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Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Philip Michaels

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra — 7 reasons to buy the phone and 3 reasons to skip it

Samsung galaxy s24 ultra reasons to buy and skip.

The Galaxy S24 Ultra could be one of Samsung's most controversial upgrades. Hardware changes are relatively minimal — you won't find an overhaul of the phone's look, for example, and the biggest camera upgrade may not even be an upgrade at all.

Instead, the biggest changes with this year's premium Samsung device involve software, with the phone maker throwing its resources into AI-powered features. It's an impressive set of new capabilities, but will it be enough to convince people to buy the Galaxy S24 Ultra?

If you're puzzling over that very question, we can help. After some Galaxy S24 Ultra hands-on time as we prepare our final review of the phone, we have a better idea of the new device's strengths and weaknesses. With Galaxy S24 Ultra preorders now underway in advance of the phone going on sale on January 31, here are the arguments on why the new phone is a good buy as well as why you might want to pass on this particular model.

Reasons to buy the Galaxy S24 Ultra

Powerful AI features

(Image credit: Tom's Guide)

There's no debate about what feature is the highlight of this year's Galaxy S updates. Samsung has put a substantial effort into AI-powered capabilities, all of which are present on the Galaxy S24 Ultra. And the best thing about the Galaxy AI features is that they're actually useful and not just parlor tricks to amuse you and your friends.

Take Circle to Search, developed with Google — you can circle or tap something in any app and a Google search box will slide up from the bottom of your screen. Make a phone call to someone who speaks a different language, and Live Translate kicks in from the Phone app with real-time translations. Chat Assist helps you strike the right tone when text messaging friends or colleagues, and the built-in Notes app has a bunch of AI tools that automatically generate summaries or formatting for your notes.

We haven't even discussed the role AI plays in photo-editing. A slick tool can turn any video you've shot on the Galaxy S24 Ultra into a slow-motion one, and AI can suggest various tweaks and fixes to your photo. Most users are going to gravitate to Samsung's generative AI editing tool, in which you can select objects and move them, resize them or eliminate them entirely from the shot.

Maybe you've never had much use for the Bixby smart assistant on your Galaxy S flagship. But you're going to want to check out the Galaxy AI capabilities the moment you get your hands on the S24 Ultra.

Brighter, flatter display

(Image credit: Future)

If we had a complaint about previous Ultra iterations, it was the curved screen, which not only made the phone difficult to hold but also could make interacting with items near the screen's edge more complicated than it needed to be. Thank heavens, Samsung has given us a flatter display with the Galaxy S24 Ultra without sacrificing any space on the 6.8-inch panel.

The Galaxy S24 Ultra isn't just easier to hold and use because of Samsung's screen changes — it's brighter, too. The Ultra now uses a panel with a maximum brightness of 2,600 nits, up from 1,750 nits on the Galaxy S23 Ultra. The result is an amazingly bright display that's easy to view regardless of the lighting conditions around you. You're not going to have to squint to make out details on the Galaxy S24 Ultra.

The best Android chipset

(Image credit: Tom's Guide)

The system-on-chip powering your phone varies by where you are in the world if you opt for the Galaxy S24 or Galaxy S24 Plus. There's no such mystery for Galaxy S24 Ultra users — every model of Samsung's premium phone features the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3.

That's a big win for the Galaxy S24 Ultra. We're in the midst of running tests on the new phone, but Qualcomm's promised improvement gains and leaked benchmarks suggest that this chipset will be the best-performing Android silicon of the year. And it might just make the A series chips powering Apple's latest iPhones sweat a little — certainly when it comes to graphics.

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 delivers more than just performance gains. It also handles power more efficiently — we'll talk about that in just a bit — and the neural processing unit has seen some improvements, too, doubtlessly helping with the Galaxy AI features we've talked about.

Amazing battery life

(Image credit: Tom's Guide)

We've already got some preliminary battery test results from the Galaxy S24 Ultra. Let's just say, you're not going to have to go looking for an outlet to charge your phone too often during the day.

Specifically, the Galaxy S24 Ultra lasted 16 hours and 45 minutes on our test, in which we have phones surf the web over cellular until they run out of power. Right now, that's third on our best phone battery life list of devices we've tested over the last 18 months, and the only two handsets ahead of it are gaming phones specifically built to last a long time on a charge.

The Galaxy S24 Ultra recorded its stellar battery test result with its adaptive refresh rate enabled, which makes that lengthy endurance even more impressive. The S24 Ultra can scale up to 120Hz when there's a lot of on-screen activity, though faster refresh rates like that have been known to drain a phone's battery. That doesn't appear to be an issue with the Galaxy S24 Ultra and its brighter display doesn't seem to be impacting battery life either.

Brighter main camera

Samsung hasn't made too many changes from last year's camera setup for the Galaxy S24 Ultra, with the biggest adjustment being a new 50MP telephoto lens. (Believe me, we'll be getting to that in a moment.) But one of the changes that you will notice on the Galaxy S24 Ultra involves the pixel size on the 200MP main camera. They're 60% larger than before, according to Samsung, and that's going to translate into brighter photos.

