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I spent £250 on my Motorola G73 and am very happy with it
My general rule of thumb when getting a cheap device:
- want the cheapest device even if it has dubious ads and tracking: xiaomi
- want a relatively cheap device and ok with first party ads/promotion and tracking: low end Samsung
The thing with cheap device is it's not guaranteed to have 3rd party roms available, and even if one exists, it's not guaranteed how long they'll be maintained, so it's not a factor when I'm trying to get a very cheap device.
You can spend barely a whole minute during first time setup to make Samsung phones not give you any ad and remove most tracking that has no direct use for the end user.
The best value smartphone on the market is the Fairphone 5. 70 euros per year, amortized over 10 years. Compare with a cheap, slower, but more expensive to repair Samsung A14, which would only last 2 years before the battery starts dying, and cost 85 euros per year over that time.
My work phone is nice (~$700 new?), so I use that for camera when possible.
My personal phone is an entry level "free" phone. Through Google Fi, and for this one you pay up front, with bill credits for the next year (I think?) which covers the cost
so basically I give Google Fi a $200 loan where the "interest" is a cheap phone. No complaints, it's not premium but it works.
Personally I would look for Linage OS supported devices on second hand sites. I managed to get a Oneplus 8T for around 250€. Didn't had any problems and it still runs smooth
As much as you can afford. When it comes to technology you can't go for the budget options without truly feeling the consequences. That said, apple is extremely overpriced for the hardware, but don't get a cheap $150 android phone. I've heard the Pixel's are good I know Google yuck, but if I'm remembering correctly you can get one if their phones for ~$600
The Pixel A series runs ~$400-$500 and won MKBHD's blind camera test two years in a row. With all the nice pixel features and no OEM bloatware, it's a standout for sure!
Somewhere between 300-500 Prioritising getting a decent chipset over the rest of the features, because having all the gimmicks doesn't matter if the phone feels slow after a few years of updates.
I would say the opposite.
The chipset is no longer important unless you're heavily into smartphone games. Even a mid-range chipset from 2 years ago will run standard tasks just fine these days. Smartphone requirements have basically plateaued for a few years now.
Prioritize just about everything OTHER then the chipset, depending on what you really use the phone for. Cameras, battery life, screen quality, memory capacity... Prioritize chipset only if you're gaming.
I dont really game on my phone but my parents both got the Samsung a51 shortly after i got my Poco F1. And nowadays the a51 takes a while to load basically anything while the F1 still feels pretty snappy.
Chipset also plays a huge part in the battery life and camera experience.
For me I only start looking for a new phone when i get annoyed by how slow my current phone feels, I'm not saying you should get a shitty phone just because it has a good chip, it just really helps it not feel old in a few years.