The best camera phone in 2022: what's the best smartphone for photography?

The best camera phone in 2022: what's the best smartphone for photography?

 The best camera phones take photos and video that can rival traditional cameras – these are the top smartphone shooters

best camera phone - close-up of smartphone being used to photograph a night scene
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The best camera phones offer a tantalizing combination of the pinnacle of imaging technology with pin-sharp displays and lightning-fast internet connectivity. In fact, some handsets can deliver better photographs than the 'proper' camera you might otherwise be tempted to pick up.

As camera phone technology progresses, you might find it tricky to keep up to date on the latest handsets available. Our phone rumors(opens in new tab) hub will keep you up to date with the latest leaks and smartphone news. But to help you find the best camera phone for you right now, we've rounded up a selection of the latest models with a range of budgets in mind.

Camera phone technology can really boil down to one simple concept – pure and simple convenience. Not only will the best camera phones feature powerful imaging sensors (for example, the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra(opens in new tab) has an incredible 108MP sensor – higher than most of the best professional cameras), but they'll also have incredible computational photography features that takes a matter of milliseconds to process the images you capture and improve aspects such as sharpness, white balance and more. 

While the best camera phones might not yet be able to beat the best DSLRs(opens in new tab) or the best mirrorless cameras(opens in new tab) for sheer image quality, the one area that camera phones beat out traditional cameras in is their size. Even the best compact cameras(opens in new tab) can still take up the majority of your pocket (if they even fit in at all!), but the best fold phones(opens in new tab) such as the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip(opens in new tab) and the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2(opens in new tab) are incredibly compact.

 

The best camera phone in 2022

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli / Digital Camera World)
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1. Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra

With a built-in stylus this is the best Android camera phone

SPECIFICATIONS

Release date: February 2022
Rear cameras: 108MP f/1.8, 10MP f/2.4, 10MP f/4.9, 12MP f/2.2 ultrawide
Front camera: 40MP
OIS: Yes
Weight: 228 g
Dimensions: 163.3 x 77.9 x 8.9 mm
Storage: 128GB/256GB/1TB

REASONS TO BUY

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Superior rear cameras
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Sophisticated digital zoom
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40MP selfie camera
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Stylus control

REASONS TO AVOID

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A little pricey
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No microSD card slot

The latest Galaxy flagship's four-camera system is top-notch, featuring wide, ultra-wide, telephoto and super-zoom sensors. The first of these boasts a 108MP sensor, with an f/1.8 aperture, Dual Pixel AF, and an 85-degree field of view. The 12MP ultra-wide camera features an f/2.2 aperture and a 120-degree field of view. There's also one 10MP telephoto with an equivalent three times zoom (f/2.4) and another 10MP telephoto with a 10 times zoom (f/4.9). And that's not to mention the selfie camera, with its 40MP resolution, f/2.2 aperture and 8K video capture at 24fps. 

More broadly, this is a large, stylish and powerful smartphone. Its 6.8-inch AMOLED screen is to die for, with smooth motion, vivid colors, impressive brightness, and 500 pixels per inch resolution.

The S Pen stylus is brilliant, and gives you the kind of productivity you previously only got with a Galaxy Note. There's a powerful 5,000 mAh battery to keep it going for hours, and the design and look of the phone is simple but, to our eyes, very stylish.


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2. Google Pixel 6 Pro

The Pixel 6 Pro is easily Google's best camera phone ever

SPECIFICATIONS

Release date: October 2021
Rear cameras: 50MP f/1.9, 12MP f/2.2 ultrawide, 48MP f/3.5 telephoto
Front camera: 11.1MP
OIS: Yes
Weight: 210g
Dimensions: 163.9 x 75.9 x 8.9mm
Storage: 128GB/256GB/512GB

REASONS TO BUY

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Natural, reliable photo processing
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Striking design
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Big, bold, punchy screen
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Uncluttered Android experience

REASONS TO AVOID

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Can get warm with heavy use
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Battery weak at first, then improves
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Ultra-wide lens is fixed-focus

Google’s first flagship in years has a lot to prove. The Pixel 5 was great, but definitely wasn’t a top-end smartphone, and the Pixel 4 missed the mark for us, with rehashed camera hardware and overheating internals. With the Pixel 6 Pro, Google hits the target.

Its triple rear-facing camera system has had a full hardware refresh: the main (26mm wide-angle) camera features a 50MP 1/1.31 sensor with 1.2-micron pixels, omnidirectional phase-detection autofocus, laser autofocus, and OIS. For a wider perspective, there's also a 12MP 17mm ultrawide camera module.

But arguably the most impressive camera in the Pixel 6 Pro is its new periscope zoom camera. Utilising a 48MP sensor with an f/3.5 aperture, 104mm lens, the telephoto module gives you roughly 4x zoom. The sensor itself is tiny at 1/2 an inch, but thanks to Google’s software know-how matched with OIS, it’s still a cracking addition to the handset, and really makes the 6 Pro worth choosing over the regular Pixel 6.

While Google’s Tensor chipset gets hot on first setup and with intense gaming, day to day, we found everything from performance to photography to be impressive on Google’s top-tier flagship – a hands down win for Google.

