Outside of the Razr 60 Ultra, this Signature, released in January 2026, feels to me like the first real flagship Motorola phone since the Edge 50 Ultra in 2024. I never had hands-on with that model, but I did have an Edge 50 Pro and currently still have the Edge 60 Pro - so plenty of angles and devices to compare with, even if not that Ultra. Still, it's great to have the Signature in-hand and more importantly, enjoy Moto's latest and greatest with some important landmark changes for the firm, which I'll come to later.
The RRP for the Signature in the UK at time of writing is £899. That's certainly into flagship territory and buyers paying that should rightly expect a lot - and step-up from the upper-end mid-tier phones, like the aforementioned Edge 50 and 60 Pro units. The Edge 50 Ultra on release was £1,049, so a bit more, but it did come as standard with 1TB storage. This amount is available (in some markets) on the Signature, but most supplied seem to be the 512GB version.
Having said all the above, it doesn't take long for the price of Motorola phones to come down and it's even worth looking out on Moto's website to see if there are bundles, deals and sales. Or buy second-hand. It can't be long now before those early-adopters are onto the next thing, so keep an eye on the usual outlets. But that's jumping the gun a bit really as I haven't yet discovered, nor shared with you, whether or not it's worth the hunt! Stick around then whilst I do so.
I have been able to secure the Signature in Pantone's Martini Olive colour and I do rather like it (as I'm sure fans of 007 James Bond will)! I think that I certainly prefer it to the boring 'carbon' colour - which is much more conservative and businesslike. They both, though, have the same linen/fabric/cloth back on them in their respective colours and it really is a nice feel. It's the first thing that you notice when pulling it out of the chargerless slim box. However, it is still too slippery for my hands - yours might get better grip, maybe if they are younger! As we know by now, it's all the trend not to supply chargers, be it claims of eco-friendliness or compliance with EU laws. Of course, these firms will happily sell you one! I guess that the cloth back helps to keep the phone surprisingly light, at 186g over the 50 Ultra's 197.
Alongside my Edge 60 Pro (which I'm using to do the copy/restore as it's fully-loaded, signed into everything with all my data on it), it's a little wider but all-but the same height. Physically it's a couple of millimetres taller and wider, but it doesn't look or feel it in the hand. Or look it when they lay next to each other. The Signature is certainly slimmer though at 6.9mm over the Edge 60 Pro's fatter 8.2mm. One of the things which makes it look different from the front is the Signature's more subtle quad-curved front edges. The primary benefit of this, as it was for the Honor 400 Pro, with the provided case with the bottom clear cutout (which I'll come to), is the gorgeous way in which the finger slides over the navigation button, Circle to Search, access to Recents and all those up-swipe gestures. It works like an absolute charm and until you try it, it's hard to describe the difference it makes.
The Edge 60 Pro is no waterfall, but it's clearly markedly more curved left and right. The Signature is also more 'square' in the corners, maybe for the same reason as above, than the more gently curved corners of the Edge 60 Pro. It's all quite subtle - but the Signature, in this respect, reminds me very much of the old Nokia 7 Plus from 2018. It is a big phone, there's no doubt - and I shall try hard to love it, but if anything is likely to put the kibosh on the deal, this will be it.
In the box we get a hard, plastic case with a Qi2 magnet ring on the back (for what it's worth). The case fits like a glove, gripping the edges with cutouts for anywhere that there's buttons or ports. I like this very much more than plastic-covered 'lumps' which most cheap cases now seem to have. It's nice that you can feel the buttons as they are, not through plastic, and that you can get the case on/off whilst the charging port is in use. Little things. I have one test Qi2 charger disk with a USB-C cable attached and I did plug it in and put it on the back of the case. And it works. Woopy doo, eh! I still see no reason for all this magnet stuff which Apple cooked up to sell peripherals - with the one possible exception being the dashboard of a car, for those who have one. Which I don't. I have never had any trouble sitting my phones on a Qi Charger cradle, nor struggling to make a connection. And I'm not sure why I'd want to put a wallet on the back of a phone, making it fatter. I suppose there might be a case for a powerbank to connect it to, to save having a cable - but all this magnet stuff feels like a stretch to me.
