Motorola to Unveil Four Razr Foldables, Starting at $1,900, on May 21
Motorola launches four Razr foldables, including the $1,900 Razr Fold and a $99 Moto Stylus, on May 21, 2026.

*TL;DR: Motorola will launch four Razr foldables on May 21, 2026, with the flagship Razr Fold priced at $1,900 and a $99 Moto Stylus accessory.
Motorola’s foldable lineup expands this year with four new models slated for a May 21 announcement. The series adds a tablet‑style Razr Fold to the existing flip‑style Razr, Razr+, and Razr Ultra. All devices run Android 16 and support Sub‑6 GHz 5G.
The Razr Fold leads the pack at $1,900, featuring a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 processor, 16 GB of RAM, and 512 GB of storage. Its external 6.6‑inch pOLED screen refreshes at 165 Hz, while the internal 8.1‑inch LTPO OLED panel runs at 120 Hz. Brightness peaks at 6,200 nits, and a 6,000 mAh silicon‑carbon battery offers up to 80 W wired charging. A $99 Moto Stylus will launch alongside the Fold, restoring pen input that Samsung has removed from its recent foldables.
Below the Fold, the Razr Ultra sells for $1,500, the Razr+ for $1,100, and the base Razr for $800. The Ultra and Razr+ use Snapdragon 8 Elite “Pro” and Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 chips respectively, with memory ranging from 12 GB to 16 GB and storage up to 512 GB. All three retain a 4‑inch external OLED display and a 6.9‑inch internal panel, both with 165 Hz refresh rates and brightness up to 5,000 nits.
Motorola’s pricing reflects rising component costs, narrowing the gap between premium flip phones and larger foldables. At $1,900, the Razr Fold sits between Google’s and Samsung’s 2025 flagship folds, offering comparable storage and RAM but a slightly larger inner screen. The inclusion of a stylus may attract users who value note‑taking on a foldable, a feature absent from Samsung’s current lineup.
The new Razr series positions Motorola as a serious contender in the high‑end foldable market. Watch for consumer response to the stylus accessory and how the Razr Fold’s battery life and performance compare in real‑world tests against Google and Samsung rivals.
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