Samsung Galaxy Fold review

GSMArena team, 26 April 2019.

Two Super AMOLEDs but only one matters

The Galaxy Fold has two separate displays - a foldable 7.3" Dynamic Super AMOLED and an ordinary 4.6" cover (front) Super AMOLED. While the screens are very different, they have one thing in common - both are OLEDs with underlying Dimond PenTile matrices.

Samsung Galaxy Fold review

The 7.3" foldable AMOLED is of 2,152 x 1,536 pixels resolution or 362ppi. This isn't a common resolution, and neither is the aspect of 4.2:3, though once the whole top row disappears in order to hide the notch, then you get the pretty common 4:3 aspect ratio and a lot of apps support it.

The Dynamic moniker before the usual Super AMOLED branding stands for the new HDR10+ capabilities added by Samsung to its latest generation of OLEDs. The first phones to have those so-called Dynamic screens were the S10 trio and now the Fold is following suit.

We measured 370nits of maximum brightness on our Fold screen when handling the slider manually. Letting the Auto take over, the phone is capable of cranking that up to 560 nits. That's not close to the 800 nits we measured on the S10 phones, but they don't have foldable screens, do they?

The innovative screen has a special protective folio, which probably contributed to the small light leakage we measured on pitch black. Unfortunately, this layer must not be peeled off as it will be the screens undoing. Other reviewers have already tried that, and this indeed let to the destruction of the soft OLED panel underneath. If Samsung intents to keep the foldable display this way even after the changes that may or may not come after the recall, it must warn the users in an appropriate manner.

Samsung Galaxy Fold review

As for the cover screen, it's 4.6" in diagonal with rounded corners and of 1,680 x 720 px resolution (399ppi). It has a 21:9 aspect ratio but due to the size, it won't do much for multimedia.

The cover screen has no light leakage when displaying blacks. The maximum brightness in manual mode is 380 nits, while when it's left on Auto, it can go as far as 620 nits.

Display test 100% brightness
Black, cd/m2 White, cd/m2 Contrast ratio
Samsung Galaxy Fold 0.002 370 185000
Samsung Galaxy Fold (Max Auto) 0.006 557 92833
Samsung Galaxy Fold (cover) 0 380
Samsung Galaxy Fold (cover) (Max Auto) 0 623
Samsung Galaxy S10+ 0 385
Samsung Galaxy S10+ (Max Auto) 0 793
Nokia 9 PureView 0 531
Apple iPhone XS 0 660
Apple iPhone XS Max 0 653
Xiaomi Mi 9 0 428
Xiaomi Mi 9 (Max Auto) 0 620
LG G8 ThinQ 0 391
LG G8 ThinQ (Max Auto) 0 655
Huawei P30 Pro 0 571
Huawei P30 Pro (Max Auto) 0 605
Huawei Mate 20 X 0 459
Huawei Mate 20 X (Max Auto) 0 655

Both screens demonstrated impressive minimum brightness levels - 1.6nits for the foldable and 1.9nits for the cover screen.

The handling of colors that's been more or less unchanged for generations of Galaxies has been overhauled. The menu now gives you two settings - Vivid and the default Natural. Natural is tuned for the sRGB color space where we measured an average DeltaE of 2.9 and a maximum of 4.3. The whites remain accurate to within a DeltaE of 2.5, which is excellent.

The Vivid mode comes with a bit punchier output which in most cases is accurate to the DCI-P3 color space with an average DeltaE of 3.9. Samsung claims when in Vivid mode the screen will display any content as accurate as possible to the content's intended color space.

When in Vivid mode, you get a slider for adjusting the color temperature in a five-step range from cool to warm, with the default in between. There is an additional set of RGB sliders under the advanced button below.

The cover screen has identical options and similar color presentation and accuracy.

Samsung Galaxy Fold review

Finally, we mentioned that the foldable screen is HDR10+ capable with the "+" being the key thing here. Think of it like this - even an HDR panel may end up having a narrower dynamic range than you may want within a single movie. HDR10 content comes with static metadata that specifies how to allocate that available dynamic range from the moment you start the playback. If your display's dynamic range is 16 arbitrary units, and your movie spans 20 units, you'd lose 4 when playing back because the dynamic range was preallocated for the best average for this movie. Imagine that you could allocate on the fly the 16 units of DR based on the dynamic range needed to display each individual frame instead of setting it in the beginning. That's roughly what the '+' in HDR10+ does.

There's the tiny caveat that as of now, HDR10+ content is realistically only available on Amazon Prime Video, and devices that support it are far and few between.

Battery life

The Galaxy Fold has a 4,380mAh power pack inside, split in two and there is a piece in each half of the phone. The phone supports 15W wired and 15W wireless charging.

