A Long-Awaited Foldable Arrival With Flagship Pricing
After months of anticipation, the Motorola Razr Fold is finally crossing from teaser to tangible product for North American buyers. The device is already up for preorder through major retailers at USD 1,899.99 (approx. RM8,810), positioning it squarely in the flagship foldable phone tier. Early buyers are being tempted with a bundled Motorola Pen Ultra, a value-add that hints at productivity ambitions beyond typical smartphone use. Reviewers are already calling it the best book-style foldable you can buy today, a bold claim in a segment dominated by Samsung’s Galaxy Z line and challenged by new entries like the Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold. While some may prefer to wait for inevitable discounts, the Razr Fold’s launch price and preorder perks underscore Motorola’s intention to compete head-on at the very top of the foldable smartphone market.

Canadian Release: Dates, Pricing, and Buying Options
For those specifically watching the foldable smartphone Canada scene, the Motorola Razr Fold now has firm dates and pricing. The device goes on sale directly via Motorola on May 21 at C$2,699.99, with wider carrier availability following on June 12. That dual-channel rollout gives buyers the choice between purchasing outright or waiting for carrier financing and promotional plans. Motorola is offering two Pantone-backed finishes: Blackened Blue with a vegan-leather matte texture for extra grip, and Lily White with a smooth, minimalist feel. Together, the colour options and early direct sales strategy are clearly aimed at style-conscious buyers who still want practical flexibility in how they pay. Combined with its flagship-level specs, this pricing structure places the Razr Fold alongside other top book-style foldables while still undercutting some rivals’ most premium configurations.
Book-Style Foldable Design and Immersive Displays
Unlike earlier Razr models that leaned on a nostalgic clamshell, the Motorola Razr Fold embraces a modern book-style foldable design. When folded, it presents a compact, almost square profile that is easier to slip into a pocket than most large slab flagships. Unfolding the device transforms a 6.6-inch outer display into an expansive 8.1-inch inner screen, giving it tablet-like real estate for multitasking, media consumption, and stylus-assisted productivity. This format positions the Razr Fold directly against the leading book-style foldable phones, where screen continuity, crease management, and hinge reliability are critical differentiators. Early evaluations suggest Motorola has delivered a well-balanced implementation that feels more like a single continuous display than two separate screens. For users curious about foldables but hesitant about durability or usability compromises, this design could be the most convincing interpretation yet.
Flagship-Level Performance, Battery, and Charging
Under the hood, the Motorola Razr Fold is built to meet flagship expectations rather than merely ride on its foldable novelty. It runs Android 16 and is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5, paired with 16 GB of LPDDR5X memory and Motorola’s RAM Boost feature for better multitasking. A sizable 6000 mAh battery backs the dual-display setup, and fast 80W TurboPower charging helps reduce downtime. Wireless users get 50W wireless charging and 5W reverse charging for topping up accessories. Audio is handled by Dolby Atmos stereo speakers with tuning by Bose and a triple-microphone array, aiming to match high-end slabs in entertainment and call quality. While some reviewers had hoped for an even more advanced Snapdragon variant at this price tier, the overall package still qualifies as a true flagship foldable phone in daily performance terms.
Camera Arsenal and Competitive Foldable Positioning
Motorola is clearly targeting creators and power users with the Razr Fold’s extensive camera array. On the rear, it offers a 50-megapixel main sensor, 50-megapixel ultrawide, and 50-megapixel periscope telephoto, covering most shooting scenarios from sweeping landscapes to high-zoom portraits. A 32-megapixel external front camera handles traditional selfies and video calls when the device is closed, while a 20-megapixel internal front camera comes into play on the large unfolded display. Video capture goes up to 4K at 60 fps or 8K at 30 fps, aligning with other top-tier camera phones. Combined with its book-style foldable format and premium internals, this imaging package helps the Razr Fold stand firmly beside the Samsung Galaxy Z series and Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold. In an increasingly crowded high-end foldable segment, Motorola’s strategy is clear: match or exceed rivals on specs while leveraging pricing and design to win converts.
