Ever since the beginning of 2019, Samsung has announced a surprisingly huge number of smartphones including its budget M-series, premium mid-range A-series, and the flagship S-series. The Korean giant finally took the leap to re-capture its lost market share to your flood of Chinese phone makers, and the Galaxy A30 fits right into this picture.

Galaxy A30: What’s in The Box

The unboxing experience for the Galaxy A30 is about the same as its elder sibling, the Galaxy A50, except for that it comes with a slide-out cover. You’ll still get almost every accessory you expect to see bundled with a smartphone these days.

Galaxy A30: Design and Build

If you’ve read our Galaxy A50 review, then the build of this smartphone would only be a refresher for you – minus the beautiful and colorful gradient rear panel of its elder sibling. The Galaxy A30 also boasts a “glasstic” build, which is a mix of glass and plastic and the black variant with us feels like a darker shade of gray. The rear panel reflects light to give you a streak-like pattern, which does look quite awesome to me, but it also feels plasticky to the touch, which I don’t really fancy.

There’s a dual-rear camera and physical fingerprint sensor on the rear, which was a relief and snappy as compared to the sluggish in-display scanner on the Galaxy A50. Since the smartphone is taller and huge, the fingerprint sensor may seem like it has been placed a tad bit higher and that you need to stretch your finger to reach it, but once you’ve been using the device for a few days, you’ll get used to its placement.

The button and ports placement here is the same as Samsung’s recent premium budget offerings, with the tactile plastic power key and volume rocker sitting on the right. You’ll find a single bottom-firing speaker (which is o’t really loud and produces a tinny sound), 3.5mm headphone jack, and USB Type-C port all sitting at the bottom. The single triple-slot SIM tray sits on the left.

Turning our attention to the front, the Galaxy A30 is exactly identical to the Galaxy M30 & Galaxy A50. There’s no difference as they all use the same Super AMOLED panel from the Korean giant, which is 6.4-inch tall with a Full-HD+ (1080 x 2340 pixels) resolution, and a 19.5:9 aspect ratio. There’s Corning Gorilla Glass 3 on top for protection purpose.

I feel like I’m repeating myself, but the display panel on the Galaxy A30 is gorgeous. The colors obviously are a little saturated (not accurate as the Galaxy S10 lineup) to make all the iconography and content pop. It is really vibrant, the blacks are deep, it performs excellently even under harsh lighting, and the Infinity-U notch at the top and thick bezel below are non-intrusive. The content-viewing experience is splendid.

Samsung Galaxy A30 is powered by the Exynos 7904 processor, which is the same processor found inside the Galaxy M30 as well. The architecture of this chipset is slightly different when compared to traditional octa-core chipsets, as it features two Cortex A-73 cores clocked at 1.8GHz and six Cortex A-53 cores clocked at 1.6GHz for better efficiency in everyday tasks.

As usual, we ran the Geekbench 4 and AnTuTu benchmark for the Galaxy A30 as well and you can find the results attached right here:

Galaxy A30: Cameras

Daylight Samples

You can see in the daylight samples attached below that the Galaxy A30 is able to capture an ample amount of detail and the images look sharp, with an obvious oversaturation that has been induced to the Scene Optimizer baked into the camera app. The device boasts a high dynamic range and the images look social media-ready, requiring only a bit of touch-up.

  • Low-light Samples

The images captured during the night time also are pretty detailed and look good, but you shouldn’t expect too much detail when zooming in and expect them to appear warm when compared to other devices. Also, there’s some visible noise in some of the images below, otherwise they look pretty decent and can be deemed worthy of social media status.

Low-light Samples

  • Wide-angle Samples

Galaxy A30 packs an ultra wide-angle sensor, something which now seems to be creeping down to new multi-camera phones. It gives you another mode to play around with, which means having the leeway to experiment. Here are some of the samples that we captured and you can easily notice the “fish-eye effect” on the edges some of the ultra wide-angle pictures:

Wide-angle Samples

  • Selfies/Portraits

The Galaxy A30 sports a 16MP (f/2.0) sensor on the front, which is the same one that we have already seen on the Galaxy M30, and the image quality is okay-ish at best. In true Samsung fashion, the selfies do have details but they’re usually soft (check out George’s selfie below) and the edge detection is finicky. The device can recognize multiple subjects in the frame, but it doesn’t guarantee a perfect picture (part of Durgesh’s hair blurred).

Selfies/Portraits

  • Galaxy A30 vs Galaxy M30: Camera Comparison

Galaxy A30 vs Galaxy M30: Camera Comparison

You can clearly see in the images above that Galaxy A30 may capture a little more detail and pull in a little more light, however, the Galaxy M30 isn’t too far behind. The pictures captured via both of these devices are pretty alike, with the A30 being on the cooler and M30 being slightly on the warmer side. There are times like the bicycles tire collection & selfie portraits, where I feel the Galaxy M30 trumps the A30, however, the latter will offer more detail in low-light situations.

The Galaxy A30 is capable of recording videos up to 1080p resolution at 30fps from both the front and rear cameras, which is saddening to see at a time when several affordable phones are offering 4K recording capabilities. We have attached sample video recordings down below, one in standard and second in wide-angle, to show you how A30 performs:

While the colors reproduction is great, there’s no stabilization on board and videos from Galaxy A30 look pretty jittery and shaky. It would be great if Samsung adds support for EIS via a software update else the videos are pretty average, well, at least for now.

Galaxy A30: Software

Samsung is offering its latest software experience, One UI, with its A-series offerings. The Galaxy A30 also runs Android Pie-based One UI, out-of-the-box and it’s a refreshing upgrade over the bloatware and clunky Samsung Experience UI days. I don’t think I need to dwell into the feature set offered here as you can read about it right here, but I would add that Samsung still needs to tone down animations to offer a smoother experience on its lower-specced offerings.

Widevine L1 & Camera2 API Support

The Galaxy A30, as you can see below, packs Widevine L1 certification, meaning you can watch Netflix or Prime Video in HD, and a limited Camera2 API support, which means you cannot use Google Camera mod without doling out the necessary permissions via ADB. It, however, comes as a relief that the native camera performance is pretty decent.

Galaxy A30: Battery Life

The Galaxy A30 sports a 4,000mAh battery and a 15W fast charger, similar to the elder sibling – Galaxy A50, and that’s easily good enough to last a whole day on a single charge, especially for low and medium usage customers. If you’re going to be using the smartphone for a moderate volume of calls, texting, surfing the Internet and consuming videos on the daily, well, then you’ll get a screen-on-time of around six hours.

The Galaxy A30 is a pretty good device for the price segment it’s sitting in, offering an AMOLED display, modest internals, and a dual-camera module with an ultra wide-angle lens. There’s also a better software experience, with the latest flavor of Android, and a massive battery as well.

I know you can also push your budget a little higher, say maybe closer to Rs 20,000, to obviously get the Poco F1 (starts at Rs 19,999). Offline sellers will still see an influx of buyers for the Galaxy A30 because of the brand trust Samsung has built over the years.

CONS:

SEE ALSO – Samsung Galaxy A50 Review: A Worthy Mid-ranger

Samsung has cleverly made a mid-range smartphone which might not undercut its own online-only Galaxy M30 for modern e-commerce-friendly users, however, those who still prefer to try out a device and buy them offline will only have the Galaxy A30 on offer. It surely is a pretty relevant offering for the specs, features, and the retail price and would surely attract a ton of buyers – I’ve already met a couple.