A Galaxy S24 Ultra in good condition is worth £480-£560 right now. A Galaxy S23? £200-£270. Even a Galaxy S21 that has been sat in a drawer for two years still fetches £80-£120. And if you have one of Samsung's foldable phones, you are sitting on even more — a Z Fold5 in good shape commands £450-£530.
These are not theoretical numbers. These are the prices UK buyback services are paying today, in cash, for used Samsung Galaxy phones.
Most Samsung owners assume their phone has lost most of its value. There is a persistent myth that Android phones — Samsung included — plummet in value the moment you open the box and never recover. People hear that iPhones hold their value and assume everything else is worthless by comparison.
Here is the surprising truth: flagship Galaxy S-series phones hold 50-65% of their original value after 12 months. That puts them second only to iPhones, and the gap is much smaller than most people think. A Galaxy S24 Ultra that launched at £1,299 is still worth over £500 a year later. That is not "losing all its value." That is a phone that has earned its keep and still has hundreds of pounds of life left in it.
This guide breaks down exactly what every major Samsung Galaxy model is worth in the UK right now, what affects the price, and how to get the most cash for yours.
Why Samsung Phones Hold Value Better Than You Think
The "Android phones lose all their value" narrative made more sense ten years ago. Back then, Samsung phones received one or two years of software updates, the second-hand market was dominated by iPhones, and the build quality gap between Samsung and Apple was noticeable.
That world no longer exists.
Samsung now provides seven years of OS and security updates for its flagship phones. A Galaxy S24 bought in 2024 will receive software support until 2031. That extended support window directly translates to resale value because buyers know the phone will remain functional and secure for years.
The second factor is Samsung's dominance in the Android market. When someone wants a second-hand Android phone, they overwhelmingly want a Samsung. It is the default choice for refurbishers and resellers, which creates strong demand on the trade-in side.
Third, Samsung's hardware quality has reached a point where a two-year-old Galaxy S-series phone is still a genuinely good phone. The cameras, screens, and processors in Samsung flagships age well. A Galaxy S23 in 2026 still takes excellent photos, still has a brilliant display, and still runs every app without hesitation.
The result is a resale market that is much healthier than most Samsung owners realise. You are not selling junk. You are selling a phone that someone else will happily pay good money to use for another two or three years.
What Your Samsung Galaxy Is Worth Right Now
Here are realistic price ranges for the most popular Samsung Galaxy models in the UK. These figures reflect what buyback services are currently paying — not retail resale prices, not eBay best-case scenarios, but the actual cash you can expect to receive.
For your exact price, get an instant quote on TechLoop. It takes about 30 seconds and the price is locked for 7 days.
Galaxy S25 Series (2025)
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy S25 Ultra (256GB) | £550-£650 | £430-£510 | £220-£300 |
| Galaxy S25 Ultra (512GB) | £600-£700 | £470-£550 | £250-£330 |
| Galaxy S25+ (256GB) | £400-£480 | £310-£380 | £150-£210 |
| Galaxy S25 (128GB) | £320-£390 | £250-£300 | £120-£170 |
| Galaxy S25 (256GB) | £350-£420 | £270-£330 | £140-£190 |
The S25 series is still relatively new, so values are high. If you have upgraded or simply decided the phone is not for you, now is the time to sell. Every month you wait costs you money.
Galaxy S24 Series (2024)
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy S24 Ultra (256GB) | £480-£560 | £370-£430 | £180-£250 |
| Galaxy S24 Ultra (512GB) | £530-£610 | £410-£480 | £210-£280 |
| Galaxy S24+ (256GB) | £340-£410 | £260-£310 | £130-£180 |
| Galaxy S24 (128GB) | £300-£370 | £230-£280 | £100-£150 |
| Galaxy S24 (256GB) | £330-£400 | £250-£310 | £120-£170 |
The S24 series represents the sweet spot right now. The phones are old enough that many owners have moved on to the S25, but new enough that the resale value remains strong. If you have an S24 gathering dust, you are losing roughly £15-£25 per month by not selling it.
Galaxy S23 Series (2023)
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy S23 Ultra (256GB) | £350-£420 | £270-£320 | £130-£180 |
| Galaxy S23 Ultra (512GB) | £390-£460 | £300-£360 | £150-£200 |
| Galaxy S23+ (256GB) | £250-£310 | £190-£240 | £90-£130 |
| Galaxy S23 (128GB) | £200-£270 | £160-£210 | £70-£110 |
| Galaxy S23 (256GB) | £230-£290 | £180-£230 | £85-£125 |
Two years old and still pulling in solid numbers. The S23 Ultra in particular holds value well because the camera system and S Pen functionality remain desirable to buyers.
