By
Alex Choros
Updated

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6
Our verdict
The Galaxy Z Fold6's biggest issue is a lack of ambition. It's a solid (albeit expensive) device that could have been more. Samsung hasn't solved issues like display crease that competitors have already addressed, and the Z Fold6's cameras are underwhelming for the asking price. 
From $1,199
What we love
  • Refined design
  • Seven years of software support
  • Improved battery life
What could be improved
  • Expensive
  • Underwhelming cameras
  • Significant display crease

The essentials
Performance
Fantastic! One of the fastest Android devices around. 
Battery
Great! Between five and six hours of screen time charge, which is translates to a full day per charge with a buffer. Using the internal display could lower this, however.
Screen
Display quality is excellent on both the internal and external display, but the Z Fold 6 still has a significant crease.
Camera
Underwhelming for the asking price. Can take decent photos, but doesn't compare to the S24 Ultra or rival flagships. 

The Galaxy Z Fold6 is unsurprisingly Samsung's best foldable phone, but its least ambitious. There are three changes year on year: a wider external display, a lighter build, and a faster processor.

Those are all good. Great, even! You’re not going to pick up the Z Fold6 and think it's a bad device or anything. It's just hard not to be disappointed by how iterative this generation feels, especially when there are still challenges with the form factor Samsung has yet to solve.

The Fold6 is meant to be Samsung's best phone, the showcase for its prowess as a manufacturer. Yet when I look at the Z Fold6, the sheer drive of the Samsung that made the original Fold is missing here, let alone the Samsung that stuffed a phone with so many features it occasionally caught fire.

Samsung

Galaxy Z Fold6 5G 256GB

  • 7.6 inch display
  • Rear Cameras: 50MP, 10MP, 12MP
105 Plans from $0/mo + $1,913.99 Upfront

What we like about the Galaxy Z Fold6


Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6

Let's start with the good. Samsung has hit the sweet spot with the Galaxy Z Fold 6's design. The external display is just that little bit wider, now measuring in at 6.3-inch. While it's still unusually narrow for its height, the extra width is surprisingly meaningful. I found typing on the Z Fold 6's cover display a lot more natural than on any of its predecessors. I didn't even need to tweak settings like keyboard size.

There's still definitely a bit of a learning curve when it comes to getting acquainted with the Z Fold6's unusually tall external screen, but the balance is much better this time around. The Z Fold6 still has a unique form factor you won't mistake for any other phone, but day-to-day use is a lot more practical. There's less need to unfold the device for a good typing experience.

The same translates across to other apps running on the front display. They're just that little bit better, to the point where you're not making a compromise by running them on such an unusual display. It's like using a super tall iPhone mini, rather than a device that's simply too narrow.

Samsung has also shaved a bit of weight, with the Z Fold6 now coming in at 239g. That's just 7g heavier than the Galaxy S24 Ultra, making it a bit more like a normal phone. While it's still on the heftier side, it's a bit more reasonable than past models. The Z Fold5 was 14g heavier, for context.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6

These design changes have come with an aesthetic rework. While past Z Folds have had a curvy vibe to them, Samsung has squared off the edges on the Z Fold6, clearly taking cues from the S24 Ultra. It makes the phone look a bit more refined, but also comes with a trade-off. When you've got the Z Fold6 unfolded, the sharper corns can jut into your hand, depending on how you hold it. Some positions are more comfortable than others, but this is a fairly minor annoyance.

Samsung has also stepped up its game when it comes to software and security updates. The Z Fold6, along with the Z Flip6, are the first Samsung devices set to get seven years of software and security updates. That matches Google's best-in-class commitment on the Pixel 8 family and is great to see. When it comes to other foldable phones, we tend to only see three years of operating system updates and four years of security. Even if you're not planning on keeping the Z Fold6 for seven years, the long software life can help resale value and make it a bit more useful if you're planning on handing it down.

Lastly, while the Z Fold6 still has a 4,400mAh battery—identical to what we've seen in every Fold since the Z Fold3—battery life has definitely improved. In my testing, I was able to get between five and six hours of screen time per charge. That translated to over a day of moderate usage per charge, with a comfortable buffer.

This result came from using the external display around 75% of the time. If your usage skewed more to the using the larger internal screen, I'd expect a shorter battery life. I could definitely see the battery percentage ticking down faster when I had the phone unfolded for a longer duration.

Different usage habits make measuring battery a little harder, but it's nonetheless an improvement over past Folds. When I reviewed the Z Fold4, I was only getting between three and four hours of screen time per charge, for example.

What we dislike about the Galaxy Z Fold6


Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6

While a more practical design, longer software life, and better battery are all great, there are challenges Samsung hasn't addressed with the Galaxy Z Fold6. Some of these are issues other brands have long solved, while others feel like compromises you shouldn't be making when you're paying just short of $2,000 for a phone.

The internal display is the most egregious of these: The Z Fold6 still has a pretty hefty crease in the middle of the screen. While manufacturers like OPPO have managed to drastically minimize the crease in their folding phones as early as 2021 with the original Find N, Samsung hasn't made anywhere near as much progress. Motorola's Razr 50 Ultra also barely has a crease.

