Samsung A32 5G review UK

Samsung A32 5G review UK
The A32 5G is a big phone with a small price tag.

If youre looking for a 5G Android phone and want to spend as little as possible, you can stop right here. At $279, the Samsung Galaxy A32 5G is your best bet right now, especially if youre in the US where such options are scarce. It offers good 5G support (including the all-important C-band!), a huge battery, and four years of security updates. Thats a compelling package for under $300.

Thats not to say its perfect. The A32 5Gs screen isnt great, performance is a little laggy, and though capable, its camera is limited. If you can spend just a bit more, you can get a phone that does better in at least one of these areas. And if you can hold off on your phone purchase for even a few more months, we should see many more very affordable 5G phones on the market to choose from, like the OnePlus N200. But if you dont have time to wait and cant spare the extra cash, I cant find a good reason to talk you out of the A32 5G.

7.5 Verge Score

Our review of Samsung Galaxy A32 5G

Good Stuff

  • 5G, including C-band frequencies
  • Four years of security updates
  • Excellent battery life

Bad Stuff

  • Screen is low-res
  • Awkward, bulky design
  • Cluttered software with lots of pre-downloaded apps
Buy for $280.00 from Samsung Buy for $230.00 from Best Buy
Samsung A32 5G review UK
The A32 5G is a big device, housing a 6.5-inch screen and a large 5,000mAh battery.

Samsung Galaxy A32 5G screen, performance, and design

The A32 5G features a big 6.5-inch 720p LCD panel thats best described as nothing special. Colors look a little flat and washed out, and though it gets bright enough to see in direct sunlight, the screens reflective plastic protective panel makes it challenging. Its also a low resolution to be stretched across such a large screen, so youll see a little pixelization if you look close.

The phone uses a MediaTek Dimensity 720 5G processor that compares well with Qualcomms Snapdragon 690 5G chipset for budget 5G phones, used by OnePlus Nord N10 5G. The Galaxy A32 5G combines the MediaTek processor with 4GB of RAM (decent) and 64GB of storage (skimpy but just enough to get by, and you can throw in a microSD card to expand it), and it performs well enough for its class.

The A32 5G features a big 6.5-inch 720p LCD panel thats best described as nothing special

Theres noticeable hiccuping with media-dense pages, brief pauses when diving into a demanding task like starting Google Maps navigation, and noticeable camera shutter lag. For the most part, though, I just didnt notice slowdowns as I jumped between apps, scrolled through Instagram, and just generally went about using the phone normally. Thats about all Id ask for from a sub-$300 phone.

The phones headline feature, 5G, still isnt something wed recommend you run out and buy a new phone to get. But the A32 5G has a couple of features that make it worth your time, even considering that good 5G is still a year or two away in the US. Crucially, the A32 5G has been cleared by the Federal Communications Commission to use C-band frequencies that Verizon and AT&T, in particular, will be utilizing for 5G in the coming years. Not all 5G phones can use C-band, so thats a big ol checkmark in the A32 5Gs favor. Theres no mmWave support here, which is the fastest and scarcest flavor of 5G, but thats no great loss.

The second factor here is that you can reasonably expect to keep using this phone for enough years to actually see 5G thats meaningfully better than LTE because Samsung will keep offering security updates for four years. Many budget devices only get about two years of security update support, but the A32 5Gs lengthy lifespan should see it through to the actual 5G age in a few years.

The A32 5Gs lengthy lifespan should see it through to the actual 5G age in a few years

Battery life is one of the A32 5Gs strengths. Its 5,000mAh capacity battery is big indeed, and I had no trouble getting two full days of moderate use out of it. My usage was more battery-friendly than someone elses might be, with battery optimization on and the bulk of my time spent on Wi-Fi, but even the most power-hungry user would be able to get a full day if not more out of the A32 5G.

With a 6.5-inch screen, the A32 5G is a big phone for sure. Its a little too bulky and awkward-feeling in my hand. What I dislike even more is that it feels slippery to me the back panel plastic feels hard to get a decent grip on. On one occasion, I set the phone down on a softcover book, and it somehow shimmied itself across the cover and off of a side table when I wasnt looking. (Theres a happy ending, though: it only fell about a foot into a box filled with hand-me-down baby clothes waiting to be put away, so theres a good argument for keeping clutter around your house.) Anyway, get a case for it if you buy this phone, and know that if your hands are small, it wont be very comfortable to use.

Samsung A32 5G review UK
Theres a decent-quality 48-megapixel main camera on the A32 5Gs rear panel.

Samsung Galaxy A32 5G camera

There are two cameras of consequence on the A32 5Gs rear panel: a 48-megapixel standard wide and an 8-megapixel ultrawide. Theres a 5-megapixel macro camera thats not very good and a 2-megapixel depth sensor that may or may not help with portrait mode photos. Theres also a 13-megapixel selfie camera around front.

Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Taken with ultrawide
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Taken with ultrawide
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK
Samsung A32 5G review UK

Considering the phones price, the A32 5Gs main camera performs well enough. Like most any other phone, it takes very nice pictures in good lighting. Thats no surprise, even for a budget phone. But it reaches its limits quickly in less-good lighting, like interiors. Thats where optical stabilization or more sophisticated image processing would come in handy, neither of which the A32 5G offers. Instead, you may find some of your photos indoors are a little blurry, and youll be very challenged to get a sharp photo of a moving subject in anything less than bright daylight.

