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Motorola Moto G13 Review

A truly budget phone with a great design and solid battery life

In This Article

In This Article

Verdict

Verdict

The Moto G13 meets the criteria of a cheap phone while looking good and offering excellent battery life. For under £130, you shouldn’t expect the kind of performance that’ll challenge flagships, but the G13 is well-made – even with corners cut regarding display resolution and the camera setup.

Pros

Cons

Key Features

Introduction

Motorola has spent the last few years cultivating a sterling reputation as one of thebest budget smartphonemakers around, and the Moto G13 feels almost predictable as a continuation of that trend.

For around £130, it offers a big display, a bloat-free Android experience, and dual SIM capabilities, making it an ideal pickup for enterprise use or a less tech-savvy loved one.

There are caveats, of course. The camera is basic, lacking in punch and detail, and the display’s 720p resolution is a shame but not unexpected at this price point – especially for an LCD panel.

Still, battery life is great, and as I mentioned in my review of theMoto G54 5G, Motorola really does have a knack for offering good-looking devices at accessible price points.

Design

Without meaning to date myself, there was a time when phones in this price range were plasticky and more than a little cheap feeling, but the Moto G13 continues the manufacturer’s tradition of making entry-level devices that look mid-range and better.

The G13 achieves this through relatively thin bezels (I’ll get to the display panel itself shortly) and a slick, almost matte back that does a pretty good job of staying fingerprint-free. The use of a plastic frame and rear is unsurprising for the price, but it does mean that the G13 is relatively lightweight for its size at 184g, although it is a little thick at 8.2mm.

My review unit is the Rose Gold option, but the ‘Rose’ is so subtle it feels closer to silver. It’s also available in Matte Charcoal or Blue Lavender, too, three rather attractive finishes for such a budget phone.

At the bottom, you’ll find a speaker grille and a USB-C port, and while there’s no speaker grille at the top, the phone can use the earpiece as a second speaker to really hammer home that stereo sound in supported videos and games. There’s also a headphone jack – remember those?

The left side is clear, aside from a SIM tray, and the right-hand side has a volume rocker and the on/off button, which doubles as a fairly reliable fingerprint scanner.

There’s facial unlocking, too, facilitated by the hole-punch camera central at the top of the screen, but that’s not as secure as the likes of Face ID and thus can’t be used to authenticate payments.

Screen

Cheaper phones can have much larger screens these days, so perhaps the 6.5-inch display on offer here shouldn’t come as a surprise. It’s not going to blow your socks off, with an LCD panel that lacks punch for pretty much everything, although it does nicely showcase Google’s love of in-app primary colours.

The90Hz refresh rateis nice to see at this price point, offering smooth animations when swiping and scrolling, but I’d have liked more than a 720p resolution. Still, it’s big, and that’ll make it ideal for many older users who are understandably more interested in readability than pixel count.

More than any other recent Motorola I’ve tested, though, I found the auto brightness to be a little tame – so much so that I ended up cranking it to the max manually on regular occasions.

Bezels are nice and slim here considering the budget focus, and there’s a chin at the bottom to help with swiping up – although there’s also the option for the classic Android software “buttons” of yesteryear, too.

Cameras

As with the Moto G54 5G, there’s no Ultrawide to be found here – it’s a 50MP primary camera and a 2MP macro lens. I’m still puzzled as to why macro keeps finding its way onto devices, but given it’s a 2MP sensor, I’d imagine it’s cheaper than adding an ultrawide despite the latter’s popularity.

The primary camera, as with the G54, is a 50MP option that hits pretty much all of the notes you’d want it to in decent lighting conditions. It’s not great, but it’s not bad; it just feels a little flat (even more so when viewed back on the device itself), although, as you can see from Goku, there’s a decent amount of detail captured.

It also delivers pretty decent colour accuracy, which is something many phones in this range struggle with.

Less impressive is the macro lens which, yet again, remains a head-scratcher. Details are too soft, even in what could be considered ‘ideal’ conditions, and it makes me wonder why you’d bother using it at all.

For selfies, the G13 is decent to a point. The 8MP camera is good enough, and arguably does a better job with skin tone than many rivals, but the portrait mode’s bokeh blurring leaves a lot to be desired, particularly when used indoors.

