Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra review Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

Two-minute review

The Galaxy S20 Ultra is Samsung’s biggest Android phone, and its most daring sales pitch: you can own the world’s most advanced 5G phone with massive camera specs… if you’re prepared to spend more money than ever on a non-foldable smartphone.

The Ultra is designed for early adopters, and three things stand out: it has a massive 6.9-inch display with next-gen fluid-scrolling tech that will stretch your hand; five cameras to capture 108MP photos, 40MP selfies and 8K video, and 5G antennas with peak speeds 66 times as fast as 4G LTE. 

It’s a nice jump from the Galaxy S10 and S10 Plus cameras, although issues with inconsistent autofocus and overexposure keep the Ultra from being the best camera phone. Even with a camera software update, we still find the Galaxy S20 and S20 Plus to be better in most non-zoom scenarios.

The cameras specs do shine for far-off subjects. The 48MP telephoto lens allowed us to get up close and personal thanks to an impressive variety of zoom lenses. It far surpasses the 2x optical and 10x digital zoom of previous Samsung phones, and the limited 8x digital zoom on the Google Pixel 4 – although 100x zoom snaps were hardly Instagram-worthy, 30x zoom looked fine on a tripod.

Samsung’s ‘single-take mode’ helps you answer an everyday question: should I take photos or a video? 

Take both. Its new ‘single-take mode’ captures a variety of shots over a 10-second span: photos, ultra-wides, portraits, hyperlapse video, regular video, and so on. It kept us out of the settings menus and in the moment, plus you can also clip 33MP photos from video, which proved handy.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

(Image credit: Future)

The S20 Ultra has a monster spec list: 12GB or 16GB of RAM and 128GB or 512GB of internal storage kick things off. 

There’s also a huge 5,000mAh battery for pulling down battery-intensive 5G signal, although we found it could only last more than 24 hours in 4G mode. There in-screen fingerprint sensor from last year’s phones, but it sadly is the first S phone without a 3.5mm headphone jack.

It’s impossible to justify the Galaxy S20 Ultra price for everyone – even those who bought the S9 Plus or S10 Plus, and intended to get the next ‘big one’ from Samsung. 

For others, though, the word ‘upgrade’ means a completely different thing: they want a phone that pushes new boundaries, and they don’t mind if that pushes the price tag further into Galaxy Fold territory. 

The Galaxy S20 Ultra is Samsung’s own version of Tesla’s ‘Ludicrous Mode’ in its electric cars, and even if the camera is a bit overhyped and inconsistent at the moment, early adopters will love showing off how its cameras go from 0.5x to 100x zoom real quick.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra release date and price

  • US, Australia release date: March 6; UK release date: March 13
  • 128GB + 12GB of RAM: $1,399 / £1,199 / AU$1,999
  • 512GB + 16GB of RAM: $1,599 / £1,399 / AU$2,249

The Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra release date was Friday, March 6 in the US and Australia, and March 13 in the UK, alongside the S20 and S20 Plus.

The S20 Ultra costs a staggering $1,399 / £1,199 / AU$1,999, which is more than any non-foldable smartphone we’ve tested in the past – and that price is just for the version with 128GB of internal storage and 12GB of RAM.

If you feel like you may need 512GB of onboard storage and a mind-boggling 16GB of RAM, the S20 Ultra price jumps to $1,599 / £1,399 / AU$2,249. Sadly, there’s no 256GB version in between, which most people who shoot video may want.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

(Image credit: Future)

Some good news, though: you’re not going to need to max-out the storage, given our ever-accelerating move to the cloud and the fact that 5G connectivity will allow you to easily pull down remotely stored data. 

Plus, all models of the S20 have a microSD slot for expanding the storage by up to 1TB in case you do hit the built-in capacity.

Display and overall size

  • 6.9-inch AMOLED display with fluid-looking 120Hz refresh rate
  • 120Hz option only works at Full HD+ to save battery life
  • This is a tall phone, though not as wide as the 6.8-inch Note 10 Plus

Samsung’s 6.9-inch display will push the boundaries of your fingers’ reach and your thumb’s dexterity, yet it won’t feel much bigger than the S10 Plus – its width is actually a tad smaller than the 6.8-inch Note 10 Plus and 6.7-inch Galaxy S10 5G.