Galaxy S22 Series (2022)
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy S22 Ultra (128GB) | £220-£280 | £170-£220 | £80-£120 |
| Galaxy S22+ (128GB) | £160-£210 | £120-£160 | £55-£85 |
| Galaxy S22 (128GB) | £130-£180 | £100-£140 | £40-£70 |
The S22 series is entering the steeper part of the depreciation curve. If you are still holding an S22 and thinking about selling, the time is now. These values will continue to drop, and by this time next year, you will be looking at noticeably less.
Galaxy S21 Series (2021)
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy S21 Ultra (128GB) | £150-£200 | £110-£150 | £50-£80 |
| Galaxy S21+ (128GB) | £100-£140 | £75-£105 | £30-£55 |
| Galaxy S21 (128GB) | £80-£120 | £60-£90 | £25-£45 |
Still worth selling. Even at these prices, you are looking at a decent amount of money for something you are not using. That S21 Ultra is worth a solid meal out for two, or a month of bills. Do not let it sit until it is worth nothing.
Galaxy Z Fold Series
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy Z Fold6 (256GB) | £550-£640 | £430-£510 | £230-£310 |
| Galaxy Z Fold5 (256GB) | £450-£530 | £350-£420 | £180-£250 |
| Galaxy Z Fold4 (256GB) | £300-£380 | £230-£290 | £120-£170 |
| Galaxy Z Fold3 (256GB) | £200-£260 | £150-£200 | £70-£110 |
Foldable phones hold value surprisingly well. The Z Fold series in particular benefits from being a niche product — there are fewer on the second-hand market, which keeps demand (and prices) higher.
Galaxy Z Flip Series
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy Z Flip6 (256GB) | £350-£420 | £270-£330 | £140-£190 |
| Galaxy Z Flip5 (256GB) | £260-£320 | £200-£250 | £100-£140 |
| Galaxy Z Flip4 (128GB) | £160-£210 | £120-£160 | £55-£85 |
| Galaxy Z Flip3 (128GB) | £90-£130 | £65-£95 | £30-£50 |
The Z Flip depreciates slightly faster than the Z Fold because it sits at a lower price point and there are more of them in circulation. Still, the values are respectable and well worth cashing in on.
Galaxy A-Series (Mid-Range)
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy A55 (128GB) | £120-£160 | £90-£120 | £40-£60 |
| Galaxy A54 (128GB) | £90-£130 | £65-£95 | £30-£50 |
| Galaxy A53 (128GB) | £60-£90 | £40-£65 | £15-£30 |
| Galaxy A34 (128GB) | £55-£80 | £35-£55 | £15-£25 |
| Galaxy A14 (64GB) | £25-£40 | £15-£25 | £5-£15 |
Budget and mid-range Samsung phones hold less value in absolute terms, but they are still worth selling. Even £25-£40 for an A14 is better than nothing. And if you have an A55 or A54, you are looking at a genuinely useful amount of cash.
Galaxy Note Series
| Model | Good Condition | Minor Wear | Cracked/Faulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy Note 20 Ultra (256GB) | £160-£210 | £120-£160 | £55-£85 |
| Galaxy Note 20 (256GB) | £110-£150 | £80-£115 | £35-£55 |
| Galaxy Note 10+ (256GB) | £70-£100 | £45-£70 | £20-£35 |
Samsung discontinued the Note series after the Note 20, folding (pun intended) its features into the S Ultra line. But Note 20 models still have a loyal following, and the prices reflect ongoing demand from buyers who prefer the Note's form factor.
What Affects Your Samsung Galaxy's Value
Understanding these factors helps you set realistic expectations and, in some cases, get a better price.
1. Model Tier Matters More Than Age
A two-year-old Galaxy S23 Ultra is worth more than a one-year-old Galaxy A54. The flagship tax works in your favour on resale because Ultra and Plus models retain a higher percentage of their value than mid-range phones. If you bought the more expensive Samsung, the silver lining is that you get more back when you sell it.
2. Storage Adds Real Value
Higher storage consistently commands a premium on the second-hand market. A 256GB Galaxy S24 is worth roughly £30-£50 more than the 128GB version. The 512GB models add another £40-£60 on top of that.
To check your storage, go to Settings > About Phone > Storage on your Samsung.
3. Condition Is Where Money Is Made or Lost
The difference between "good condition" and "minor wear" on a Galaxy S24 Ultra is around £80-£130. Between "good condition" and "cracked/faulty," it can be £250-£300.