There's the usual books and papers in the box, SIM Card Tray tool and USB-C to USB-C cable ready for the 90W charger you buy from Moto for another fifty quid. Except that they don't sell 90W TurboPower chargers that I can find - only 125W or 68W. Fortunately, the USB-C to USB-C cable in the box is a 6.5A version and so will get the 90W speed if the 125W charger is purchased (otherwise it would be capped at 60W). Finding a 3rd party charger to get 90W charging is difficult - like other OEMs these days it seems, you need to really buy Moto's gear to attain it. It's all a bit complicated but yes, like I found with VOOC chargers for BBK Group phones, you really have to use their own gear to top out those speeds. I have a UGreen 100W GaN charger here - and it still will only reach 60W. Way of the world, I guess.
This unit is a single nanoSIM + eSIM unit and the suitably capped-one-side SIM Tray confirms that. Depending on region/operator/supplier your mileage may vary on this. Mine is a SIM-Free model bought directly from Lenovorola in the UK. That SIM Tray sits on the bottom of the phone to the left of the USB-C port, which is, in turn, to the left of the 'right' speaker of the stereo pair. Unusually for Moto, the other one is up top, so top-firing and not front-facing doubling up the earpiece for calls in what has become the common way. So sound fires out top and bottom. We'll come to that. Next to the 'left' speaker is the now-usual Dolby Atmos branding and a couple of microphones.
On the left side of the phone is the MotoAI button, which, again, we'll come to - and on the right, volume up/down rocker and power/assistant button. All the buttons feel firm and solid. Turning it over, we find that aforementioned cloth back and a sizeable camera island, top-left, in portrait. There are four circles on it and we'll identify their functions later. The Olive version of this phone has gold accents and that continues onto the camera island which has a kind of stripey, etched look. The gold-coloured accenting continues around the perimeter of the phone, aluminium right around, with antenna cut-outs and microphones dotted here and there. It's a classy look and though there's a risk of it coming across as 'bling', I don't think it does so because of the olive green colour toning it down into a muted, pastel shade.
In terms of ingress and robustness, the phone is rated IP68, IP69 and has the MIL-STD-810H certification. The 50 Ultra nor 50 Pro had this level of protection. The 50 Ultra did have a wooden back option, by the way, which seems to now only have been ported to the top-end Razr by choice. The front glass is also more robust than previous models, now Gorilla Glass Victus 2 instead of 1. The front panel, as I said above, is all-but flat - with those classy, subtle edges - and is an LTPO AMOLED one, over the 50 Ultra's P-OLED. One big difference for me there is that it allows for the refresh rate to drop very low and enables Moto to include a proper Always on Display, like the Edge Neo phones and Razr models, rather than the older Peek Display. The refresh rate goes all the way up to 165Hz in some gaming/selected apps that can make use of it properly - the 50 Ultra this was capped at 144Hz. And the large 6.8" screen is bright (peaking at 6,200nits), colourful and vibrant as I have come to expect from Moto. The ratio is 20:9 and pixel count 1264 x 2780, returning 446ppi.
One of the things that Moto seems to have arrived with and caught up the leading pack with now is attention to detail on OS updates for phones. I think I'm right in saying that this is the very first phone which they have promised to give 7 OS updates to (5 was previous maximum with the Edge 50 Neo and ThinkPhone 25), landing on Android 16 and going all the way to Android 23, and the same for years, for security - so presumably to January 2033, which is some stretch ahead. The Edge 50 Ultra is (and was) way behind this, like most other Moto phones, with 3 OS updates and 4 years of security. If you're reading this you probably know that Motorola has a reputation for laggy updates all-round, so we'll see how they stick to these promises.
There's been quite a hike in chipset too from the 50 Ultra which had the Snapdragon 8s Gen 3, this one now very nearly top of the current pile with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5. We'll do some gaming later and see how it holds up. I haven't seen a 256GB version of the Signature, but apparently in some regions it is in the pile, most seem to be 512GB and either 12GB or 16GB RAM. This one has 512GB Storage and 16GB RAM. There's also a 1TB version, to match the 50 Ultra, but again, I haven't seen that in the UK yet. The storage across the board is UFS 4.1 (up from 4.0) so read/writes on internal storage are nice and fast - and, of course, there's no microSD Card support here so choose (if you can) your model carefully. I do think that 512GB really is enough for all-but real fringe users/cases.
The stereo speakers are very, very good. Not the absolute best I've heard, but up there with the impressive Razr 60 Ultra's. They are certainly very loud and the quality of output, tweaked with the included Dolby Atmos settings, is, yes, very, very good. Turn off the Dolby Atmos and wind the volume up to 100% and sure, it gets a bit less rich - and as usual with speakers on phones it sits more happily at about 80% volume. But yes, engage Dolby and 100% is fine. The soundstage is wide, compared to many, when up to 2ft away from the face - helped in no small part, I'm sure, by the aforementioned placing of the speakers, top and bottom rather than earpiece-front and bottom.
