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Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Google Pixel 9 Pro XL: Clash of titans

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra colors
Nirave Gondhia / Digital Trends

Now that the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra has been out for a month, you might be enticed to get the top tier model in the latest line of the flagship Samsung Galaxy series. It’s accompanied by its trusty S Pen, carved with beautifully rounded corners, and every feature is powered by Galaxy AI, including the distraction-free Now Brief and picture-perfect ProScaler. Meanwhile, the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL, the first XL phone in the Google Pixel series since 2019, has a larger-than-life screen and bears a redesigned camera bar.

Both phones run on Android, but they’re worlds apart in terms of appearance and the features they have. But which one will you choose? Let us save you the time-consuming dilemma with this side-by-side guide to help you make this important decision.

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Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Pixel 9 Pro XL: specs

Specs Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Google Pixel 9 Pro XL
Size 162 x 77.6 x 8.2mm 162.8 x 76.6 x 8.5 mm
Weight 218 grams 221 grams
Screen 6.9-inch QHD+ Dynamic AMOLED 2X

1440 x 3120 pixels

Super Smooth 120Hz refresh rate (1~120Hz)    

2,600 nits peak brightness

6.8-inch Super Actua LTPO

1344 x 2992 pixels

1-120Hz Dynamic refresh rate
HDR10+

3,000 nits peak brightness

Operating system Android 15

One UI 7

Android 14 (upgradeable to Android 15)
RAM and storage 256GB, 512GB, 1TB

12GB RAM

128GB, 256GB, 512GB, 1TB

16GB RAM

Processor Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy Google Tensor G4
Camera Rear:

200-megapixel primary

50MP ultrawide

50MP telephoto, 5x optical zoom

10MP telephoto, 3x optical zoom

Front:

12MP

Rear:

50MP primary, f/1.68 aperture, 1/1.31-inch sensor size, OIS

48MP ultrawide, f/1.7, 123° field of view

48MP telephoto, f/2.8, 5x optical zoom, 1/2.55-inch sensor

Front:

42MP

Connectivity Wi-Fi 7

Bluetooth 5.4

Wi-Fi 8

Bluetooth 5.3

Water resistance IP68 IP68
Battery & charging 5,000mAh battery

45W fast charging

Fast Wireless Charging 2.0

Wireless PowerShare

Qi wireless charging

5,060mAh battery

37W wired charging

23W wireless charging

Reverse wireless charging

Colors Titanium Silverblue, Titanium Black, Titanium Whitesilver and Titanium Grey Obsidian Black, Porcelain White, Hazel Green, Rose Quartz Pink
Price Starting at $1,300 Starting at $1,099
Review 4 out of 5 stars 4.5 out of 5 stars

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Pixel 9 Pro XL: design and display

The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra's screen.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra comes in Titanium Black, Titanium Silverblue, Titanium Gray, and Titanium Whitesilver, and it has taken on rounded corners instead of adopting the sharp and pointy edges of the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra, making the phone look less like a tiny discount store notebook and more like its lower-tier counterparts. The rounded corners also make the phone easier to grab, as they won’t make as much of a dent into your skin as its predecessor may have after holding it for hours. The Google Pixel 9 Pro XL, which is painted in Porcelain White, Hazel Green, Obsidian Black, and Rose Quartz Pink, has more rounded corners than the Galaxy S25 Ultra, as well as a redesigned camera bar, satin matte back, and metal frame.

The screens match both of their respectively beautiful curves, and have beautifully different displays to go with them. The Galaxy S25 has a 6.9-inch QHD+ Dynamic AMOLED 2X display with a high resolution of 1440 x 3120 pixels and a peak brightness of 2,600 nits, complimented by the Super Smooth 120Hx refresh rate. The Now Brief feature, where you get news, weather, and social media updates before you even open those apps, really sells it. Meanwhile, the Pixel 9 Pro XL has a slightly shorter 6.8-inch Super Actua display, a slightly lower resolution of 1344 x 2992 pixels, and a 120Hz Dynamic refresh rate with a peak brightness of 3,000 nits. The 400 nit difference in brightness is difficult to believe when the Galaxy S25 Ultra has a higher pixel count and makes every photo and video look like Oscar gold with ProScaler.

Winner: Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Pixel 9 Pro XL: performance

Pixel Studio app running on the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL.
Google Pixel Studio app Joe Maring / Digital Trends

Nothing puts phones in a fierce competition better than their performance. The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra is operated by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, helping it run at a frequency of 4.32GHz to enhance CPU and GPU performance to lower the power consumption as you run multiple apps without overheating the phone. Playing games at their highest settings doesn’t make the phone feel as hot as a sidewalk on a summer day either, which make it a massive jump from the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 in the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra.

Meanwhile, the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL has the Tensor G4 chip, which clocks the speed of phone operation at 3.10GHz. That’s not exactly an impressive operating speed, especially since its vapor chamber is just as big if not bigger than the one in the Google Pixel 9 Pro proper, and it has 16GB of RAM, which should be enough to justify a microchip that runs on an even frequency with the Snapdragon 8 Elite. And even then, the speed will still throttle after a certain point. Samsung takes this slice of the cake for Snapdragon alone.

