI image processing and better optical image stabilization, are only found in the more expensive Galaxy S22 Ultra.

What you’re left with is a few new tricks, courtesy of the Qualcomm Snapdragon Gen 1 processor inside the Galaxy S22.  The smartphone is offers portrait video, less noisy night photography, and a new detail enhancer setting.

As someone who has spent a lot of time using the night mode on the Galaxy Z Flip 3, my time with the above two camera settings delivered cleaner and more usable results. At the same time, I can’t say that I was impressed at the photography that the Galaxy S22 produced in the way that I was with Google’s Pixel hardware or the camera on the iPhone 13. For the most part, the Galaxy S22 is a tinkering or enhancement on what the Galaxy S21 already offered.

Daylight shots looked good enough to share on social media (and even with the improvements to Night Mode), but the Galaxy S22’s camera just didn't deliver the same kind of consistency or crispness that I've previously gotten out of not just its direct competitors but also older devices like the Pixel 5 or the iPhone 12 Pro. Samsung is hardly the first Android manufacturer to reserve the better camera for the larger handsets in the lineup, but this sucks as much now as it did back in 2016.

Even if Samsung is (narrowly) coming out ahead of the personal best set by the Galaxy S21, those who would prefer a good camera and a small form-factor are left in a situation where the two are mutually exclusive.

Samsung Galaxy S22 review

Galaxy S22 device specs: You can only do so much more with less


Screen size aside, the smaller battery inside the Galaxy S22 might be the most consequential detail on the spec sheet for the device.

Regardless of whether you’re looking to spend most of your time watching TikTok, playing mobile games like Genshin Impact, or making use of the enhanced smartphone photography capabilities of the device, the Galaxy S22’s 3700mAh battery is going to play a pretty significant role in that experience.

While the subtraction in overall battery size from the 4,000mAh found in the Galaxy S21 to the 3,700mAh found in the Galaxy S22 forced me to lower my expectations, I didn't really find myself running too short when it came to battery life during everyday usage.

I'd usually squeeze around four or so hours of screen time each day. That's not terrible, but it's not great either. As someone regularly working from home, the S22's humble battery proved itself adequate for my daily needs. However, I’m less confident about how it’ll hold up as I (hopefully) start to spend more time away from home in the months ahead.

The Galaxy S22’s premium features sometimes feel at odds with the practical realities of using it. Sure, having a 120Hz refresh rate is nice, but doing so will come with a cost to your battery life. In practice, I found that the Galaxy S22’s dynamic refresh rate setting sometimes shaved as much as a quarter off what I’d usually get when it came to daily screen-time per charge. I had to switch it off to hit the aforementioned four hours of screen time.

When you’re spending this much on a phone and you’re already losing out on new camera features or a higher-resolution screen, better battery life might have made for a decent consolation prize but it’s not to be found with the standard Galaxy S22.

Samsung Galaxy S22 review

Samsung Galaxy S22—Final thoughts


For many consumers, the Samsung Galaxy S22 is going to be the obvious Android-based alternative to the iPhone 13. However, it feels like Samsung have set their smallest premium handset up to fail when it comes to a head-to-head comparison here.

As someone who would prefer to see the premium smartphone experience associated with Samsung’s Galaxy S range translated into a form factor that’s more pocket-friendly than the 6.6-inch screen on the Galaxy S22+, the Galaxy S22 should feel like the obvious choice. Instead, it feels hamstrung by the realities of having to do more with less.

The Galaxy S22’s shortcomings aren’t so severe that I couldn’t imagine surviving them, but as far as picking the portable computer I’m going to be using every single day goes, it’s hard not to wish Samsung had gotten a little ambitious and built something that I could imagine myself thriving alongside instead.

Samsung Galaxy S22 review: FAQs

Samsung Galaxy S22 camera samples


Galaxy S22 camera sample: espresso martini
Galaxy S22 camera sample: street
Galaxy S22 camera sample: tunnel
Galaxy S22 camera sample: church
Galaxy S22 camera sample: cat
Galaxy S22 camera sample: garlic bread
Galaxy S22 camera sample: sandwich
Galaxy S22 camera sample: treats
Galaxy S22 camera sample: plants
Galaxy S22 camera sample: cat
Galaxy S22 camera sample: seafood
Galaxy S22 camera sample: night mode off
Night mode off
Galaxy S22 camera sample: night mode on
Night mode on
Galaxy S22 camera sample: ultra-wide lens
Ultra-wide
Galaxy S22 camera sample: primary lens
Primary lens
Galaxy S22 camera sample: 3x zoom lens
3x zoom
Galaxy S22 camera sample: flower at night
Galaxy S22 camera sample: pho
Galaxy S22 camera sample: city at night
Galaxy S22 camera sample: graffiti
Galaxy S22 camera sample: flowers
Galaxy S22 camera sample: cheese board
Galaxy S22 camera sample: pasta
Galaxy S22 camera sample: flowers
Galaxy S22 camera sample: more flowers

Fergus Halliday

Contributing Editor

Fergus Halliday
Fergus Halliday has written about technology, telecommunications, gaming, and more for over a decade. He began his full-time career as the Editor of PC World Australia and has been published in Gizmodo, Kotaku, GamesHub, Press Start, Screen Rant, Superjump, Nestegg, and more.

Read full bio


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