My Camera Test: Comparing the $499 Pixel 10A With the Galaxy S25 FE, Motorola Edge

My Camera Test: Comparing the $499 Pixel 10A With the Galaxy S25 FE, Motorola Edge

Google's $499 Pixel 10A uses nearly the same cameras as last year's Pixel 9A, but I wanted to see how its photos directly match up to its midrange Android rivals: the $650 Samsung Galaxy S25 FE and the $550 Motorola Edge.

I traveled with all three phones around St. Petersburg, Florida, checking how flexible each was in different environments, from bright outdoor settings to an indoor coffee shop and an evening brewery. All three environments can be challenging for the small image sensors on each phone. 

While I find the cameras on all three phones to have different strengths and weaknesses depending on the setting, I'm quite impressed with how the Pixel 10A keeps up. In my tests, the photos include lots of detail, even though certain settings appear to involve a lot of processing to improve them.

Watch this: Unboxing Google's Pixel 10A: Everything That Comes With the $499 Phone

Wide and telephoto cameras

Starting with photos taken on the sidewalk in downtown St. Petersburg, I notice that all three phones handle bright sunlight slightly differently, especially how it's depicted on the street.

Photo of sidewalk taken by the Pixel 10a. The sun creates a spot of exposure.

Taken on the Pixel 10A's wide camera at 1x.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

For the Pixel 10A, the sun provides a slight exposure mark over the Bay First sign at the top of the frame, but it remains fairly cordoned off to focus on the rest of the streetscape. Zooming in, you can see the Century 21 location, but the street is captured in the most detail, with the phone's camera maintaining its natural gray color.

Photo of sidewalk taken with the Galaxy FE. The photo is quite clear.

Taken on the Samsung Galaxy S25 FE's wide camera at 1x.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET
Photo of sidewalk taken with the Edge. The photo is quite clear.

Taken on the Motorola Edge at 1x.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

For both the Galaxy S25 FE and the Motorola Edge, the sun has a more pronounced effect on the rest of the image. The pavement's color is notably brighter. I also find both the S25 FE and the Edge have slightly more clarity on the business signs on the Bay First building, including the aforementioned Century 21 logo.

Since the S25 FE and the Edge each include a telephoto camera that supports 3x optical zoom, I took a photo at that zoom with each phone. The Pixel 10A uses digital zoom on the phone's 48-megapixel wide camera, but a lot of the scene's detail remains preserved.

Photo of sidewalk taken by Pixel 10a. The details in the foreground are clear, but details in the background are not.

Taken on the Pixel 10A at 3x zoom.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

The Pixel's zoom photo provides a clear view of the 7th St N sign, the trees and the plants. However, if you look further back at the next intersection, you'll notice that the 7th St S sign and the Colony Grill are much harder to see. It's those smaller details that are captured by the S25 FE and the Edge, both aided by telephoto cameras, making them more visible.

 Photo of sidewalk taken with the Galaxy FE's telephoto lens. Colors remain accurate.

Captured on the Galaxy S25 FE's telephoto camera at 3x zoom.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET
A 3x telephoto taken by the Edge. The phot has a slight yellow hue, which isn't intentional.

Captured on the Motorola Edge's telephoto camera at 3x zoom.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

Of the three zoom photo examples, I feel like the S25 FE has the best color reproduction while also retaining details like the signs further back. Even though the photo was taken with the S25 FE's 8-megapixel telephoto camera rather than its 50-megapixel wide camera, the colors remain complementary when comparing the 1x to the 3x. Meanwhile, the Edge's 10-megapixel telephoto camera looks quite a bit different from the 50-megapixel wide camera -- the whole image has a more yellowish hue.

Ultrawide cameras

Moving inside the Southern Grounds coffee shop, I decided to use the ultrawide cameras to capture my sausage, egg and cheese on toast. The three photos came out wildly different.

Table with breakfast, two phones and a notebook, taken by the Pixel 10a.

Captured on the Pixel 10A's ultrawide camera.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET
Breakfast table photo taken by the Galaxy FE.