When key competitors have managed to drastically minimize the crease in their folding displays, it's odd that Samsung hasn't kept pace in a category it's pioneered. Sure, a crease doesn't change the way you use the phone, but I'd still prefer it to not be there. It's clearly a solvable problem, and again, the Z Fold6 costs almost $2,000.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6

Similarly, Samsung has barely upgraded the Z Fold6's camera setup. There's a new ultra-wide lens that promises better low-light performance, but otherwise, you're getting the same hardware configuration as we saw in both the Z Fold 5 and Z Fold 4. The 12MP ultra-wide lens is joined by a 50MP primary lens and a 10MP 3x optical zoom lens.

Camera hardware is naturally only part of the equation, and a new chipset can also help with image quality, but by and large, the results on offer here are good, but not great. The photos I took aren't that different to what we got from the past two models.

Even slightly dim lighting can result in significant camera grain and lack of detail in photos when using the primary camera. Nighttime photography is prone to blur, and at times, capture unrealistic colors. The new ultra-wide lens does well during the day, but is inconsistent at night. The zoom lens fares similarly, but is too slow for most low-light situations. This is especially disappointing given Apple and Google have both made their long-range zoom lenses significantly more usable in the last 12 months.

Needless to say, other high-end devices like the iPhone 15 family and the Pixel 8 family will get you better photos. Samsung's own Galaxy S24 Ultra will too. Samsung has proven it can make better cameras, so why isn’t it putting that same tech in its most expensive phone? Why doesn't the Z Fold6 have a 200MP camera?

Galaxy Z Fold 6 camera samples


Check out these camera samples taken on the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6. Click or tap on any photo to see a larger version. 

Samsung's also insisted on using the same under 4MP under-screen selfie camera it's been using since the Z Fold 3 in the internal display. Predictably, nothing has changed here. It's jarring when you notice it on the screen, and the picture quality is awful. I'd much prefer a camera cut out here than using "futuristic" tech that isn't ready yet.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6

And in the same vein, the Z Fold6 has S Pen support, but it's still an optional extra. At this point in the Fold's life cycle, an S Pen feels like the kind of feature that should be integrated into the phone itself. If Samsung can work out how to make a foldable phone, surely it can work out how to stow an S Pen in one?

Galaxy AI

The Galaxy Z Fold6 has all the Galaxy AI features found in the Galaxy S24 family, as well as a couple of extras. I haven't touched on these because they're now also available on previous Samsung foldables running the latest software, so they're not strictly new. You can read more about Galaxy AI in our Galaxy S24 Ultra review.

In terms of new Galaxy AI features, there's an upgrade to live translation which lets you use the external display to show a message to who you're speaking to while you look at the internal. There's also a new image tool that lets you sketch on a photo, after which AI will attempt to make it look photorealistic. The results from this are pretty mixed.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6—Final Thoughts


Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6

It might seem like I've been tough on the Z Fold6, but that comes from a place of love. I was immediately taken by the potential of the form factor when I tried the original Fold five years ago, so it's a shame to see Samsung falling behind in a category it pioneered.

I have no doubt that Samsung can solve the display crease and put better cameras in the Z Fold. Why it hasn't is beyond me.

The cynical take is that it's not interested in spending the extra resources on these challenges, given its dominant position in foldables in the West. If that's the case, Samsung is doing a disservice to its most loyal customers.

Samsung's head of mobile for Australia, Eric Chou, told me the brand has historically seen a lot of existing loyalists rush to buy a new Fold during the pre-order period, and that the refresh cycle for those buying flagship phones is much shorter, "due to the loyalty we have from customers who want to upgrade to the latest and greatest."

With that in mind, the Z Fold6 feels like a smaller upgrade than it should when compared to the Z Fold4. Better battery life and a more practical design are great. The lack of camera improvements isn't. If your Z Fold4 is still holding out strong, I'd wait and see what Samsung comes out with next year. If you're on a Z Fold3 (or older), the Z Fold6 will definitely be a more significant upgrade if you're keen to stick with a foldable.

If you're foldable curious, the Z Fold6 isn't a bad place to jump, even if it's an expensive one. It's Samsung's most refined device to date, and fulfills the promise of being both a phone and a tablet better than any previous generation Fold. But, you still run into the problem that you can buy a better phone for less money, whether you're sticking with Samsung or looking at other manufacturers. How much do you want the folding form factor?

It's easy to imagine the Z Fold6 being a more compelling device than it is. You only need to look at Samsung’s history—and the Galaxy S24 Ultra—to know it can do more. Samsung doesn't need to reinvent the Fold, but there's still so much it could do that other brands have already achieved in the space.

The Galaxy Z Fold6 isn't a product from a hungry Samsung trying to cement itself as an innovative force, it's a product from a complacent Samsung resting on its laurels.

How we review phones

When reviewing phones, we consider a number of key factors. Primary concerns include:

  • Camera: Does a phone take good photos? How does it perform in low light? Can it handle moving subjects?
  • Battery: Will it last a full day? How many hours of screen time can you get per charge?
  • Screen Quality: Is it nice? Is it bright enough for a sunny day? Do colors distort off-axis?
  • Performance: Is the phone fast enough for day-to-day tasks? How does it handle more demanding activities like gaming?

We also take any unique features or inclusions into account.

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Alex Choros

Alex Choros
Alex Choros is the Managing Editor of WhistleOut Australia and an award-winning journalist. He's been writing about consumer technology for over a decade and is an expert on the Australian telco sector, to the point where he knows far too many phone and internet plans by heart. In addition to leading the WhistleOut editorial team, Alex is responsible for ruining the office Sonos with his troubled taste in music.

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