In our testing the Galaxy Fold clocked 10 and a half hours in Wi-Fi web browsing and 17 hours of looping videos in airplane mode. We measured 37 and a half hours of 3G voice calls too. All of that combined with a bit higher than expected standby consumption resulted in an overall Endurance rating of 90 hours.

Samsung Galaxy Fold review

Our battery tests were automated thanks to SmartViser, using its viSer App. The endurance rating above denotes how long a single battery charge will last you if you use the Samsung Galaxy Fold for an hour each of telephony, web browsing, and video playback daily. We've established this usage pattern so that our battery results are comparable across devices in the most common day-to-day tasks. The battery testing procedure is described in detail in case you're interested in the nitty-gritty. You can check out our complete battery test table, where you can see how all of the smartphones we've tested will compare under your own typical use.

Filling up that battery once it's been depleted happens with Samsung's Adaptive Fast Charger that's been around unchanged since the Galaxy S5, imagine that. It's rated at 9V/1.67A and 5V/2A, so 15W is the maximum it'll output. It charges the Fold from flat to full in 1:50h with the battery indicator showing 37% at the half-hour mark - so not really all that bad, especially considering the big battery.

Stereo speakers

The Galaxy Fold has a stereo speaker setup and thanks to its form factor - it has the real thing - two independent and equally loud speakers on its shorter sides. When holding the phone in landscape, each speaker handles the respective channel, while in portrait they're assigned the channel they had last time they were in landscape.

In our three-pronged test, the Galaxy Fold posted an 'Excellent' score for speaker loudness. It's also a joy to listen to, though it could have benefitted from a little bit richer output within the high notes.

Samsung Galaxy Fold review

Finally, if you hold the phone in landscape and the speakers are close to your palms, you would create improvised chambers, and this will noticeably amplify the sound. We don't know if their placement was intentional for exactly this type of use, but it's brilliant, nevertheless.

Speakerphone testVoice, dB Pink noise/ Music, dB Ringing phone, dB Overall score
Nokia 9 PureView 68.9 71.8 81.1 Very Good
Xiaomi Mi 9 70.1 74.2 81.6 Very Good
Samsung Galaxy Note9 71.2 74.9 80.2 Very Good
Apple iPhone XS Max 70.5 74.0 84.7 Excellent
Samsung Galaxy S10+ 74.4 74.2 83.6 Excellent
Samsung Galaxy Fold 70.7 73.1 90.9 Excellent
Huawei P30 Pro 70.9 73.8 90.9 Excellent
Huawei Mate 20 X 71.4 73.5 91.1 Excellent

Audio quality

The Samsung Galaxy Fold has no audio jack so we tested it using the official Samsung USB-C to 3.5mm adapter. So keep in mind that if you use a different adapter, your experience may vary.

The clarity of the output was great both with an active external amplifier and headphones. It posted excellent scores top to bottom in both cases, with the only difference being a rather minor hike in stereo crosstalk.

Volume levels were very good too - the foldable phone was nicely loud in both parts of the test - in line with the Galaxy Note10+.

TestFrequency responseNoise levelDynamic rangeTHDIMD + NoiseStereo crosstalk
Samsung Galaxy Fold+0.04, -0.17-93.793.50.00130.008-93.8
Samsung Galaxy Fold (headphones)+0.05, -0.16-93.693.40.00240.021-69.3
Samsung Galaxy Note 10++0.03, -0.06-94.094.00.00110.012-95.1
Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ (headphones)+0.03, -0.06-93.993.90.00270.023-69.9
Samsung Galaxy S10+0.03, -0.04-92.292.00.00150.0079-92.7
Samsung Galaxy S10 (headphones)+0.06, -0.03-91.991.70.00200.037-77.0
Sony Xperia 1+0.02, -0.01-93.693.50.00100.007-85.2
Sony Xperia 1 (headphones)+0.31, -0.26-92.191.90.00600.302-55.1
OnePlus 7 Pro +0.03, -0.01-93.092.60.00230.021-89.6
OnePlus 7 Pro (headphones)+0.10, -0.05-92.091.40.00340.106-74.8
Huawei P30 Pro +0.04, -0.02-90.590.40.00140.013-93.0
Huawei P30 Pro (headphones)+0.14, -0.23-90.490.30.00460.211-47.0

Samsung Galaxy Fold frequency response
Samsung Galaxy Fold frequency response

You can learn more about the tested parameters and the whole testing process here.

Reader comments

  • shain
  • 19 Aug 2021
  • CAC

return your device to the place to got the fold

  • Anonymous
  • 22 Dec 2020
  • mpm

Email Samsung, this isnt GSMArenas issue.

  • Yakolo
  • 25 Oct 2020
  • r3a

I am using Samsung gallaxy 5g fold and it is not charging, please can rectify the problem