Captured on the Galaxy S25 FE's ultrawide camera.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET
Photo of breakfast taken by the Edge. The toast looks slightly burnt, though it wasn't in real life.

Captured on the Motorola Edge's ultrawide camera.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

The Pixel 10A's 13-megapixel ultrawide and S25 FE's 12-megapixel ultrawide have a more balanced set of colors and details, in my opinion. The wheat toast appears lighter in the Pixel's photo than in the darker hues captured by both the S25 FE and the Edge.

When zooming into my notebook, however, the Pixel and S25 FE captured more of the page markings, details that blur together more in the photo taken by the Edge. While the Edge's 50-megapixel ultrawide camera is a higher-spec number, I noticed it had a harder time distinguishing toast levels, giving more of it a darker look. If I hadn't eaten it myself, I'd have thought it was burned based on the Edge's photo.

Night photography

Moving over to a nighttime setting, I used the three phones to take photos outside of 3 Daughters Brewing. I felt like all three did a decent job at producing the colors of the building, but they differ in how they handle light sources.

Photo of brewery taken by the Pixel. The details are visible, though somewhat smudgy.

Captured on the Pixel 10A's wide camera.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET
Photo of brewery taken by the Galaxy S25 FE. Details are sharp.

Captured on the Samsung Galaxy S25 FE's wide camera.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET
Photo of brewery using the Edge's camera. Noticeable light streaking is visible.

Captured on the Motorola Edge's wide camera.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

Both the Pixel and the S25 FE tone back the glare produced by the various lighting fixtures. Meanwhile, the Edge's photos show noticeable streaks that dominate the sky. When inspecting the photos more closely, I find that the Galaxy captured a sharper view of the furniture, like in the Connect 4 set next to the blue chairs in the center of the frame. The same details are visible in the Pixel's and the Edge's depictions of the scene, but they appear smudgy by comparison. 

This type of scene needs to take advantage of a phone's processing power in order to iron out visibility issues, and I do find that the Edge appears to come up short here in this regard, with a lot of noticeable image noise.

Selfies

Each phone takes selfies with noticeable differences in style and color choices. For this test example, I'm in a well-lit daytime room with natural light from a window. The 12-megapixel front-facing camera on Google's Pixel 10A brightened up my face as if there was a light in front of me, and captured a decent amount of the details of my hair and face.

Selfie of Mike Sorrentino taken using the Pixel 10A.

Captured on the Pixel 10A.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

The front-facing camera on Samsung's Galaxy S25 FE shows a noticeably darker color tone, but it still captures a similar shade of orange on the wall behind me. Of the three photos, I felt like the S25 captures the most details, including strands of hair, and defaulted to a closer crop than the other two.

Selfie of Mike Sorrentino taken using the Galaxy S25 FE.

Captured on the Samsung Galaxy S25 FE.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

The photos taken by the 50-megapixel selfie camera on the Motorola Edge feel a bit smoothed out. The orange color on the wall is noticeably different from the Pixel and the S25 FE, though it does capture a lot of my face details, from hair strands to the fabric textures on my shirt.

Selfie of Mike Sorrentino using the Motorola Edge.

Captured on the Motorola Edge.

Mike Sorrentino/CNET

The $499 Pixel 10A camera keeps up and, in some cases, exceeds the detail captured by the slightly more expensive $550 Motorola Edge and $650 Galaxy S25 FE. I'm quite impressed by how the Pixel camera handles colors and low-light environments, but the phone's processing work sometimes makes scenes appear brighter than they are in real life.

The Galaxy S25 FE is no slouch either, with a third telephoto lens for capturing more detail farther away. While I did find the Motorola Edge to struggle in low light, it is one of the lowest-cost phone options currently available for someone who must have a 3x optical telephoto camera.

But if you can live without the telephoto lens, the Pixel 10A's low cost and photography abilities will likely be a good fit for most people.

Google's Pixel 10A Looks Stylish for a Low-Cost Flagship Phone

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