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Review: Samsung Galaxy A35 5G

Sitting in between the Pixel 8A and the latest Moto G Power, Samsung’s midrange smartphone struggles to stand out.
Two views of the same pink mobile phone left showing the backside with three cameras and right showing the front with an...
Photograph: Samsung; Getty Images
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Rating:

7/10

WIRED
Nice, bright screen with a 120-Hz refresh rate. Solid cameras. Decent performance. IP67 water resistance. Four Android OS upgrades and five years of security updates. MicroSD card slot to expand storage.
TIRED
OK battery life. Performance could be a bit smoother. No wireless charging. Bland, boring design.

It feels like Samsung is having a bit of an off-year with its midrange and budget smartphones. Last year, I enjoyed my time with handsets like the Galaxy A14 5G and Galaxy A54 5G—the value and performance were great. In 2024, my experience with successors like the Galaxy A15 5G and now the Galaxy A35 5G is disappointing.

It doesn't help that this review season is bookended with two strong contenders. I just wrapped up testing the $300 Motorola Moto G Power 5G—which I gave high marks—and I will move to the Google Pixel 8A ($499) next, a smartphone line that has routinely been my top recommendation for almost anyone looking for a well-priced, feature-rich smartphone. The Galaxy A35 sits right in between those two at $400. It's an adequate smartphone, but it lacks some perks of its peers and doesn't punch as hard as its predecessors.

On the Cusp

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

In a vacuum, it's not hard to consider the Galaxy A35 a great smartphone. The all-glass design feels like it costs more than the price suggests, and it checks off a lot of boxes on the specs list. I wish it looked more interesting. Samsung sent me the “Awesome Navy” color, and there is nothing awesome about it; it's quite dull. There's a fun pinkish gradient color called Awesome Lilac that looks far more interesting.

Design is an area where I'd like to see Samsung do more. Motorola is playing around with vegan leather on the back of its phones; Google's Pixels have a long camera bar that stands out; and the Nothing Phone (2a) doesn't look like any other midrange smartphone despite its $350 price. It's OK to be a bit more creative, Samsung!

You're treated to an excellent 6.6-inch AMOLED display that's sharp and has a 120-Hz screen refresh rate. Interacting with this display feels responsive and fluid, and I used it in bright conditions outdoors without having to squint. The colors get washed out when the phone cranks up the brightness, but I prefer this to struggling to see what's on the screen.

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

The optical in-display fingerprint scanner is quick and reliable, and while there's no headphone jack on this handset, you get a microSD card slot to expand on the base 128 GB of storage. The Galaxy A35 is IP67 water resistant, so it'll be OK if you accidentally drop it in the pool, and it supports contactless payments—I've been using Google Wallet to pay for pretty much everything these past few weeks.

Problems start with the performance. The Samsung Exynos 1380 chipset inside is paired with 6 GB of RAM, and while it bested the Moto G Power 5G's benchmark scores, my real-world testing has been noticeably laggier than Motorola's phone, with far more stutters in daily operation. I can do everything I usually do with flagship smartphones, but apps load slowly, switching to another app can feel stuttery, and the interface can feel janky with the slowdowns.

It's not frustrating like the Galaxy A15's performance, just annoying. It's not always like this; there are periods when it feels smooth and fast when I'm siloed in one app for a while (like doomscrolling on X before bed).

Battery life is also nothing to write home about. There's a 5,000-mAh cell. With average use, I usually ended a full day with around 40 to 30 percent left. But on a few occasions, if I used it more rigorously—for GPS, music streaming, browsing Instagram, and taking pictures (around five and a half hours of screen-on time)—I've had to recharge it by 5 or 6 pm.

Strong Points

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

There's a triple-camera system on the A35, but you should stick to the main camera. It's a 50-megapixel primary sensor joined by an 8-MP ultrawide and a 5-MP macro. Over on the front is a 13-MP sensor. Selfies look sharp—no qualms there—and I was pleasantly surprised by the quality of the photos out of the main sensor.

It handles high-contrast scenarios (like a bright sky above a shady area) well with a balanced exposure, though the colors in these scenes can be washed out. There's decent detail, even if you use the 2X crop to get closer to a subject. In low light, you can use Samsung's Night mode, but you and your subject need to be still. I have several blurry shots of my dog because he never stays put. It's overall an acceptable camera system, one that's better than the offerings from Motorola and Nothing, but it doesn't match the reliability of the Pixel A-series.

The best part of the Galaxy A35 is Samsung's software update policy. This Android 14 phone will receive four years of Android OS upgrades and five years of security updates. It's not as good as the seven years Google is now promising for the Pixel 8A, but it's still one of the best you'll find for a device at this price. Longer software support means you can hold onto your phone for longer and receive updates for new features, bug fixes, and security patches.

If I sound a bit picky, it's because this is Samsung, one of the biggest smartphone makers in the world. I'd love to see it move the needle and shake things up in the midrange sector. Long software support is a start, but there's plenty more! Motorola's $300 phone has wireless charging support for the first time, a welcome convenience I wish was present here (it's available on the Pixel 8A). I want to enjoy the device I'm using, and Motorola's vegan leather texture zhuzhed up the experience, but the A35 doesn't make me feel much of anything.

The performance quirks set it back, but if your budget is tight, the Galaxy A35 is well worth a look. My advice? Wait for a sale. Samsung's A-series phones routinely dip during major sale events and at random times of the year, and guess what? It's already on sale at Amazon for $360. I suspect it won't be long before it dips even lower.