There's no 3.5mm audio-out for head/earphones of course, but actually, armed with a USB-C pair, the output is terrific and apparently the partnership with Bose and Qualcomm's SnapDragon Sound make it so. For those fed up with tripping over wires, there's Bluetooth 6.0 which, as we say time and again, is nothing short of fabulous these days. We have 24-bit High-Res and High-Res Wireless certification in the mix too and again, for those who want to tweak there's the usual version of Dolby Atmos - not quite the all-singing/dancing Sony Xperia version, but plenty to twiddle with to make the sound one's own. Paired up with my Marshall Monitor III set, Moto Buds Loop, Moto Buds+ or Sony XM4's the sound is phenomenal. But to be fair, as intimated above, it probably would be so with most phones these days with constant advancements in Bluetooth.
The battery is a Si-C 5,200mAh unit, a hike up from the 50 Ultra's non-Si-C 4,500mAh. On initial testing it feels as though it's pretty good, though not up to the performance of the Si-C 6,000mAh battery in my Edge 60 Pro. I guess that stands to reason, given that the latter has a bigger cell, more power-efficient chipset and less screen to drive, apart from any other factor. But yes, it is a shame that the same one couldn't have gone into the Signature to make it even better. First tests on my 10% Reading Test returns about two and a half hours, so not up there with the 'over 3 hour' brigade, but certainly far from bad and very usable.
My average use for me test certainly gets me well into Day 2 if needed, even with the Always On Display on 24/7. So, again not up there with the 2-into-3 days phones (think Moto's 'Power' branded units) but certainly not a problem for the vast majority of people. Don't forget that these are my tests, based on how I use my phone routinely. I have been applying this same series of tests now on all the phones I review for, well, decades - so even though they might not reflect your use and mileage, my playing field is level so I can comment about it in relation to my use of hundreds of devices over a long time.
We have, as mentioned above, 90W wired charging (with the right gear) which is a drop from the 50 Ultra's 125W but I think that once you get up into that territory, the difference is of little consequence. If you want fast wired charging, I'd suggest coughing up the £50 for Moto's 125W charger and be done with it. As for me, I'm happy with wireless Qi charging - which is does at the same 50W rate (with the right pad) as the 50 Ultra did, supports 10W reverse-wireless and unlike the 50 Ultra, even 5W reverse-wired. With the right wired charger, you can expect a full charge from flat in not much more than half an hour which, is, surely, fast enough for most!
I've left it long enough now to not talk about the killer-feature for me and the sole reason, had it not been here, that I wouldn't have bought the phone (over my Edge 60 Pro) over - yes, the Always On Display! It's hugely important for me and I'm annoyed and irritated if the phone I have is without. Motorola have, for some time been championing their Peek Display instead, which certainly has its merits, but with the arrival of the recent Razr devices, Edge Neo units and ThinkPhone 25 (which is really a rugged Edge 50 Neo), they came along. And a good one too. Bright, big, clear and always useful. I'm not sure why it's so important to me, perhaps I'm shallow (no, don't take a vote on it!), but being able to glance across the room to check the time, day, date, weather even - and notifications simply feels essential (for my use of phones). Some phones, apparently, released in other regions, did have LTPO displays giving Moto the confidence to put an AoD in (Edge 60 Pro in India is one, I believe) but UK releases (including my Edge 60 Pro), no chance. Many of these OEMs seem frightened of battery use if screen refresh-rates can't get down to 1Hz. Yes, I know, you can add an AoD app - and I have spoken about this in my quest - some very good, some not so good, some sipping battery, some caning it - but there's nothing like a built-into ROM one. So yes - I'm delighted with that. And for anyone who isn't bothered, they can turn it off! Wonderful choices in the Android world.
A Motorola with an Ultrasonic fingerprint scanner? Is this a first? I do think that it probably is - and not only for Motorola but also their 'mother' firm, Lenovo. The latter have plenty of scanners in laptops, but they're all capacitive ones as far as I know. So this really does seem to be a first for Lenovorola! And they're done it every bit as well as Samsung have been doing for years now. They got there in the end, it seems! Personally, I think I still prefer a capacitive scanner on the side or back of a phone, like the Razr, but if we're going in-glass, you can't beat this. It's clearly much better than the Optical one on the Edge 60 Neo (even though that was certainly good-enough) and takes it all up a notch. Hopefully, Ultrasonic (and AoD) will now been used more widely by Moto, even in non-flagships.