It’s just that the Galaxy S20 Ultra is noticeably taller, not wider, expanding to a 20:9 aspect ratio. You can still grip it with one hand, and shove it in a deep-enough jeans pocket – just know that you’ll have to operate it with two hands to comfortably touch all corners of the display. It’s big; just not as big as its 6.9-inch screen suggests.

We found the Super AMOLED display to be bright and pixel-dense at its 3200 x 1440 QHD resolution, yet also look perfectly fine at the default Full HD+ resolution. The lower resolution saves battery life and – spoiler – it’s the only resolution at which you can experience the 120Hz screen refresh rate; that’s not QuadHD-compatible yet.

That’s okay – we tended to favor Full HD+ with 120Hz turned on rather than dialing the refresh rate back down to 60Hz. Samsung matches pure gaming phones like the Asus ROG Phone 2 and Razer Phone 2 with this refresh rate, and the screen fluidity makes playing fast-paced games, and even just scrolling through Instagram, feel nicer.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

(Image credit: Future)

We appreciate that Samsung found a way to make a smaller punch-hole for its front-facing camera in the top-center of the screen, and selfies actually look better than before – and say goodbye to that wide dual-lens selfie camera from the S10 Plus, as there’s only one camera embedded in this display. 

Software handled the depth detection fine, which casts doubt on why you need a depth camera on the back of the Ultra and the Plus.

We were consistently wowed by the Ultra’s screen-to-body ratio, brightness levels and support of display standards such as HDR10+, offsetting our often cumbersome handling of this massive phone. It’s worth it if you want today’s best smartphone display, and aren’t secretly wishing that the rumored iPhone 9 ushers in iPhone SE era sizes.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

(Image credit: Future)

Design

  • You get just two Ultra colors: Cosmic Gray and Cosmic Black
  • Less screen curve, but accidental touches persist
  • The camera bump and 1mm of extra girth aren’t a bother

The Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra is made of glass and aluminum – there’s no ceramic version this year – and comes in just two colors: Cosmic Gray and Cosmic Black. The Cloud Blue color is exclusive to the S20 and S20 Plus, while Cloud Pink is an option with the smaller S20 size, which is a shame for Ultra owners who want some extra flash.

There’s still a curve on the right and left edges of the screens, though it’s much less pronounced compared to past S phones. Sadly, that doesn’t mean fewer accidental presses of the nearly bezel-less screen – Samsung still doesn’t have excellent palm rejection software, so when we touched the edges with our grip and tried to press the shutter button in the camera app, the phone constantly thought we were trying to activate multi-touch and zoom in, instead of performing single press of a button. Palm creep is very real on this phone.

We’ve talked about the tall-not-wide dimensions (166.9mm x 76mm), so now let’s talk about the girth and weight. At 8.8mm, the Ultra is noticeably thicker than the other S20 phones and all of the S10 phones (those range from 7.8mm to 7.9mm), and it has a sizable rear camera bump on top of that. Both are completely okay with us.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

The Galaxy S20 Plus next to the S20 Ultra (Image credit: Future)

It’s also heavier at 220g (roughly in between the S10 Plus at 175g and the Galaxy Fold at 276g). But again, to us, this is a completely favorable trade-off given the fast 5G mmWave technology, 108MP camera, and 5,000mAh battery that are packed into this cutting-edge smartphone.

Too many times, camera team leads from various phone makers have told TechRadar “we would’ve fit in a better camera, but the design team won” – that’s a direct quote from one of them. 

The Galaxy S20 Ultra, thankfully, doesn’t sacrifice camera quality in order to look extra chic. It’s big, but it looks stylish enough – and more people will see your glorious 108MP photos than your phone anyway.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

If you’re going to test, test properly… (Image credit: Future)

Five cameras

  • 108MP main camera lets you crop into photos while minimizing quality loss
  • Most 108MP shots we took ended up having autofocus and overexposure issues
  • The 100x zoom is a neat party trick, but not Instagram-worthy; 10x is where the magic happens
  • The is the best selfie camera, but not the best camera – at least not with the current software

Update: As promised, we went back are thoroughly tested this phone’s camera with the newest software following our initial in-depth Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera test. There are changes, but they didn’t move the needle enough to change our review verdict.

We could write a whole review of the Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra’s cameras, there’s so much to say about them – and that’s good news if you want something fresh out of your smartphone’s photos, but bad news if you want the best photos with every snap. 

It’s Samsung’s biggest camera sensor upgrade since the Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge, yet we found the hyped-up 108MP camera mode captures photos that don’t look much different than snaps taken in the main camera’s default 12MP mode. 

