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For reasons I'll not get into I'm seriously considering dropping my smart phone and purchasing a feature phone for use for at least a few years.

I'm looking for a simple phone but I'm not completely ready to just give up all features that come standard with all current smart devices. Specifically, I have a wife and a couple of kids and their is something to be appreciated about having the ability to pull your phone out of your pocket and take a good (enough) photo for family history.

However, I'm not interested in having a devices that REQUIRES a data plan, has an app store, has a built in GPS, etc. I'd like just a simple phone with the basics (voice & texting) and a rather decent camera, that can be used with most carriers in the US.

Does such a device exist? From my own personal research, you have two options. You can get a sophisticated, capable smartphone with more-than-you-need functionality, or you can get a really, really basic phone that does nothing more than offer voice and text and MAYBE an MP3 player baked in.

I'll also say that cost doesn't matter. I'd rather not spend $600 on a feature phone but if one exists that's a bit rugged (e.g. can realistically work for 3+ years), has an exceptional camera and has a responsive UI... I could probably convince myself into buying said device.

EDIT - October 2018

Well, I never got that feature phone years ago but that's partly because I never found the one I was looking for. I am still interested in such a phone, if it even exists.

I changed the title to reflect that it needs to work in "North America" since Canada largely uses the same general technology specifications (as well as I'm aware.) That said, I'm not opposed to importing a good phone from, say, Japan. It's my understanding that the Japanese culture generally has an appreciation for feature phones more than western cultures. If they have phones available that are basically a really good, high quality phone+text+camera setup, I'd gladly import it to the US, assuming it should work with most carriers.

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  • Personally liked the Samsung Alias 2 back in the day. Camera doesn't compare to today's smartphones, but it might serve your purpose. And it had a microSD to easily transfer photos. Another option might be get the basic talk/text phone and an iPod touch for photo purposes and carry both.
    – TronicZomB
    Mar 30, 2016 at 19:16
  • Assuming money is not the issue, why not just get a smartphone then? Many don't require a data plan and are sold separately. If you don't want to get tracked, get a repair shop to remove the GPS.
    – Pacerier
    Aug 29, 2022 at 23:46
  • @Pacerier In my experience (at least in the USA) that's not an option. First, in 2022, most major carriers no longer offer plans without data. Second, even if they do, you can still connect to the internet, but they charge you a MASSIVE fee for your data usage, so it actually makes the problem worse. Phones today are expected to have data plans. I eventually just got a dumb flip phone. I'm not unhappy with it either.
    – RLH
    Aug 31, 2022 at 11:45
  • @RLH, Nope. I've just bought an Android from target for $25 +taxes. No plan needed. No further charges. Wifi works well. I believe they have sold such phones like since forever.
    – Pacerier
    Apr 11, 2023 at 23:49

5 Answers 5

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I've been looking for the same thing. The major challenge is finding a good camera on a current feature phone. The best option seems to be camera phones from around 2009-2011, like a refurbished Sony Ericsson Cybershot (the C905 or C903, say) or (since the OS is unsupported, basically turning them into feature phones) a refurbished Nokia 808, N8, or N86.

The C905, C903, N8 and N86 are readily available on Ebay, presumably because many more were produced than ended up being sold as smartphones took over. All these phones only support 3G, so if you're on a 4G-only network you're out of luck with them. For 3G, you'll also generally have to ask the seller if they have the North American version with HSDPA 850/1900 or the international version with HSDPA 2100. Sometimes sellers don't know, don't care, or don't get back to you.

While the picture quality on these phones is great, the video capabilities of these phones are poor by today's standards, at 240p, 320p or 480p. Only the N8 will get you 720p.

I suspect that phones like this aren't available now because a good camera is expensive, whether or not a phone is attached. I don't think there has ever been a high-quality digital camera or camera phone sold for less than a few hundred dollars new. The number of people who are willing to spend a few hundred dollars on a feature phone to get a great camera with it are probably few and far between now.

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I've been looking for the same thing. Ditto with the kids and camera. The highest feature phone I could find was the 5 MP Nokia 2780. Which is not very good. There is a burgeoning market on minimalist phones but they are still smart phones, just have the addictive apps removed and more privacy on some. I am not sure I buy the camera is too expensive bit. I just bought a Unihertz Atom which has a 16 MP camera in it for $230. It is still a smart phone with all the different sensors, scanners, wifi, bluetooth, etc... If they are making that price point I don't see how they can't use a camera like that minus all the sensors and the beefy cpu and drop it in to a plain feature phone. More likely the carriers are driving what is being developed and is on the market.

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Reliance JioPhone 2

It might still be early days, but the Reliance JioPhone 2 feature phone from India might soon become a viable option for the smartphone haters among us.

As a matter of fact, Reliance is opening up shop in Estonia, taking out a European e-residency. Provided the appropriate LTE bands are supported, such a European JioPhone 2 might be perfectly usable in the US.

Reliance Jio is expected to become the 10th largest phone brand in the world.

As for the operating system, the closed-source KaiOS, runs the Linux kernel and happens to be a far descendent of Firefox OS. KaiOS brings support for 4G LTE E, GPS and Wi-Fi with HTML5-based apps and longer battery life to non-touch devices with optimised user interface, less memory and energy consumption.

However, be aware that Google invested $22M in this feature phone operating system. By investing in KaiOS, Google ensures that core apps like Search, Maps, YouTube, and Assistant reach feature phone users. Google likely hopes that those users will grow dependent on the services, and that these users will eventually upgrade to Android smartphones.

Reliance JioPhone 2

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I was looking for the same basic phone + good camera and they dont exist. Even now in 2021 they don't exist - STILL they give you idiot VGA camera and expect you to be grateful. 2MP is highest on some of the current Nokias or similar. Why?

The highest resolution camera in a basic phone is the 3.15MP camera in the Samsung B550h - I bought when I first saw it in 2016 and it gives reasonable pictures though not great (slow lens) but way better than VGA. i.e. 2048 x 1536 res.

I use this in the UK but it may well work in the US - check the GSM specs online.

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The Cosmo Communicator (top) and Gemini PDA (bottom) offer you a choice of Android or Linux, and have quite a bit more for you than JioPhones. A colleague just received the Cosmo and is very happy with its build quality.

Cosmo Communicator

Gemini PDA

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