| Exynos 1330 | 6.7-inch AMOLED | IP54 |
| 5000mAh with 25W | 50MP main, 5MP ultrawide, 2MP | One UI 7 on Android 15 |
The Samsung Galaxy A series has always carried a sense of nostalgia for longtime users, especially those who have seen the Galaxy J series morph into the A series.
My first ever phone was the iconic Galaxy J7, and truth be told, I enjoyed every moment I spent with it.
Fast forward to today, I’ve been testing the new Samsung Galaxy A17 for about a week, and the experience has been a mixed bag to be honest. The Galaxy A17 definitely has some strengths that make a truly solid phone. However, it also has some pretty glaring shortcomings.
Samsung’s design language is super consistent across its A-series and S-series, and honestly, I like that. The A17 looks classy in blue, black, and grey.
I’ve got the blue one for testing, and although it is terrific to look at, the blue coloured plastic back is a massive smudge magnet. Even though it’s a plastic back with a plastic frame, it doesn’t feel cheap.
The flat sides make for a good grip and at 192 grams it’s not bulky to carry. You get a mono speaker at the bottom and a no headphone jack. There is dual nano SIM support too.
My only complaint would be the that it’s a big phone, which makes it slightly awkward to slip into jeans pockets.
The display is a 6.7-inch AMOLED panel with a 90Hz refresh rate. Colours are crisp, natural, and watching any content feels fun. But here’s the thing; 90Hz in 2025 is a bit disappointing.
To make matters worse, smartphone brands like Motorola and Realme are already pushing 120Hz in the same price segment, so Samsung feels behind the curve here.
To add to that, the drop notch on the front feels outdated too.
On the positive side though, the IP54 rating and Gorilla Glass Victus protection are solid, so at least you get scratch resistance and splash protection out of the box.
The A17 runs on Exynos 1330 with storage and RAM options that go up to 8GB RAM and 256GB storage. Benchmarks scores are mid-tier at best, 970 single-core and 2184 multi-core in GeekBench.
But that’s okay because, it’s not aiming to be a performance beast anyway.
In day-to-day use it’s smooth. I faced no heating as such, until I started clicking a ton of photos back-to-back, where the area around the camera bump warms up a bit.
Switching between apps feels chill, but the one weak spot is the camera app, which sometimes lags when processing multiple shots.
On the software side, this is where Samsung really nails it. The A17 runs One UI 7 on Android 15 and you get six OS updates promised, which is insane for an ₹18K phone.
One UI itself is clean and well organised, though sometimes it still looks a little old-school. Honestly, using it gave me a weird throwback to my J7 days. That said, small touches like Samsung Notes syncing and notes import are underrated gems that really make the experience feel good even on a budget device.
You get a 5000mAh pack with a 25W charger in the box. I thought charging would be a pain, but nope, it went from 15 percent to 94 percent in just an hour, which is actually pretty chill.
Usage wise, it easily survives a full day on moderate use. I watched a two-hour podcast and the phone only dropped by 10 percent.
A bit of casual gaming shaved off just 2 percent. That’s impressive because it basically means it doesn’t die on you mid-day, and it doesn’t take forever to charge either.
The camera setup includes a 50MP main shooter, a 5MP ultrawide, and a 2MP macro. The main camera clicks balanced shots with natural colours and sharpness, but the finer details don’t always hold up when you zoom in.
Portraits look sharp overall and the separation between foreground and background works well, though the edge detection around hair and faces is still a bit messy.
Ultrawide shots keep the colours consistent, but they lose out on sharpness, with HDR being only decent at best.
Selfies, on the other hand, are natural and sharp, though skin tones can sometimes look oversaturated.
Videos max out at 1080p 30FPS, with stabilisation that’s fine. In low light, the performance is okay at best usable, but definitely not a standout.
Overall, the photos are solid for what you pay for the phone, and are totally Instagram-ready, as long as you keep your expectations in check.
The Galaxy A17 has some strong positives like solid battery life, fast charging, a premium-looking design, Samsung’s unmatched OS update policy, and cameras that deliver decent results for the price.
But there are also a few issues that are hard to ignore, like the outdated 90Hz refresh rate in 2025, the drop notch that feels like a relic from the past, slight heating while clicking photos, and the occasional lag in the camera app.
At ₹18,999, I’d still call it a value-for-money device, especially if you’re looking for something reliable with long-term software support.
But if you’re chasing the absolute best performance in this range, something like the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion might tempt you more. The A17 is a safe choice, reliable, and easy to recommend, but with just a couple of tweaks, it could’ve been a straight-up no-brainer.