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Vertu’s new foldable phone serves alligator skin, solid gold, and a fittingly outrageous price tag

This foldable phone costs more than my car and probably my rent too

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Alphafold
Alphafold Vertu

Luxury phone maker Vertu has unveiled its newest foldable smartphone, the Vertu Alphafold, and it may be one of the most extravagant phones released in years. Combining foldable smartphone hardware with exotic leather, gold accents, AI-powered business tools, and ultra-premium pricing, the device is clearly aimed at wealthy buyers who want exclusivity as much as specifications.

The pricing alone is enough to turn heads. The standard calfskin leather version starts at $6,880, while the alligator leather model jumps to $8,800. For buyers wanting something even more extravagant, Vertu is offering customised variants with gold detailing and diamonds that can push the price all the way to $46,800.

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At that level, the Alphafold costs several times more than flagship foldables from brands like Samsung, OPPO, or Huawei.

A foldable built for luxury and business

Unlike most foldable smartphones that focus heavily on entertainment, cameras, or gaming, Vertu is positioning the Alphafold as a business-focused AI device for executives and luxury buyers. The phone includes an AI assistant called Hermes Agent, which Vertu says can help manage schedules, workflow approvals, travel planning, and enterprise tasks using natural language commands. According to the company, the assistant can also integrate with services such as Gmail, Google Calendar, Maps, WhatsApp, Telegram, Facebook, and Amazon.

Vertu is additionally emphasising privacy and security. The company claims sensitive data processing can happen locally on the device using a dedicated A5 security chip, while high-risk actions such as financial approvals still require manual user confirmation.

In terms of hardware, the Alphafold features an 8.05-inch foldable OLED display paired with a 6.53-inch outer screen, both supporting 120Hz refresh rates. Power comes from Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset, alongside a large 6,500mAh silicon-carbon battery with fast wired and wireless charging support.

The camera setup includes a 50-megapixel primary sensor, a 50-megapixel ultrawide camera, and a 5-megapixel telephoto lens. Vertu says the hinge mechanism uses titanium and carbon-fibre materials and is rated for up to 650,000 folds. The company is also continuing its traditional luxury-phone approach with handcrafted finishes, concierge services, and custom detailing options.

However, there is one detail that has already sparked discussion online: the Vertu Alphafold may not be entirely original hardware. Reports suggest the phone is effectively a heavily customised version of the Nubia Fold, which originally launched in China in late 2025. That means much of the underlying hardware may already exist in a far cheaper form.

Why this matters

The Alphafold highlights how foldable phones are slowly expanding beyond mainstream consumer electronics into luxury lifestyle products. While most smartphone companies compete on cameras, performance, or AI features, Vertu continues to target buyers who value exclusivity, craftsmanship, and status.

At the same time, the launch also shows how AI branding is now becoming part of even ultra-luxury smartphones, especially for business-focused devices. Foldables still represent a relatively small part of the smartphone market globally, but Vertu clearly believes there is space for ultra-premium niche devices. Whether buyers will actually spend luxury car money on a foldable smartphone remains uncertain. But if nothing else, the Vertu Alphafold proves one thing: in 2026, even smartphones can become fashion statements for the ultra-rich.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
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