However, the the extra-large pictures do offer the ability to crop in without as much quality loss. It makes sense for the same reason recording 8K video is often a good idea even if you don’t own anything more than a 4K TV: you can crop and edit without sacrificing detail. It gives you creative latitude, even if you ultimately output to a 12MP photo and 1080p video.

But Samsung’s 108MP mode has a tendency towards overexposing images while its overaggressive image processing can smooth out faces and textures, and we had difficulty with the autofocus in several of our tests. Another issue: once we snapped good 108MP shots, we had issues with uploading the 20MB files to some social media networks, as they had a 12,000 x 9,000-pixel resolution. Twitter didn’t just downsize the pictures, it flat-out rejected them.

That’s troubling for such a pricey camera phone. You also lose some features in 108MP mode, including motion photos (fine) and beauty mode (won’t miss that), and there seems to be some baseline skin smoothing you can’t control (not good).

In the two photos above, taken on the Ultra and an iPhone 11 Pro Max, you can see that the Ultra image is brighter, but to the detriment of the dynamic range – this happened a lot with the photos we tested. You can also see where the phone had trouble focusing. The bokeh is good, though, giving the background some nice blur.

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera samples

(Image credit: Future)

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra – 1x (no zoom)

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera samples

(Image credit: Future)

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra – 2x zoom

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera samples

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra – 4x zoom

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera samples

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra – 10x zoom

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera samples

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra – 30x zoom

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera samples

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra – 100x zoom (max zoom)

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera samples

(Image credit: Future)

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra ultra-wide camera – 0.5x zoom

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

How 100x zoom works on the Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra (Image credit: Future)

The 100x digital zoom range of the 48MP telephoto camera is a neat party trick, but never gave us a usable photo. Even on a tripod, we found images taken using the 30x digital zoom looked oversharpened, and not at all great. It’s the 10x hybrid optical zoom that appeared most impressive in side-by-side photo comparisons with the iPhone and Pixel.

Where the 108MP camera struggled, the front-facing 40MP camera produced some of the best selfie photos in our tests. There were few autofocusing issues in the default 12MP mode, and more noticeable detail in the 40MP mode, but again, only once we cropped in.

Samsung Galaxy camera sample

(Image credit: Future)

Samsung should give you more control over the virtual bokeh on its selfie camera, because a shallow depth of field limits the versatility of a 40MP camera (although the selfie camera takes 10MP photos by default). There isn’t a huge amount you can crop into if the backgrounds are always blurred.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra selfie camera

(Image credit: Future)

Samsung has also introduced ‘Smart Selfie Angle’, a menu option that zooms out of group selfies automatically. We’ve seen the ability to expand the frame on the Google Pixel 3, iPhone 11, and S10 series, but here it happens automatically when the camera detects two or more faces; when you’re alone, it says tight for a more intimate view. This is one less option to worry about when you’re trying to grab a quick selfie with several friends.

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Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra camera sample

(Image credit: Future)

Portrait mode: Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

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iPhone 11 Pro Max camera sample

(Image credit: Future)

Portrait mode: iPhone 11 Pro Max

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Google PIxel 4 camera sample

(Image credit: Future)

Portrait mode: Google Pixel 4

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Samsung Galaxy S10 camera sample

(Image credit: Future)

Portrait mode: Samsung Galaxy S10

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Samsung Galaxy S10 5G camera sample

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Portrait mode: Samsung Galaxy S10 5G

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Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus camera sample

(Image credit: Future)

Portrait mode: Samsung Galaxy Note 10

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OnePlus 7 Pro camera sample

(Image credit: Future)

Portrait mode: OnePlus 7 Pro

Portrait mode, which Samsung calls Live Focus, does better than most camera phones in daylight, but struggled at night. Regardless, while we’ve never said Samsung had the best camera, we’ve previously said it has the most fun camera because of this feature – the Color Point filter a selective black-and-white mode), for example, makes your subject pop.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

(Image credit: Future)

There’s often a downside to inflated megapixel counts: the individual pixels are often smaller. We’ve seen that on plenty of cheap Android phones that tout 48MP and 64MP cameras with deceptive marketing, only to perform poorly in low light. Luckily, Samsung’s approach here is different.

The S20 Ultra does have smaller pixels at 0.8 microns, whereas the S20 and S20 Plus push the pixel size to 1.8 microns (up from the S10 series’ 1.4 microns). But there are two things going for the Ultra that should make up for those smaller microns.