Being honest about your phone's condition when getting a quote saves everyone time. If you describe your phone as "good" and it arrives with a cracked back panel, the quote will be revised downward. TechLoop's condition grading system is straightforward — have a look before you submit so you know where your phone sits.
4. Network Lock Status
Most Samsung phones sold in the UK since 2021 are unlocked by default. If yours is locked to a specific carrier, it reduces the value by £10-£25 because it limits the buyer pool. You can check by inserting a SIM from a different network — if it connects, your phone is unlocked.
5. Included Accessories
Having the original box, charger, and any included accessories (like the S Pen for Ultra models) can add £10-£20 to your offer from some services. It is not a deal-breaker if you have lost them, but it helps.
Samsung Trade-In vs Independent Buyback Services
Samsung offers its own trade-in programme, allowing you to exchange your old Galaxy for a discount on a new Samsung device. It is convenient, but how does it stack up against selling independently?
| Factor | Samsung Trade-In | TechLoop | Selling on eBay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | Typically 20-40% below market | Competitive market rate | Potentially highest, but variable |
| Payment Method | Discount on new Samsung device | Cash (bank transfer) | Cash minus fees (12-15%) |
| Speed | Instant at checkout | Same-day once received | Days to weeks |
| Effort | Very low (part of purchase flow) | Low (2 min quote, free postage) | High (photos, listing, shipping) |
| Accepted Conditions | Working devices with minor wear | All conditions including broken | Your discretion |
| Risk | None | Very low (7-day price lock) | Medium (scams, disputes, returns) |
| Flexibility | Must buy new Samsung | Cash to spend anywhere | Cash to spend anywhere |
The trade-off is clear. Samsung Trade-In is easiest if you are already buying a new Samsung device and do not mind leaving money on the table. But if you want the most cash — or if you are not buying another Samsung — selling to an independent buyback service like TechLoop gets you significantly more.
Here is a concrete example. Samsung's trade-in programme currently values a Galaxy S23 Ultra (256GB, good condition) at around £200-£250 as a discount on a new S25 Ultra. TechLoop's quote for the same phone is £350-£420 in cash. That is £100-£170 more in your pocket.
If you are selling a phone from the A-series or an older model, the gap can be even wider. Samsung's trade-in programme tends to offer minimal value for non-flagship and older devices.
Where to Sell Your Samsung Galaxy
You have several options, and they are not all equal.
Online Buyback Services
The most popular option for a reason. You get a quote online, post the phone for free, and receive cash once it is checked. TechLoop, Mazuma, and musicMagpie all follow this model.
TechLoop stands out for Samsung sellers specifically because the service accepts all Samsung models — including budget A-series phones and broken devices that other services might reject. You also get a 7-day price lock, same-day payment, and free postage with a pre-paid label.
For a deeper comparison of all the major services, see our guide to the best places to sell your phone in the UK.
CeX (High Street)
Walk in, get your phone tested, walk out with cash. CeX is the go-to for people who need money today. But their Samsung prices are consistently 15-30% below what online services pay. If you have a Galaxy S24 Ultra worth £480-£560 online, expect CeX to offer around £350-£430. That said, the instant cash is genuinely valuable if you need it urgently.
eBay and Facebook Marketplace
Selling privately can net you the highest price, but it comes with real costs: eBay takes 12-15% in fees, you handle shipping, and there is always a risk of disputes, returns, and scams. For high-value phones (S25 Ultra, Z Fold6), the effort might be worth it. For mid-range or older models, the time investment rarely pays off compared to an instant buyback quote.
Network Carrier Trade-In (EE, Vodafone, Three, O2)
Most UK carriers offer trade-in when you take out a new contract. The values are typically underwhelming — similar to or worse than Samsung's own trade-in — and the credit is applied to your monthly bill rather than given as cash. Only worth considering if you are switching carrier anyway and the trade-in deal is clearly better than selling independently.
How to Prepare Your Samsung Galaxy for Sale
Follow these steps to make the process smooth and get the best possible price.
1. Back Up Your Data
Samsung phones offer multiple backup options:
- Samsung Cloud: Settings > Accounts and backup > Samsung Cloud > Back up data
- Google Backup: Settings > Accounts and backup > Google Drive
- Smart Switch: Samsung's desktop app for a full device backup to your computer
Do at least one of these. Once your data is backed up, you can wipe the phone with confidence.