Videographers look away; it’s 1080p at 30fps here, and it’s not great, particularly when moving at any speed.

Performance

There’s a 12nm MediaTek Helio G85 chip and 4GB of RAM powering the Moto G13, and while it’s not offering anywhere near the level of power of even some mid-rangers, it’ll do its damnedest to keep up with the majority of your day-to-day tasks.

I’ve had no issues flicking through apps, both from Google itself and third-party sources, and benchmarks show that it’s more capable than the similarly pricedNokia C32andTCL 40 SE, but the low-power chipset can’t really handle gaming.

Sadly, the Moto G13 isn’t built for gaming on the go, but if that’s not of interest, then it’ll hardly be a dealbreaker. It’s not that youcan’tgame, it’s more that the GPU will struggle to keep up with you outside of simpler titles like Marvel Snap.

Where the G13 has the more expensive G54 beat, however, is a pair of stereo speakers. They’re not regularly available on phones in this price range, with manufacturers (Motorola included) tending to opt for a basic mono speaker at the base. Thankfully, the G13’s audio is louder, more nuanced, and more balanced with the inclusion of Dolby-powered stereo support.

Software

Motorola has kept theAndroid 13install here very trim, too – there are a couple of apps preinstalled, but for the most part, this is as close to a stock Android installation as you’re likely to get at this price range, and it’s very welcome, leaving much more of the 128GB internal storage available.

There are a couple of games, Mistplay, TikTok, and LinkedIn, but everything else is as stock as you like.

The good news is that Motorola has confirmed that the G13 will eventually get the upgrade toAndroid 14, but the bad news is that this is the one and only software upgrade coming to the budget blower. If software longevity is important, you might want to splash out on something a little more expensive.

Battery life

5,000mAh batteries appear to be in vogue at the moment, and the G13 is packing one too. Based on my experience, with the combination of a low-res 720p display and a processor that won’t use much power, you can expect around 36 hours of use on a single charge.

Naturally, you’ll get less if you start using it literally all day long, but for average users, it’ll serve you well throughout work and on your commute each way, too.

There’s a charger in the box (imagine that!), but there’s a 10W limit, so don’t expect rapid charging. In fact, it takes almost 3 hours to charge entirely, which definitely puts it in the “charge overnight” category.

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Should you buy it?

You want a cheap phone with a big screen

The 6.5-inch Moto G13 looks great, making it ideal as a first phone for a style-conscious child or as a handy second phone for enterprise.

You want a good-quality display

While the Moto G13’s display is large, the LCD tech means it’s not as bright or vibrant as some OLED alternatives.

Final Thoughts

It’s hard to get excited about the Moto G13, but that’s not to say it isn’t well worth a look for younger, older, or enterprise users.

It’s got just enough grunt to beat similarly priced phones from Nokia and TCL with enough power to get what you need done and still have enough juice left for a bit of YouTube in the evenings – and it’ll look good doing it.

How we test

We test every mobile phone we review thoroughly. We use industry-standard tests to compare features properly and we use the phone as our main device over the review period. We’ll always tell you what we find and we never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in ourethics policy.

Used as a main phone for a week

Thorough camera testing in a variety of conditions

Tested and benchmarked using respected industry tests and real-world data

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FAQs

Yes, you’ll get a 10W charger in the box.

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Lloyd is a freelance contributor for Trusted Reviews, and his work can be seen across the internet with pieces about tech, fitness, and gaming. He’s also Editor in Chief for GGRecon.com, and in his fr…

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We also expect our journalists to follow clear ethical standards in their work. Our staff members must strive for honesty and accuracy in everything they do. We follow the IPSO Editors’ code of practice to underpin these standards.

Why trust our journalism?

Founded in 2003, Trusted Reviews exists to give our readers thorough, unbiased and independent advice on what to buy.

Today, we have millions of users a month from around the world, and assess more than 1,000 products a year.

Editorial independence means being able to give an unbiased verdict about a product or company, with the avoidance of conflicts of interest. To ensure this is possible, every member of the editorial staff follows a clear code of conduct.

We also expect our journalists to follow clear ethical standards in their work. Our staff members must strive for honesty and accuracy in everything they do. We follow the IPSO Editors’ code of practice to underpin these standards.