Motorola launched the Razr 70 and Razr 70 Ultra in India in July 2026, starting at Rs 70,000 for the standard Razr 70. The Ultra version carries a larger price tag but delivers the most ambitious cover screen Motorola has ever built.
The Razr 70 Ultra has a 3.6-inch cover screen—by far the largest on any flip phone. This is not a notification strip. This is a usable display. Apps run on the cover screen. Typing, scrolling, and swiping all work without opening the phone.
Most flip phones have a 2.7-inch or 2.9-inch cover display. Motorola pushed to 3.6 inches. The engineering challenge is clear: larger cover screens draw power faster and increase component costs. Motorola accepted both to differentiate.
Inside the Fold
The Razr 70 Ultra has a 6.9-inch main AMOLED display that folds. The cover screen supports 90Hz, and the main screen runs 120Hz. Dolby Vision HDR is on both. The peak brightness reaches 3,000 nits on the inside display.
MediaTek Dimensity 7450X powers the phone. This processor sits below flagship level but handles demanding tasks. Gaming and video editing work. Multitasking flows. Battery life will determine real-world satisfaction.
The standard Razr 70 keeps the same processor but has a smaller cover screen. Buyers get the full fold experience for less money.
Why Motorola Still Matters
Samsung dominates foldables with its Galaxy Z Flip 8. The Razr 70 Ultra is Motorola’s direct answer. The bigger cover screen is the main differentiator. Can Motorola convert buyers who want more screen real estate without committing to opening the phone?
The Razr heritage runs deep. Motorola invented the flip phone culture decades ago. The brand still carries that recognition, even if Samsung now owns the market.
Pre-orders open in July 2026. Shipments start mid to late July. The Razr 70 Ultra proves foldables keep evolving, not just copying Samsung.




