Samsung Galaxy S10+ Galaxy S10+ Review

The Samsung Galaxy S10+ scores a near-perfect 99/100 for features but its performance lags in the 69th percentile. At $1000, is this classic still a good buy?

Screen Size 6.4
Processor Snapdragon 855
RAM 8 GB
Storage 128 GB
Rear Camera Mp 12
Front Camera Mp 10
Battery Capacity Mah 4100
Five G No
Operating System Android 9.0 Pie
Samsung Galaxy S10+ Galaxy S10+ cellphone
58.1 综合评分

The 30-Second Version

The Galaxy S10+ scores a near-perfect 99th percentile for features, keeping the beloved headphone jack and microSD slot. However, its performance sits at a middling 69th percentile, and it costs a full $1000. You're buying a classic, not a current contender.

Overview

The Samsung Galaxy S10+ is a classic that still holds up. It scores in the 99th percentile for features, which means it's packed with stuff modern phones often skip, like a headphone jack and expandable storage. That's a big deal if you're tired of dongles and cloud storage fees. With a 93rd percentile camera and display, plus a 93rd percentile battery, it's a well-rounded package that feels premium. The catch? Its raw performance lands in the 69th percentile, so it won't keep up with the latest flagships in a speed test.

Performance

The Snapdragon 855 and 8GB of RAM put this phone's performance in the 69th percentile. That's perfectly fine for everyday tasks, social media, and even some gaming, but it's not going to win any benchmark trophies today. Where it really shines is in the details. The 6.4" Quad HD+ Dynamic AMOLED display is in the 93rd percentile for a reason—it's vibrant and sharp at 522 ppi. And that 4100mAh battery, also in the 93rd percentile, should get most users through a full day without a sweat.

Performance Percentiles

Build 88
Camera 93.7
Battery 90.2
Display 91.4
Feature 99.1
Performance 67.8
Connectivity 75.7
Social Proof 72.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Feature-packed: 99th percentile feature score thanks to the headphone jack and microSD slot. 99th
  • Excellent display: 93rd percentile screen with a sharp 3040x1440 resolution. 94th
  • Strong battery life: 93rd percentile battery rating from a 4100mAh cell. 91th
  • Versatile camera system: 93rd percentile camera with a triple-lens rear setup. 90th
  • Premium build: 87th percentile build quality feels solid in the hand.

Cons

  • Aging chipset: Performance is only in the 69th percentile, lagging behind newer phones.
  • No 5G: Connectivity score is 76th percentile, missing modern 5G support.
  • Older Android version: Ships with Android 9 Pie, which is several versions behind.
  • Hefty price for age: At $1000, it's priced like a current flagship but isn't one.

The Word on the Street

4.2/5 (4 reviews)
👍 Buyers appreciate that the phone arrived as a brand new unit, not a refurbished model.
👍 Users on CDMA networks like Verizon confirm the unlocked phone works with their service.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Screen Size 6.4
Resolution 3040 x 1440

Performance

Processor Qualcomm Snapdragon 855
Processor Model Snapdragon 855
CPU Cores 8
RAM 8 MB
Storage 128 GB
Expandable Yes

Camera

Main Camera 12
Camera Count 3
Front Camera 10
Video 4K

Battery & Charging

Battery 4100 Wh
Connector 3.1, Type-C 1.0 Reversible Conne

Connectivity

5G No
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi
Bluetooth Yes
NFC Yes
USB 3.1, Type-C 1.0 Reversible Conne
SIM Nano SIM

Design & Build

Weight 0.2 kg / 0.4 lbs
Fingerprint In-display
Face Recognition No
OS Android 9.0 Pie
Headphone Jack Yes

Value & Pricing

At $1000, the value proposition is tricky. You're paying current flagship money for a phone with last-gen performance. The high feature, camera, and display scores are great, but that 69th percentile performance is a real anchor on the price. You're essentially paying a premium for the headphone jack and expandable storage in a premium body. If those are must-haves, it might be worth it. If raw speed matters more, your money goes further elsewhere.

US$1,000 Unavailable

vs Competition

Compared to something like the Google Pixel 10, you'll trade camera computational photography and a newer OS for the S10+'s headphone jack and expandable storage. Against the OnePlus 15, you'll lose a ton of performance and likely get a worse software update policy, but gain those classic features. The Samsung Galaxy S25 FE is a more direct comparison—it'll have better performance and support, but likely a plastic build and might still lack the headphone jack. It's a battle of modern specs versus classic convenience.

Spec Samsung Galaxy S10+ Galaxy S10+ Samsung Samsung Galaxy S26 SM-S948UZKEXAA Motorola Moto G PB6V0014US Google Google Pixel 10 GA09899-US OnePlus OnePlus 15 5011116281 Apple Unlocked iPhone 15/15 Plus MTLY3LL/A
Screen Size 6.4 6.9 6.7 6.3 6.8 6.1
Display Type - OLED AMOLED OLED OLED OLED
Refresh Rate - 120 120 120 120 60
Processor Snapdragon 855 Snapdragon® 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy Snapdragon® 6 Gen 3 Mobile Platform 3.78 GHz 8 Elite Gen 5 A16
RAM (GB) 8 12 8 16 16 -
Storage (GB) 128 512 1024 256 512 128
Rear Camera Mp 12 200 50 50 50 48
Front Camera Mp 10 12 32 42 32 -
Battery Capacity Mah 4100 5000 5000 4870 7300 -
Charging Wattage - 60 68 - - -
Wireless Charging - true true false - -
Five (g) false true true true true true
Water Resistance - IP68 IP68 IP68 IP69 -
Operating System Android 9.0 Pie Android 16 Android 15 Android 16 Android 16 iPadOS 17
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Common Questions

Q: Is this a new phone or a refurbished model?

Based on customer feedback, units sold are typically new, not refurbished. However, always check the specific listing details from the seller.

Q: Will this work on Verizon?

Yes. The unlocked Galaxy S10+ supports both GSM and CDMA networks, making it fully compatible with Verizon's CDMA network.

Q: How does the performance hold up in 2024?

Its performance is in the 69th percentile, which is adequate for daily tasks but noticeably slower than current mid-range and flagship chips. Don't expect top-tier gaming or heavy app performance.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this phone if you need cutting-edge speed or long-term software support. Its 69th percentile performance score means it's already behind the curve, and it launched with Android 9. Gamers, power users, and anyone who wants their phone to feel fast for years should look at newer models. Also, avoid it if 5G is important, as it's a 4G-only device.

Verdict

We can only recommend the Galaxy S10+ if the headphone jack and expandable storage are non-negotiable for you and you're okay with performance that's good, but not great, by today's standards. Its 99th percentile feature score is unique, but that comes at the cost of paying $1000 for 69th percentile speed. For most people, a modern mid-ranger or a previous-year flagship will offer better performance and support for the same or less money.