2. Remove Your Google and Samsung Accounts
This is critical. If you factory reset without removing your Google account first, the phone will be locked by Google's Factory Reset Protection (FRP), making it unusable for the buyer. This can delay your payment or reduce your offer.
Go to Settings > Accounts and remove both your Google account and Samsung account before resetting.
3. Factory Reset
After removing your accounts, go to Settings > General management > Reset > Factory data reset and confirm. This wipes everything from the phone.
TechLoop performs a certified GDPR-compliant data wipe on every device regardless, but resetting beforehand speeds up the process and gets you paid faster.
4. Remove Your SIM and Memory Card
Take out your SIM card and any microSD card before sending your phone. These will not be returned to you by most buyback services.
5. Clean It Up
Give your phone a quick wipe with a microfibre cloth. It sounds trivial, but a clean phone makes a better impression during the condition check, and first impressions matter even in a professional grading process.
6. Gather Accessories
If you still have the original box, charger cable, or any other accessories, include them. This can add a small premium to your offer, and it makes the phone more valuable for resale.
When to Sell Your Samsung Galaxy
Timing matters. Samsung follows a predictable release cycle:
- Galaxy S-series: Announced in January, released in February
- Galaxy Z Fold/Flip: Announced in July, released in August
- Galaxy A-series: Various throughout the year, usually February-March
The best time to sell your Galaxy S-series phone is October through December — demand for used phones is high in the run-up to Christmas, and the new S-series has not yet been announced. Values drop 10-20% within a week of a new model being revealed.
For Z Fold and Z Flip phones, the ideal selling window is April through June, before the summer announcement.
The worst time to sell? The week after a new model launches. If you are reading this and your phone is sitting unused, the second-best time to sell is today. Every week you wait, the value ticks downward.
Get an instant quote on TechLoop to see exactly what your Samsung is worth right now. The price is locked for 7 days, so there is no pressure to decide immediately.
Samsung Galaxy Depreciation: What to Expect
Understanding how Samsung phones depreciate helps you make smarter decisions about when to sell and what to expect.
| Time Since Launch | Typical Value Retained (S-Series Flagship) |
|---|---|
| 0-3 months | 75-85% |
| 3-6 months | 65-75% |
| 6-12 months | 50-65% |
| 12-18 months | 40-55% |
| 18-24 months | 30-45% |
| 24-36 months | 20-35% |
| 36+ months | 10-25% |
The steepest drop happens in the first three months after purchase and again immediately after the successor model launches. Between those two events, the depreciation curve is relatively gentle. This is why selling before the next launch is so effective — you catch the flat part of the curve rather than the cliff.
Samsung's mid-range A-series phones depreciate faster in percentage terms but start from a lower base, so the absolute loss in pounds is smaller. A Galaxy A54 might drop from £350 to £90 in two years (74% loss), while a Galaxy S24 Ultra drops from £1,299 to £480 (63% loss). The Ultra loses more money in absolute terms but retains a higher percentage — and crucially, still has hundreds of pounds of value left.
Common Mistakes When Selling a Samsung Galaxy
Avoid these and you will have a smoother, more profitable experience.
Not removing your Google account before resetting. This triggers Factory Reset Protection and makes the phone a headache for the buyer. It is the single most common issue with Samsung trade-ins.
Describing the condition inaccurately. If your phone has a cracked back panel, do not select "good condition" and hope no one notices. The revision will cost you time and potentially money. TechLoop's grading guide makes it easy to pick the right condition level.
Waiting too long. Every month your Samsung sits in a drawer, it loses roughly £10-£25 in value depending on the model. Three months of procrastination can cost you £30-£75. Six months can cost you £60-£150. Sell now.
Not comparing prices. Different buyback services offer different amounts for the same phone. Checking two or three takes five minutes and can put £30-£80 extra in your pocket. Start with TechLoop and compare from there.
Forgetting to remove your microSD card. Samsung Galaxy phones often have expandable storage. Check before you send the phone — you will not get that card back.
The Bottom Line
Your Samsung Galaxy is worth more than you think. Whether it is a flagship S25 Ultra or a budget A14, whether it is in pristine condition or has a cracked screen, it has value — and that value is dropping every day you do not sell it.
The process is straightforward. Get an instant quote on TechLoop, see your exact price, and decide if it makes sense for you. If it does, post it for free and get paid the same day it arrives. If it does not, you have lost nothing but 30 seconds.
For more on the selling process, see our complete guide to selling your phone in the UK or learn what your phone is actually worth if you want a deeper understanding of how phone values work.
Your Samsung has already given you good service. Now let it give you one last thing: cash in your pocket.
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