Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. s

The Samsung Galaxy S21 doesn’t have an SD card slot, and I don’t care

Add as a preferred source on Google

The Samsung Galaxy S21 series is here, offering a new design, a range of new features, and the new Qualcomm Snapdragon 888. But there’s one other change that some potential buyers might not be so thrilled about. The Galaxy S21 spells the end of the microSD card slot in Samsung’s flagship phones. None of the models, not even the S21 Ultra, have expandable storage.

I don’t really care, though.

Recommended Videos

The microSD card was long a convenient and inexpensive way to get additional storage for your phone. And over time, it’s only gotten cheaper. But in 2021, it’s just no longer necessary.

Storage is cheap

Samsung is, thankfully, making it relatively easy to upgrade the internal storage in your Galaxy S21, so if you think you’re going to need more storage, it’s not overly expensive to get it. The base model of the Galaxy S21 already offers 128GB of storage, which isn’t bad — but if you think you’re going to need extra, it’s only $50 to double that to 256GB. On the Galaxy S21 Ultra, you can jump all the way to 512GB if you wish.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Now, I get that for many people, spending $800 on a smartphone is already a stretch, and that extra $50 can make a difference. But the fact is that it used to be far more expensive just to jump from 64GB to 128GB — and many low-end phones charge a similar amount of money for a whole lot less. Just look at the new Moto G Power, where you’ll pay $50 for an extra 32GB.

And we can’t forget that Samsung’s base prices have gone down this year, a full $200 from the Galaxy S20 series. Upgrade to that 256GB storage option, and you’re still coming out $150 ahead of where you would’ve been with the base Galaxy S20.

Cloud is the future (and the present)

Gone are the days when cloud-based apps and services were a novelty, and most people kept their music on their device itself. These days, almost everything is cloud-based, and that’s likely to continue. Music? Spotify? Movies and TV shows? Netflix? Many people even handle basic file storage through Google Drive. And this isn’t a matter of “it’ll happen when 5G gets here” — it’s the case right now with LTE.

Really ,the only thing you need local storage for is apps, and the photos and video you take between time spent on Wi-Fi. And yes, that is an area where you could run into issues, especially if you enjoy lots of mobile gaming and shooting 8K video. But again, if you know that’s what you want from the start — just buy the extra storage.

Cloud storage is no longer the “future” — it’s the present.

Now I realize I’m coming from a place of privilege to not care about local storage that doesn’t incur a recurring cost. And that, perhaps, is the main reason why I would want an SD card slot. But even those who do use local storage for music and videos should be able to get away with using either 128GB or 256GB, even if it means rotating media out every now and then.

Ultimately, doing away with tech like the microSD card slot gets companies like Apple and Samsung closer to the future of portless devices. It may not benefit everyone, but you’ll get used it, as I have. You’ll have to, anyway.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
iPhone Ultra replica model predicts a design deja vu for Apple’s first foldable phone
Apple’s foldable iPhone might just be Android with an Apple logo
Foldable iPhone

Apple’s long-rumored foldable iPhone may have just taken another step closer to reality - or at least another step closer to the internet’s imagination. A newly leaked replica model, believed to represent Apple’s upcoming “iPhone Ultra” foldable device, is now circulating online, revealing what could be one of the company’s boldest design shifts in years.

According to a report from Notebookcheck, the replica showcases a foldable phone with curved edges, a slim profile, and a surprisingly familiar design language that many users are already comparing to existing Android foldables.

Read more
Next-gen Siri will sync your AI chats and spread them across Apple’s walled garden
Apple wants Siri to become ChatGPT with an iCloud subscription
Siri

Apple’s long-delayed AI overhaul may finally be starting to take shape, and the company appears ready to push Siri far deeper into its ecosystem than before. According to a new report from Mark Gurman, Apple is developing a major Siri upgrade that will synchronize AI conversations across devices through iCloud, turning the assistant into a more persistent and connected AI system inside Apple’s tightly controlled ecosystem.

The upcoming Siri redesign is reportedly being prepared as part of Apple’s broader iOS 27 and iOS 28 strategy, with the company positioning the assistant more directly against AI products like Google Gemini and ChatGPT. Instead of functioning as a simple voice tool, Siri is expected to evolve into a conversational AI assistant capable of maintaining synced chat histories across iPhones, iPads, Macs, and other Apple hardware.

Read more
iPhone 18 Pro’s big camera upgrade might cut deeper in your wallet
Apple’s next big iPhone camera upgrade might hurt your wallet
iphone 18 pro

Apple’s next-generation Pro iPhone could arrive with one of the biggest camera upgrades the company has introduced in years. But according to new analyst reports quoted by Forbes, that improvement may also come with a significant increase in manufacturing costs - raising fresh questions about whether future iPhone prices could climb even higher.

The focus of the latest leak is the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max, which are expected to debut a new variable aperture camera system. Supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo claims the upgraded camera module could cost Apple roughly 50 percent more than the camera hardware currently used in its Pro models.

Read more