Galaxy S24 Ultra (Image credit: Future)
Galaxy S23 Ultra (Image credit: Future)
Pixel 8 Pro (Image credit: Future)

Bigger pixels capture more light, and you can see the result in the above gallery featuring a New York City fountain. The differences between the Galaxy S24 Ultra and Galaxy S23 Ultra shots are subtle, but they're present — the buildings in the S24 Ultra image have a brighter shine to them and the reflections on the water are more pronounced. I find the blue signage in the background richer and more detailed in the Galaxy S24 Ultra photo as well. Throw in a much darker image captured by the Pixel 8 Pro, and the differences couldn't be more stark.

The Galaxy S23 Ultra was our favorite camera phone for nearly all of last year. We've got more camera testing to do, but the Galaxy S24 Ultra seems like a worthy successor.

A more durable phone

(Image credit: Tom's Guide)

Like Apple with last year's iPhone 15 Pro models, Samsung adopted titanium for the frame of the Galaxy S24 Ultra. Apple may have gotten their first, but that will hardly matter to Galaxy S24 Ultra who will enjoy a device made out of a more durable material than the aluminum frame Samsung previously used.

Samsung didn't stop with titanium when it came to strengthening the Galaxy S24 Ultra. The new phone uses Corning Gorilla Armor, which is rated as 4x more scratch resistant than other types of toughened glass. The bottom line is that the Galaxy S24 Ultra is built to handle life's bumps and bruises, even if we'd still recommend investing in a good case and screen protector to keep your phone looking as good as new.

Seven years of software support

You'll want to keep your Galaxy S24 Ultra looking pristine for as long as possible because Samsung just made a policy change that should let you hold on to your phone for as long as you like.

Previously, Samsung offered four years of Android software updates plus an additional year of security support for its top Galaxy devices. That's changing with the Galaxy S24 series, as you'll now get seven years of software and security support.

Will anyone really want to keep using a phone they buy in 2024 into the start of the next decade? Maybe not, but it's still good to have that option, especially if it helps justify the cost of the Galaxy S24 Ultra.

Reasons to skip the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra

A shorter range for the zoom lens

(Image credit: Tom's Guide)

Easily the most talked about change for the Galaxy S24 Ultra is its new telephoto lens. Samsung replaced one of the 10MP lenses on the Galaxy S23 Ultra with a 50MP lens, which should produce more detailed zooms. But the new 50MP lens only offers a 5x optical zoom, as opposed to the 10x zoom that the departed 10MP sensor provided.

Samsung argues that this is an upgrade overall, as the 50MP lens can still provide 10x zooms of optical quality — it's cropping the full 50MP shot into a 12MP image in that case. Samsung also says its customer research indicted that more Galaxy owners shoot 5x zooms so it instead put its efforts into using a sensor capable of capturing more details at higher resolutions.

Galaxy S23 Ultra 10x zoom camera sample. (Image credit: Future)
Galaxy S24 Ultra 10x zoom camera sample. (Image credit: Future)

It's a convincing argument in theory, but our preliminary testing suggests that the S23 Ultra's zoom remains superior. In our Galaxy S24 Ultra vs Galaxy S23 Ultra zoom testing, S24 zoom shots at 10x had softer details than comparable shots taken by the S23 Ultra.

We plan to do more testing, particularly with zooms at night, which is a feature the Galaxy S24 Ultra is better able to support. But right now, it feels like the telephoto lens has taken a small step backward.

No new S Pen features

(Image credit: Future)

The S Pen migrated over from Samsung's now defunct Galaxy Note line for the Galaxy S21 Ultra. Since then, the only change has been the S Pen getting more responsive and finding a slot within the Galaxy S22 Ultra. Samsung really hasn't added new capabilities.

That trend is continuing with the Galaxy S24 Ultra, as the S Pen remains unchanged from previous models. This feels like a wasted opportunity — the S Pen is one of the Ultra's most unique features. Why not add more capabilities that highlight what a valuable productivity tool it can be — especially in support of new AI features like Circle to Search and various live translation capabilities?

One expensive starting price

When the iPhone 15 Pro Max raised its price by $100 last fall, we thought the more presented a golden opportunity for Samsung. For years, Apple's best phone had cost less than Samsung's premium device. Now, it had the same $1,199 price tag. Surely, this would give Samsung a chance to show off how its phone delivered more bang for all those bucks.

Instead, Samsung increased the amount of bucks you need to hand over. It also raised the price of its phone by $100, as the Galaxy S24 Ultra starts at $1,299. Tha's the most Samsung has charged for a phone that doesn't fold in half

Yes, Galaxy S24 preorder deals can knock that price down, but $1,299 is a lot to pay for a phone — particularly one with modest hardware improvements from the previous year's model.

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra outlook

We're not done testing the Galaxy S24 Ultra yet, but our initial impressions are pretty positive. We love the brighter display and long-lasting battery life, and the pictures produced by the cameras are solid, too, even if we're not fully convinced that the zoom lens is an improvement over the one on the Galaxy 23 Ultra.

That said, if a $1,299 starting price makes you hesitate about the Galaxy S24 Ultra, we can't hold it against you. Much of this phone's appeal is going to lie in its AI features. If you appreciate those, you likely won't blink at the S24 Ultra's cost; if they fail to impress, then you might want to consider a different phone.

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