


A new leak suggests Motorola is getting ready to refresh its flagship flip-phone lineup with the razr 70 Ultra, and the early renders make it look more like a careful evolution than a dramatic redesign. According to images shared by OnLeaks in collaboration with XpertPick, the phone keeps the brand’s now-familiar full-size outer display concept while slightly changing the hardware dimensions.
The report says the upcoming model will feature a 4-inch outer screen alongside a 7-inch inner folding display. That means Motorola appears to be sticking with the large cover-screen approach that has helped its recent Razr devices stand out in the clamshell foldable category. The cover display is again shown wrapping around the dual rear cameras and LED flash in a landscape layout.
One of the more noticeable changes is thickness. The leak claims the razr 70 Ultra will be about 0.6mm thicker than the previous generation. That is not a huge shift on paper, but it suggests Motorola may be trading a slightly chunkier body for internal changes such as structural tweaks, battery adjustments, or thermal improvements.
Because the new model has not been officially announced yet, the leak stops short of confirming the full spec sheet. To give context, IT Home compared it with last year’s razr 60 Ultra, which launched on May 8 with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, up to 16GB of RAM, and as much as 1TB of storage. That phone also offered a 7-inch 1.5K LTPO AMOLED inner panel, a 4-inch OLED cover screen, three 50MP cameras, a 4,700mAh battery, and support for 68W wired and 30W wireless charging.
If Motorola keeps a similar strategy this year, the razr 70 Ultra will likely continue targeting buyers who want a premium foldable that feels stylish but still delivers flagship-level specs. For now, though, the renders mainly point to a device that refines an existing formula rather than tearing it up and starting over.
Until Motorola makes the phone official, the leak should still be treated as preliminary. Even so, the combination of a large cover display, a roomy inner panel, and only modest design changes makes this look like a classic next-gen Razr update: recognizable, slightly larger, and aimed at keeping momentum in the premium flip-phone market.