The ultrawide camera shows its shortcomings if you look close theres some distracting flare in direct sunlight, and some noise visible in shadows of high-contrast scenes. Theres no telephoto lens here, with shortcuts in the camera app to jump to 2x (acceptable), 4x (eh), and 10x (dont use it) digital zoom.

Samsung A32 5G review UK
The Galaxy A32 5Gs generous security support timeline means its a phone you can plan to use for the next few years.

Its tough to say how the Galaxy A32 5G compares to the competition because it doesnt have much yet. Its among the least expensive 5G phones youll find anywhere. Its closest competition at the moment is the OnePlus Nord N10 5G, which is a little more expensive at $299 but offers some worthwhile hardware upgrades, like a nicer screen, a bit better camera performance, and faster charging. Its a nicer phone in a lot of ways, but its only slated for two years of security updates.

If you want a future-proof choice thats easy on the budget, then the Samsung A32 5G will do the trick

Of course, if you only plan to hold on to your phone for a couple of years, then the N10 5G is worth strongly considering. If thats the case, then 5G becomes a less important feature, too. If theres room in your budget, consider the $349 Google Pixel 4A, which will get you a much better camera, cleaner software, and timely updates over the next couple of years, albeit without support for 5G at all. Its a much smaller device, though. So if a big screen is part of the A32 5Gs appeal, you might want to look at something like the $279 Motorola Moto G Stylus.

If youd like to avoid the hassle of phone shopping again in two years and you want a future-proof choice thats easy on the budget, then the Samsung A32 5G will do the trick.

Photography by Allison Johnson / The Verge

Comments

Unfortunately Samsungs are typically loaded with crapware that cant be uninstalled.

Some of that you can blame on the carriers. My understanding is carrier free version has less crapware installed.

Definitely.
If you buy unlocked then you are free of the carrier crap.
But Samsung also has its own store, its own messaging app, its own browser, and other similar duplicate apps vs stock Android apps. You get both sets of these apps on their phones. And their apps cant be uninstalled. I did read that there is a sideload app that will enable the uninstallation of those apps, but how many people are going to do that?

You only get one messaging app. I have a couple carrier unbranded devices from Samsung. The only "duplicates" is their browser and Chrome and maybe Gallery/Google Photos depending on if you consider those the same thing. The Galaxy Store has some duplicate apps in the play store but its largely themes and sometimes they have special offers.

I cant agree with the conclusion of this review.

I have a Galaxy A32 5G (that I got for a lot less than MSRP). The screen is not merely poor, its awful. Resolution aside, the colors are exceedingly washed out and dim its as bad as budget phones from 8+ years ago, like the Nokia 520 and the original Moto G. The speakers (for both calls and media playback) and haptics are atrocious. The camera is adequate only for people who dont take photos. And the Samsung software inundates you with ads and redirects to the Samsung store. Good luck trying to remove the crapware via ADB without breaking the Settings app, lock screen, or notification shade. (Thankfully, Family Link allows you to remove the most egregious crap if youre setting the A32 5G up as a kids device, which is what I eventually did with mine.) Also, the device is limited to quarterly, not monthly, updates and T-Mobile is holding even those back (its still on Marchs update now in mid-June, with critical exploits unpatched).

There is a niche for this device: people who absolutely must have 5G plus years of (delayed) updates at the lowest price possible, but most everyone else would be better off with a Pixel 4a or iPhone SE, which are in another league of quality altogether for not much more money, or even the another budget phone from OnePlus or Moto.

Sounds like we both got a free A32 5G. You may want to check for a software update, mine recently got the May security patch, hopefully it gets back on a better cadence going forward.

For daily use mine has been fine, the camera works a lot better when you turn it off 48mp mode.

Ive been using mine for Xbox game streaming a lot and it works really well for that as well.

Yeah, the issue is that my Pixel just got the JUNE security patch. Samsung is always slow, and OS updates are normally at least six months later than Pixels.

Or, starting at roughly 150$, you can go and buy a Xiaomi Redmi Note. Its better than this cheap Samsung, almost on par with Pixels phone. Only gaming is not confortable on it.

I seriously have to disagree with your statements that the screen is awful. its a complete adequate screen. Colors are fine and not over-saturated, just as it should be. The mono speaker is pretty good, definitely not atrocious and the cameras are completely fine. Theres also absolutely no ads on mine and theres the normal amount of Samsung and Microsoft pre-intalled apps which I wouldnt consider bloatware as they are good and functional apps. Seems to me like you dont actually have the phone.

720p on a 6.5" screen? Gross.

For $0 from T-Mobile, its "good enough", at least until I can get my hands on a Pixel 6. The screen isnt "brilliant" or anything, but for my use case (reading email, browsing news, taking the odd picture) it suffices. The 5G coverage for me has been good at home, and 4G abroad (Mexico) is fine.

I use Nova Launcher and although I cant remove Samsungs bloatware, I can at least hide it so its not annoying (with the exception of the stupid Samsung account Settings header)

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