Winner: Samsung Galaxy S25

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Pixel 9 Pro XL: battery and charging

The USB port on the Galaxy S25 Ultra Magnetic Charging Cover attached to the phone in the hand
Nirave Gondhia / Digital Trends

Another thing to consider when choosing between the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra and the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL is how fast the phone should charge. The former phone houses a 5,000mAh battery that supports 45W wired charging and 15W wireless charging, as well as Fast Charging 2.0, Wireless PowerShare, and Qi2 wireless charging, while the latter has a slightly bigger battery — 5,060mAh — and only supports 37W wired charging and 23W wireless charging.

The Pixel 9 Pro XL seems to have gotten the short end of the stick in terms of charging speeds despite its battery being close to the Galaxy S25 Ultra’s in size, yet they both have the ability to charge other phones and wearables with reverse wireless charging. In our review of the Pixel 9 Pro XL, we noted that the battery tends to last most of the day, depending on how heavy the usage is. Prolonged screen time plus gaming gives you nearly 10% of battery life left over by the end of the day, while less screen time leaves you with nearly 50% of battery life by the time you go to bed. The Galaxy S25 Ultra’s battery life lasts two days if you only use three hours of screen time per day and don’t play any games on it, and the 45W charger fills the battery up to 50% in 20 minutes and 75% in 30 minutes.

Winner: Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Pixel 9 Pro XL: cameras

Someone using the Camera app on a Pixel 9 Pro XL.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

This category has both phones vying to be a photographer’s or content creator’s best friend. The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra’s rear camera has two 50-megapixel cameras, one of which is ultrawide with 5x optical zoom, and one 10MP camera with a 3x optical zoom range, plus a 200MP sensor, while the selfie camera has a 12-megapixel lens. The Google Pixel 9 Pro XL’s cameras are almost evenly balanced, with the rear camera bearing two 48MP lens — one ultrawide and the other telephoto with 5x optical zoom — and a 5oMP primary lens, and a 42MP selfie camera.

The Galaxy S25 Ultra’s ultra-wide camera is four times more powerful than that of the Galaxy S24 Ultra, which was 12MP and made for an interesting experience of taking great pictures in various lighting conditions, but also frustrating and sometimes frustrating with close-up shots making the main camera trigger focus enhancer mode and dampen the depth of field. However, photos taken on the S25 Ultra vary in quality, depending on how far you zoom the camera in. If you zoom in at 3x or 5x, the pictures come out amazing, but anywhere between 10x and 100x and they’re all so pixelated not even ProScaler can enhance them. It does help you remove background noise with the Audio Eraser feature, but that depends on the situation, so it may not be used too often. The Pixel 9 Pro XL’s cameras did considerably well with the balanced optics, especially with the main camera doing as much of the heavy lifting as the secondary cameras of zooming in up to 30x and acting as the macro camera to get the tiniest details looking pretty.

Winner: Google Pixel 9 Pro XL

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Pixel 9 Pro XL: software and updates

The Now Brief icon on the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra's home screen.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra runs Android 15 and One UI 7 out of the box. The dual software enables everything to run smoothly in conjunction with Galaxy AI and the Snapdragon 8 Elite. The Now Brief helps to organize your life a little faster than you can jot down your to-do list, and the microchip allows every program you’re running to react faster. It will receive seven years of Android updates and security updates from Samsung.

The Google Pixel 9 Pro XL comes with Android 14, but it can be upgraded to Android 15, which has been out for nearly four months now. The software is relatively user-friendly in terms of what AI can do. When you check the weather on the Pixel Weather app, the AI Weather Report summarizes the forecast in one sentence so you’ll know more about how the day will play out than what the chart tells you. And you can group every screenshot into different folders based on their context. It will also receive seven years of Android updates, along with security patches and occasional feature drops.

Winner: Samsung Galaxy S25 Plus

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Pixel 9 Pro XL: price and availability

The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra is now available starting at $1,300. The Google Pixel 9 Pro XL is available now, starting at $1,099.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra vs. Pixel 9 Pro XL: which should you buy?

A person holding the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra is the best phone to invest in, no matter who you’re getting it for. Its processor is more powerful than the one embedded in the previous model, its design makes it look like every other phone with rounded corners, and it produces the best pictures and videos, and saves scrolling time with Now Brief — all courtesy of AI. The color options are great for a premium tier phone, especially Titanium Silverblue.

Now, we understand that some people may want to opt for the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL because it’s a little more affordable than the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra. Sticker shock aside, the camera takes great pictures near and far, the battery life is decent, and the design is a major improvement from its predecessors. Plus, the color options are not as bland as the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra, even though it has blue. But as far as features go, the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra is your best bet.

Pre-order the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra:

Buy the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL:

Cristina Alexander
Cristina Alexander is a gaming and mobile writer at Digital Trends. She blends fair coverage of games industry topics that…
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