Working hard for that Galaxy S-line
Note: We are aware that the 256GB Galaxy S25 FE now retails at S$948, while the 512GB now retails at S$1,038. This is vastly different from its original launch prices at the start: 128GB at S$948, 256GB at S$1,038, and 512GB at S$1,218.
Kindly factor in that difference when making your own assessment at the checkout page.
A perk of Samsung’s FE phones is that these devices feel like premium handsets in hand, which can be satisfying for users who want a good deal without paying the usual price (read: Galaxy S-xpensive) seen in Samsung’s headlining mobiles.
Harkening Samsung Galaxy S25 FE’s budget-friendly approach is the combined cost savings with careful trimming, a simplified design, and more affordable components. Despite the great lengths it undertook to develop a wallet-friendlier flagship, Samsung has not neglected its premium-tier features in areas where you’d interact the most. For example, it features Corning’s Gorilla Glass Victus+ on both sides, which enhances the hand feel with a touch of glass (instead of cheapo plastic covers), a full One UI 8 experience, including Gemini Live.
Samsung is also minimising the compromise that usually comes with such flagship-lite devices. In this case, you’re getting the Exynos 2400 processor, which graced last year’s flagship range (Samsung Galaxy S24/S24+).
With the promised premium and savings combined into one device, the Galaxy S25 FE should be a reskinned flagship with outsized value, while still performing like one of the best Samsung phones.
But does it? Let’s find out.
Seven years of updates in a glass body
Samsung Galaxy S25 FE.
Photo: HWZ
The design looks understated, opting for a monolithic, coloured rear that has minimal distractions, such as thin camera rings and a single cut-out for the LED flash.
Before you say we’re gassing up the Galaxy S25 FE’s appearance, remember that S25 FE resembles an earlier iPhone (minus a camera block or camera island). Its simplicity isn’t unique, but it’s good that Samsung made the Galaxy S25 FE undeniably pleasant without reinventing the wheel.
One minor design gripe stretches across the phone’s wider girth, preventing smaller hands from holding it comfortably, despite having a typical mobile width of 76.6mm. This is likely the result of harsher straight edges between the display and the trimming (sides). It’s not an issue since we prefer that over an outdated-looking bullnose or waterfall edge.
The bottom bezel… why…
Photo: HWZ
The design flaw, however, comes from the bottom black bezel that sits below its gorgeous 6.7-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X display. It is visibly thicker than the other trims around its panel, since the rest appear evenly distributed. It betrays the S25 FE’s otherwise impeccable aesthetic, which is probably necessary for Samsung to ensure its non-FE models still retain an edge.
An otherwise pleasant display with essential durability intact.
Photo: HWZ
The Samsung Galaxy S25 FE also has an IP68 rating for dust and water resistance, matching the resistance level of its flagship Galaxy S25 series handsets. That hasn’t changed since the very first FE phone, which was the Galaxy S20 FE. What did change, however, was that the Galaxy S25 FE would receive up to seven years of OS and security upgrades (the Galaxy S20 FE had only three years of OS upgrades).
Works like the real deal
Samsung Galaxy S25 FE on display.