First, Samsung employs something called nona-binning technology, combining nine pixels into one to increase the pixel size to 2.4 microns in low-light situations, and leaving you with 12MP photos (the 9-to-1 math on a 108MP camera checks out).

Second, the S20 Ultra has physically larger camera sensors – a 1/1.33-inch main sensor and 1/2-inch telephoto sensor. We’ve seen less noise from nighttime photos thanks to these physically bigger sensors that can absorb more light, although as mentioned Samsung tends to go overboard with the exposure, making some shots look artificial and smoothed. 

And that’s the rub with the Galaxy S20 Ultra camera. It has the best hardware we’ve seen on a camera phone, and deserves all of the hype it’s attracted. But autofocus and overexposure issues leave us wondering why you should pay so much for big camera spec numbers that result in photos that look pretty good, but not any better than what you can get on an iPhone, a Pixel or last year’s Note 10 Plus.

Samsung’s single-take mode and 8K video

  • Samsung still has the best camera app of all smartphone makers
  • Clipping 33MP photos from video and ‘single-take mode’ offers flexibility
  • 8K video recording option, like the 108MP camera, allows you to crop in after the fact, but suffers from the same autofocusing issues

Samsung’s camera app continues to be the best out there, balancing robust features with ease of use. You can swipe anywhere on the screen to flip between the front and back cameras, and make a hand gesture to trigger the selfie camera timer. This is so much better than what Apple does right now – the timer is now hidden behind a menu on the iPhone 11 series. 

We also love the fact that you can double-press the lock button to launch the camera app without having to look at the screen; sometimes it’s the little things that make snapping a photo easier. 

We had fun with the new ‘single-take mode’, which cycles through the cameras and some of Samsung’s 13 photo and video modes for 10 seconds, then picks the best shots. We ended up with wide, ultra-wide, smart cropped and filtered photos, as well as a video and hyperlapse video. It feels like this is more than a gimmick, and we hope other phonemakers adopt something similar.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

(Image credit: Future)

The S20 Ultra introduces 8K-resolution video recording, and Samsung’s Super Steady stabilization now incorporates anti-rolling correction (up to 60 degrees). Both sound great, but both can’t be used at the same time.

We discovered that you can’t have 8K and Super Steady; in fact, Super Steady didn’t work in 4K either – it’s still a 1080p affair. And 8K is limited to 24fps, so you’re not going to get all the bells and whistles you do with 4K and Full HD video.

What 8K did for us was allow us to crop and edit video without sacrificing quality. 4K, meanwhile, gave us frame-rate and zoom versatility – you get 20x video zoom in 4K, whereas you’re stuck at 6x in 8K. We did experience the same autofocusing flaws in 8K as we saw with 108MP photos, though, and you can start to see a theme here: big numbers aren’t always better.

To give you some storage requirement context, 8K video files will eat up just under 600MB for every minute of footage in the HEIC format (and every 8GB it’ll start a new file) – we say that just in case you’re deciding between the 128GB and 512GB versions of this phone. 

Luckily, we were able to trim the large 8K video files using the phone’s built-in video trimmer, which we found handy. You can also clip 33MP photos on the Galaxy S20 Ultra while recording, or in post if you’re shooting 8K video – you just tap a button inside the camera UI and it saves a high-resolution photo to your camera roll. 

5G, battery life, specs and software

  • 5G mmWave speeds are up to 66x as fast 4G LTE, but only in some areas
  • During our testing, 4G LTE was sometimes faster than sub-6 5G
  • Google Duo video calls are helpfully now integrated into the dialer app
  • Samsung’s Quick Share feature apes Apple’s AirDrop so you can easily transfer files, but it’s limited to S20 phones for the moment

The Galaxy S20 Ultra will almost certainly the first 5G smartphone for a lot of people – just 1% of phones that shipped in 2019 were 5G devices, so it’s still very new tech. 

Like the S20 Plus, the Ultra combines mmWave and sub-6 technology to offer the fastest peak download speeds (mmWave) and the widest range (sub-6). The S20 is outfitted with just sub-6, and it won’t be sold by Verizon, an mmWave-exclusive carrier in the US, for this reason.