Connectivity seems as sound as a pound in my testing. Wi-Fi 7 is present again making connection to various routers perfectly good, GPS tested with various mapping and tracking services/apps and all locking quickly and holding on as expected, NFC I tested down at Tesco and it worked like a charm and Bluetooth, as I said earlier, works really well - the range seems good with my test gear too. There's UWB present too for those who can use it and also the same USB-C 3.1 Gen2, OTG, DisplayPort 1.4 as the 50 Ultra - meaning that however good wireless might be, it can be cabled up to a TV, Monitor or PC etc. to get streaming anything you like to anything you like even without a network. Including Smart Connect.
The MotoAI button is on the left side, just in the right place, not confusing the right side near to the power button (looking at you Nothing Phone)! The button can be assigned actions for press-hold and double-press. Press and hold for MotoAI (or nothing), double-press for Update me, Take notes (or nothing). You can assign the power button on the other side for MotoAI if you like, or the usual power menu or (other) digital assistant (whatever your default is). On all of these there's now a slider for press-and-hold duration preference. You can also assign Android's own Quick Launch (so double-tap the back of the phone) to anything, pretty much, including (yet) another way into MotoAI - they want us to use it! I've written about MotoAI before and I think most of it is pretty much the same since I did, so do follow this link for a rundown of the features and how it all works.
I have written about Smart Connect before (and Ready For before it) and working with a PC this is where Moto leapfrogged Samsung's DeX by continuing to support Windows software. Install Smart Connect on Windows and you have a full Desktop computing environment driven by your phone. Now, one could argue that if you've got Windows in front of you and universal tools like Motorola's Phone Link, Google's Messages for Web and Quick Share, why do you need the Windows software (in terms of productivity and functionality). And this may have been the point that Samsung got to as they claimed few people were using their Windows software. But I like Smart Connect! Long may it live, I say!
Inside this, we have a Messages portal, a Screen Share (wither Mirror or separate instance), using the phone as a webcam for webinars or whatever instead of the likely rubbish one in a laptop, creating a complete Mobile Desktop able to hijack the mouse and keyboard, using the phone as a Hotspot for getting connected, file management on the phone with hot-drag-drop, Cross Control to use other devices around the periphery of the PC with free-flowing mouse and keyboard hot-swapping between devices (like Second Screen for Windows), an echo of the photos on the phone, notifications, even app streaming - so run an app on the phone but control it on the PC - and loads more! It's a veritable playground of opportunity and I love it!
We continue to get all those good gesture functions with Moto of course, face unlock, lift to wake, 3-finger screenshot, chop-chop for torch, twist-twist for camera, sidebar with pop-outs, split-screen, pick up to silence, Attentive Display, fairly deep personalisation of fonts, icons, themes, colours, lock screen clocks, fingerprint animation, wallpaper and more. Long-press the home screen and enter a world of tweaks, personalisation, widgets and choices. It's just great to see someone continuing with the way things were, with only small adjustments for the better, not following the herd. (I'll come to that shortly!)
There is one enhancement over previous with the lock screen clocks, which used to give 3 options, but now there's 13 and each can be adjusted for font and colour as well. Moto continue their focus on privacy and security with a plethora of options, scans and adjustments. Secure folder, App lock, SIM lock, PIN pad scramble, scammer stuff, emergency alerts, eye protection stuff, Digital Wellbeing, various modes and so on. Some of this is Android's own with Android 16 but it's also clear that Moto have added their own suite as well and on top of that.
What I particularly like about the UI though, even with Android 16 onboard, is that Moto are not following the pack, like other sheep after Apple features. An annoying number of (particularly) far-east OEMs are including little features like Control Centres and dual drop-panels for Notifications, illegible battery percentage stuck inside a stupid little battery icon and a load more. Moto resist this and keep to their own design language which deserves huge kudos. Well done Moto. I do like some of what Google has done with Material 3 Expression, particularly on Pixels, but it's clear from Moto's implementation of (especially) Android 16 that OEMs can go/keep going their own way if they want to. Hurrah!
Now to my least favourite part of any review I do - the cameras! Unpopular as this might be as I know that for most tech reviewers (and possibly users) it's at the other end of the priorities list! But they often forget the 1,001 other things phones can do and only seem interested in cameras, driven by the industry's focus. Cameras that are usually outgunned in almost every department by a proper compact camera, much cheaper. Anyway, here we go! The main camera is a 50MP f/1.6 unit with OIS, it's supported by a 50MP f2.4 3x periscope optical zoom, again with OIS, a 50MP f/2 wide-angle lens with autofocus and for video it can shoot 8K@30fps, 4K@120fps and 1080p@240fps. There's a 50MP f/2 Selfie with autofocus and for video the Selfie can shoot 4K@60fps and 1080p@240fps. So that's the tech-spec out of the way!
