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I checked the Prime Day budget phone deals, and these two are the ones worth buying

Google is the smarter long-term pick, while Motorola is the ultra-cheap phone deal for basic everyday use.

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Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone
Shikhar Mehrotra / Digital Trends
Best Prime Day Amazon Deals
This story is part of the Digital Trends Prime Day 2026 coverage
Updated less than 12 minutes ago

Budget phone deals can be some of the worst Prime Day traps because the low price does a lot of emotional damage to common sense. A cheap phone still needs enough storage, decent battery life, a usable camera, and enough performance to avoid becoming drawer clutter by Halloween. These two deals make sense for different reasons: the Pixel 10a is the better all-around Android buy, while the Moto G Play is the cheapest phone here that still has a clear job.

Google Pixel 10a

Pros
  • Class-leading camera quality
  • Completely flat back panel
  • Bright 120Hz OLED screen
  • Seven years software updates
  • Long-lasting overall battery life
Cons
  • Older generation processor used
  • Unchanged design from predecessor
  • Low RAM limits AI
  • No optical zoom lens
  • Lacks magnetic wireless charging

The Google Pixel 10a is the one I’d check first if you want a budget phone that still feels modern. It’s down to $424 from $499, which makes it 15% off.

The price cut isn’t huge, but the appeal is the total package. You’re getting a Google phone with 128GB of storage, a listed 30-plus hours of battery life, Camera Coach, and Gemini features baked into the experience. That lines up with our Pixel 10a experience, where weeks of use made the specs debate feel less important than how well the phone works day to day. It’s the better fit if you want a daily phone, not just a backup device or a “please survive until payday” slab.

The Amazon listing shows a 4.4-star average from 390 ratings, which is a stronger buyer signal than most bargain-bin Android phones get. More than 1,000 were bought in the past month, too, so this deal has traction. At $424, though, this is budget by flagship standards, not ultra-cheap. If you just need the lowest working Android phone, the Moto below gets a lot cheaper.

Motorola Moto G Play

Pros
  • Class-leading camera quality
  • Completely flat back panel
  • Bright 120Hz OLED screen
  • Seven years software updates
  • Long-lasting overall battery life
Cons
  • Older generation processor used
  • Unchanged design from predecessor
  • Low RAM limits AI
  • No optical zoom lens
  • Lacks magnetic wireless charging

The Moto G Play is the deal to look at if price is the whole point. It’s down to $85.49 from $149.99, which works out to 43% off.

This isn’t the phone I’d buy for heavy gaming, serious photography, or pretending a sub-$100 handset is secretly a flagship. The argument is much simpler: it’s an unlocked phone made for the U.S., with 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and a 50MP camera for less than many wireless earbuds. Our older Moto G Play review hit the same basic truth about the line: Motorola can make a lot of phone for very little money, as long as you keep expectations realistic.

The buyer signal is solid for the price. Amazon lists a 4.2-star average from more than 1,700 ratings, and more than 2,000 were bought in the past month. The obvious compromise is headroom. With 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage, I’d expect basic everyday use, not power-user comfort. For under $90, though, this is the cleaner bargain.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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