So how fast is 5G on the S20 Ultra? Exactly 66 times faster than the 4G LTE iPhone 11 Pro Max we tested right next to Samsung’s phone, at least in New York City. We got 1.9Gbps on Verizon’s mmWave network in Bryant Park, which broke our previous record of 1.6Gbps on the Galaxy S10 Plus in the same spot. 

We did have to be outdoors, and close to a 5G node on top of a lamppost, to make that happen. Sadly, mmWave is extremely fast but incredibly limited in range, whereas sub-6 is slower (ranging from 200Mbps to 500Mbps) but has a wider range, offers a more reliable connection and works indoors. Traveling around London, which is limited to sub-6 networks right now, we actually saw faster speeds with our 4G LTE iPhone 11.

The fact is that 5G is still very much in its infancy in some regions, but, by combining the two 5G technologies, the S20 Ultra and S20 Plus futureproof your access to super-fast connectivity.

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

(Image credit: Future)

The rest of the internal specs are all top-of-the-line: a 7nm chipset (Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 865 in the US, or Samsung’s Exynos 990 in the UK and Europe), 12GB or 16GB or RAM, 128GB or 512GB of internal storage, and a microSD card slot for expandable storage.

Samsung’s One UI 2.0 software reskins Android 10 with a one-hand-friendly layout, with a lot of the menus items you need to touch appearing on the bottom half of the screen. Another perk is that Google Duo is now integrated directly in the dialer app – we were able to make Full HD video calls, and you can chat with up to eight people. 

The other new software addition is Quick Share, Samsung’s take on Apple’s AirDrop. It allows you to share files with multiple people, not just one person at a time, without having to connect to Bluetooth or sign into anything. However, the feature is exclusive to the Galaxy S20 series for now, with the intention that older Samsung phones should get it in the future.

Battery life

  • 5,000mAh is a monster battery size, but power gets used up quickly at higher settings
  • There’s a big difference in drain time with 5G and 120Hz enabled
  • There’s a 25W charger in the box, and the Ultra is compatible with an optional 45W charger and 15W wireless charger

Using 5G hogs battery life, and in part to counter this the Galaxy S20 Ultra has a 5,000mAh battery capacity, while the S20 Plus has a 4,500mAh battery. We found that the Ultra lasted longer than 24 hours on days we weren’t testing 5G speeds non-stop.

The Ultra lasted 12 hours and 13 minutes in our battery drain test that ran through web pages on the T-Mobile LTE network. Switching to the 120Hz screen, however, shaved off exactly three hours, with the phone dying at 9 hours and 13 minutes using the same test. We found it hard to say no to the fluidity of 120Hz screen, but you may want to turn it off when you’re not gaming.

Samsung’s ‘Super Fast’ charging returns on the S20 Ultra, up to 45W here with an optional charger, and 25W with the charger included in the box. 

That mirrors what we saw on the Galaxy Note 10 Plus, as does the Ultra’s fast wireless charging prowess of up to 15W. 

Despite the large battery size, we were able to charge the phone to 31% in just 15 minutes, and 63% in 30 minutes, using the 25W charger.

Buy it if…

You relish phones with big, beautiful screens
This 6.9-inch display will stretch you grip and require juggling to get to all corners of the screen, but you end up with an amazing-looking picture that’s more fluid when the 120Hz refresh rate is turned on.

You want your first 5G smartphone
5G is still in its infancy in some regions, but it proves to be 66 times as fast as 4G LTE in the right locations with mmWave technology – although of course your milage may vary. 

You want to show off the 108MP camera and 100x zoom
The S20 Ultra cameras boast big numbers and cutting-edge specs, and although the 108MP photos aren’t perfect, and the 100x zoom looks blurry, both offer neat party tricks, and everyone we showed this phone to was eager to try them out.

Don’t buy it if…

You want the best camera phone
Samsung is offering something new that pushes the boundaries of smartphone photography. But the experience isn’t always consistent, with exposure and autofocus issues, and while the Ultra’s 108MP photos have their perks, it’s hard to call them ‘the best’ we’ve taken on a phone.

You wish smaller phones would make a comeback
You shouldn’t buy the Galaxy S20 Ultra if it’s too big for your hand, and that may be true for most average phone buyers. It makes a convincing case for foldable phones to exist.

You’re on a budget
Even if you’ve bought a Plus-sized Samsung phone in the past, its new big phone for 2020 may not be for you because of the eye-watering price. The Galaxy S20 Plus also got a price hike, but it’s more reasonable if you’re strapped for cash.

First reviewed: March 2020

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