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli/Digital Camera World)
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3. Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra

The second best Samsung camera phone

SPECIFICATIONS

Release date: January 2021
Rear cameras: 108MP f/1.8, 10MP f/2.4, 10MP f/4.9, 12MP f/2.2 ultrawide
Front camera: 40MP
OIS: Yes
Weight: 227 g
Dimensions: 165.1 x 75.6 x 8.9 mm
Storage: 128/256/512GB

REASONS TO BUY

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Fantastic cameras
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Beautiful display
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8K video

REASONS TO AVOID

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S22 Ultra has better specs overall

Until the launch of the latest Samsung Galaxy S22 ultra, the S21 Ultra was one of our top camera phones, and it remains a stunningly sophisticated device with a lot to offer. This phone features four rear cameras, including a 108MP f/1.8 main camera, a 12MP f/2.2 ultra-wide camera and two 10MP telephoto cameras – one with an f/2.4 aperture and 3x optical zoom and one with an f/4.9 aperture and a huge 10x optical zoom. You also get a fantastic 6.8-inch screen. The Dynamic AMOLED 2X display features a 120Hz refresh rate for smooth scrolling and gaming experiences, HDR10+ support, 1500-nit peak brightness and a 1440 x 3200 resolution.

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli/Digital Camera World)
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5. Sony Xperia 1 III

A videographer’s dream

SPECIFICATIONS

Release date: August 2021
Rear camera: 12MP (24mm f/1.7) + 12MP (70mm f/2.3, 105mm f/2.8) + 12MP (16mm f/2.2)
Front camera: 8MP (f/2)
Rear camera aperture: f/1.7 + f/2.3 + f/2.8 + f/2.2
Dimensions: 165 x 71 x 8.2 mm
Storage: 128GB/256GB

REASONS TO BUY

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Excellent pro video features
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Stunning screen
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Plenty of power and storage

REASONS TO AVOID

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Screen could be brighter
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Expensive
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Weaker zoom than competition

The Sony Xperia 1 III is the only choice for video pros and cinema buffs who want to get manual with their smartphone videography. It’s able to shoot footage at up to 21:9 for cinema style capture, offers full manual control and features a beautifully flat color profile, perfect for post-processing in Premiere Pro or Da Vinci Resolve(opens in new tab). Thankfully, almost everything else about this phone is excellent too, with a striking 21:9, 4K HDR screen, a clean UI and a snappy chipset ensuring plenty of power under the hood. Sony photography fans will also appreciate all the Alpha elements that have made their way into the Xperia camera UI. If want the ultimate cinema experience, both from a content creation and consumption point of view, the Xperia 1 III is it.

(Image credit: Future)
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6. Apple iPhone 13 Pro

More evolution than revolution, but still the best iPhone ever

SPECIFICATIONS

Release date: September 2021
Rear cameras: 12MP f/1.5, 12MP f/1.8 ultrawide, 12MP f/2.8 telephoto
Front camera: 12MP
OIS: Yes
Weight: 204g
Dimensions: 146.7 x 71.5 x 7.7mm
Storage: 128GB/256GB/512GB/1TB

REASONS TO BUY

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Extensively upgraded cameras
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120Hz screen refresh rate

REASONS TO AVOID

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Still 'only' 3x optical zoom

Though it's camera improvements may be fairly modest when compared to the iPhone 12 Pro, the iPhone 13 Pro still sports some worthwhile upgrades. There's a useful new macro mode, along with an improvement to low light shooting with the ultra-wide camera. New picture styles are worth experimenting with, while the Cinematic video mode is a clever feature and nice to have if you're a budding movie-maker.

As for camera hardware, Apple has gone for a triple lens set up on the iPhone 13 Pro, giving us a standard, ultra wide and telephoto lens. We have the same focal lengths for the 26mm (equivalent) standard lens, and 13mm (0.5x) ultra-wide optic, but the telephoto lens has been extended to a 3x (78mm) offering, compared with the iPhone 12 Pro’s 2x lens.

Overall, the iPhone 13 Pro is without question the best iPhone for photographers to date (exactly what we’d expect) and it produces fantastic image and video quality, but it’s not for those who are particularly budget conscious, especially if you’re already in possession of a 12 Pro which is very nearly as good.

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli/Digital Camera World)
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9. OnePlus 10 Pro

A hugely capable camera phone... with a few compromises

SPECIFICATIONS

Release date: Jan 2022
Rear camera: Main camera 48MP (f/1.8), telephoto 8MP (f/2.4), ultra-wide 50MP (f/2.2), depth 2MP (f/2.4)
Front camera: 32MP
OIS: Yes
Weight: 201g
Dimensions: 163 x 73.9 x 8.6mm
Storage: 128/256/512GB

REASONS TO BUY

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Bright, bold, brilliant screen
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Cool, fast flagship power
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Ultra-wide field of view is huge

REASONS TO AVOID

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Ultra-wide lacks autofocus
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No 150° video
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Inconsistent colors across cameras
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No IP68 water resistance

The OnePlus 10 Pro boasts a good-looking body, a stunning screen, and stacks of power - it’s a great gaming phone that also gives you impressive value for money. While the 48MP primary camera is impressive in areas – photos are processed with pizazz and look rich, detail is fair and the ultra-wide field of view is stellar - there are a handful of quirks that hold the 10 Pro, like colour inconsistency between the rear facing cameras, and the ultrawide snapper's lack of autofocus. What also holds back the OnePlus 10 Pro’s appeal is the fact Google’s Pixel 6 Pro (above) can be had for similar money, but is an all-round better camera phone. That’s why while we can wholeheartedly recommend the OnePlus 10 Pro – it’s a great phone, after all - it can't make it further up this list.


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