Motorola’s first book-style foldable is already making waves where it matters most to buyers: camera performance. In newly published DxOMark results, the Motorola Razr Fold posts an impressive overall camera score of 164 points, putting it within reach of today’s top-tier flagship phones.
While the Razr Fold doesn’t quite catch the very best camera-focused devices like the iPhone 17 Pro, Find X9 Pro, and Xiaomi 17 Ultra, its result is a standout for a foldable—especially in a category where camera systems often come with compromises to accommodate slim bodies and hinge designs. What’s even more notable is how far down the list some high-profile foldables sit by comparison, including the Honor Magic V5 and Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7.
A big reason the Razr Fold performs so well comes down to its supporting cameras. DxOMark highlights the phone’s strong telephoto and ultra-wide cameras, which is a meaningful advantage in the foldable market. On many foldables, secondary sensors tend to lag behind the main camera in sharpness, consistency, and overall quality. Here, Motorola appears to have delivered a more balanced camera setup—one that holds up across different shooting styles rather than relying on only a single standout lens.
Beyond the lens lineup, the Razr Fold earns praise for producing good exposure, strong dynamic range, and solid detail across its cameras. That combination typically translates to more dependable results in everyday photography, from bright outdoor shots to trickier scenes with mixed lighting.
That said, the Razr Fold isn’t flawless. DxOMark notes that images can show occasional noise and color fringing, even in daylight, which may be noticeable around high-contrast edges such as buildings against bright skies. Video is another area where the phone can stumble: the device reportedly struggles at times with adapting autofocus and maintaining accurate white balance when recording, which can lead to shifts in focus and color as scenes change.
Overall, the Motorola Razr Fold’s DxOMark score signals a major step forward for book-style foldables that aim to compete not just on design and multitasking, but also on camera credibility. For buyers searching for a foldable phone with a more complete camera experience—especially better-than-usual telephoto and ultra-wide performance—this is shaping up to be one of the most interesting options in the category.






