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Motorola Edge 70 Pro is a practical and polished pitch for phones under 40,000

This clearly isn’t an annual spec-sheet exercise, as Motorola has gotten the fundamentals thoughtfully right

Published on: Apr 28, 2026 10:35 AM IST
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It goes without saying that the Motorola Edge 70, released late last year, is a mighty impressive smartphone. That ultra-slim design, the Pantone-optimised camera, and a display that’s also matching professional grade screens, impressive foundational pieces. The new Motorola Edge 70 Pro, newest addition to that portfolio, is making more than an effort to live up to that ‘pro’ moniker. More than anything else, I’d say this marks another well-written chapter of phones priced under 40,000 that are more than good enough to be called “flagship alternatives”, though that phrasing seems out of vogue these days.

The Motorola Edge 70 Pro’s slim design meets a large battery, a Pantone-validated camera, and a powerful chip. (Vishal Mathur | HT Photo)
The Motorola Edge 70 Pro’s slim design meets a large battery, a Pantone-validated camera, and a powerful chip. (Vishal Mathur | HT Photo)

It steps up in the pricing stakes too, with prices starting 36,999. That puts the Motorola Edge 70 Pro in direct competition with the Samsung Galaxy A57, the OnePlus Nord 6 and the Nothing Phone (4a) Pro. It is important to mark the trajectory here, because this troika has significantly upped the generational game, underlined by better hardware and software. The more one uses the Edge 70 Pro, the more a layer of inspiration from the very impressive flagship Motorola Signature becomes clear—and that should add value, in the grand scheme of things.

The three key elements to the foundation that I mentioned, continue here as well, with more additions. The ultra-slim design (though the ‘Pro’ needs mean it’s not 6mm like the Edge 70, but 6.99mm) meets a larger 6,500mAh battery. The Pantone validated camera image processing for colours and skin tone, meets an equally capable 6.8-inch AMOLED display that can match the camera’s optimisations. The 4-nanometer architecture Mediatek Dimensity 8500 Extreme chip meets a large 6,500mAh battery, a combination of performance and battery stamina that seems more than adequately future proof from where I assess this today.

There is some heating on the back panel that’s quite noticeable when the Motorola Edge 70 Pro is strained (the North Indian summer afternoons made their presence felt after some sustained camera usage). This phone has a vapour cooling chamber, but its slightly more compact size compared with some rivals, is key to this observation. This has been seen on flagships as well in previous years in the peak summer months, and thermals won’t be a challenge either side of a heatwave. Unless you’re regularly gaming, of course. For regular users, the Motorola Edge 70 Pro will work just fine.

Motorola has made a curious choice with the cameras, when compared with the Edge 60 Pro, its predecessor. The Edge 70 Pro continues with a 50-megapixel wide and a 50-megapixel ultra-wide sensor, but the third of this troika isn’t a telephoto but a light sensor (the Edge 60 Pro had a 10-megapixel telephoto; a bit more photography versatility). The selfie camera is 50-megapixel too, which will be great news for video calls with friends and family. That sensor choice aside, the overall optimisation and positioning of the camera return very likable photos. The colours and overall tonality have a role to play, and personal preferences will play a part.

This would be, in my opinion, far ahead of the Nothing Phone (4a) Pro and in the same ballpark as the OnePlus Nord 6 for daytime photos—the Motorola Edge 70 Pro does have an advantage with better contrast though, and that helps everything in the frame look better, richer and more dynamic. Low-light photos is where the Motorola Edge 70 Pro takes a more pronounced lead over its rivals, and it must be the light sensor that’s contributing to this difference—results are crisper, less noise around subjects and looking at a light source doesn’t lead to a photo ruining flare.

The slimness of the Motorola Edge 70 Pro means the 6,500mAh battery isn’t the highest capacity in this price band (the Nord 6 has a 9,000mAh battery) but still more than the others. That itself is no mean feat by Motorola’s engineers and designers. Fairly stable and acceptable real world stamina as well, close to 6 hours and 15 minutes of active screen time, before you must plug this in. That is a 90-watt charging pace, fast enough for a quick splash and dash before heading out for the next meeting.

Even before Motorola’s latest spec stack with the Edge 70 and now the Edge 70 Pro stepped into the limelight, there have always been advantages of the clean Android experience (most other phone makers can only come this close, because revenue streams take centerstage later). The Motorola Edge 70 Pro has had to withstand the test of the current time, with that extra bill of materials costs towards memory and storage, meaning there is no wireless charging or a light sensor instead of a telephoto.

That said, the core experience built atop a very capable Dimensity 8500 Extreme chip, a consistent 6,500mAh battery, and an optimised display, leaves nothing to chance. There is just the right amount of AI processing for photos and videos, some interesting editing options, and relevant Moto AI features you’ll find useful from time to time. Between the Pantone Lily White, Pantone Tea and Pantone Titan colour options (somehow, the Pantone badge of honour is missing on the back panel), it’s difficult to pick a favourite because all three look nice. And that, in a way explains the Motorola Edge 70 Pro most succinctly—there is a lot to like about this phone.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Vishal Mathur

Vishal Mathur is Technology Editor for Hindustan Times. When not making sense of technology, he often searches for an elusive analog space in a digital world.

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