I think that the one standout feature that I was impressed with over the array of other Camera options was the 'gimbal' type function which can be used for shake-free video recording. They call it Horizon Lock and it's designed to keep the video footage perfectly, well, nearly perfectly level even if the phone is rotated, jogged or tilted during shooting. It can be used in landscape or portrait in 4K@60fps or even 8K@30fps. It's baked directly into Moto's Camera App so available to any user of the phone. I don't think that it's on any other Moto phone yet, but yes - impressive. We shall see later this year how much, if at all, the forthcoming Honor Robot phone pulls off the same trick with a sticky-out element instead of built-in, like here. I have to say that even as someone who never shoots video these days, when I was testing it, it really is rather good and well executed.
Otherwise, the camera setup is not really that different from the 50 Ultra's - tweaks and improvements here and there. I do like the simple and clean Camera app by Moto here, as usual, offering an uncluttered view with the sliding 'row' of shooting options with 'More' at the end for less-used items. There's also an option to open up the camera in the last shooting mode rather than going back to the default each time, which is a nice touch missing from many. You can drill down into settings for loads of tweaks like those hideous watermarks (otherwise known as manufacturer adverts on every photo), digital processing of long zooms, auto-capture (like smiles/palm triggers) and more. The Pro mode lets you control most of the elements manually and in Portrait mode there's even an f-stop adjustment for aperture. It's all smoke and mirrors of course, software processing.
More on the camera app with Night Vision, which in my testing here seems to do a decent enough job for when stuck, turning apparent pitch black into at least something to see, Time lapse, long exposure, Panorama - you know the routine. The close-focus always used to be best with the wide-angle lens with autofocus on Moto phones, which it can still do here, but to be honest, for my uses, I think you get a better result now via the telephoto lens. Certainly closer, if maybe not as good quality (for those likely to use photos for anything more than social media sharing). And this is clearly what this is all about with these consumer cameras-in-phones. They know that 99% of photos taken will just be posted online and viewed on tiny screens, so it really doesn't matter much. If you want more than that, buy a camera!
In order to give you the best overview (and not to upset readers with my negativity), well, better than from me anyway, I shall do my usual trick of sending you to our friends over at GSMArena and their blow-by-blow review with samples aplenty which starts here. Do please support GSMArena as they provide great data and a relentless review cycle of anything that is released globally and in China if they can, and what's coming, as well as all the top, current industry news. The short version is that they are pretty impressed with the main cameras for stills, but think that the video could be improved. But dig in and read for yourself - or watch their review video.
So, in summary, what we have here is a true Moto flagship again, the first slab phone one since the Edge 50 Ultra. Some of the other mid-range phones in the interim have been great - but they're not flagships. This is. And it feels so. It's very fast, the battery is very good, the screen is gorgeous, there's a proper AoD, the camera setup, I'd argue, would exceed the expectation by a long way, of 98% of users, the innovative design of the back of the phone makes it unique out there, the Olive colour is lovely, it's robust and certificated for such, the AI is smart and fun to use, loads of storage, loads of RAM, 7 years of support with updates, very, very good speakers and wired audio output, the wonderful Smart Connect (even wired if needed), great connectivity, a wonderfully 'traditional' UI and even Moto's first ultrasonic fingerprint scanner that works beautifully. What's not to like, I wonder!
Well, some may not like the price at £899, but actually, given all the above, I honestly do think that's a fair price. It's a beast of a phone that pretty much does everything - and if you want to save a few pennies, yes, Moto and Lenovo often have sales - but even on launch the phone was bundled with a Moto Watch Fit, Moto Buds Loop and Moto Tag. I think the deal has now been changed to include the newer Moto Watch and oh, yes - hang on - I forgot to mention the Moto Pen Ultra! Probably because nobody seems to be able to get hold of one yet, including me! It's costs another fifty quid but it does look nifty. It's Bluetooth, comes in a sleek case, USB-C charging, can be used on the Signature or forthcoming Razr Fold, apparently has palm rejection and lets you annotate over the top of pretty much anything, I think! When I can get my hands on one I shall be sure to update my Blog here with findings.
So far, I'm loving my Signature - might even be the best Moto ever. And I've used most of them over the years! I'm unlikely to part with mine and look forward to 7 years of fun and productivity. Recommended.