Google Pixel 10 Pro
Samsung Galaxy S25

Google Pixel 10 Pro Samsung Galaxy S25

Overview

Welcome to our in-depth comparison of the Google Pixel 10 Pro and the Samsung Galaxy S25 — two flagship Android smartphones that take very different approaches to what a premium phone should be. From their distinct chipsets and raw benchmark performance to their camera systems, battery endurance, and everyday software experience, these two devices each make a compelling case. Read on to see how they stack up across every major specification category.

Common Features

  • Both phones are waterproof with an IP68 ingress protection rating.
  • Neither phone has a rugged build.
  • Neither phone can be folded.
  • Both phones feature an OLED/AMOLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate.
  • Both phones use Gorilla Glass Victus 2 for damage-resistant glass protection.
  • HDR10 support is available on both phones.
  • HDR10+ support is available on both phones.
  • Always-On Display is available on both phones.
  • Neither phone has a secondary screen.
  • Both phones support integrated LTE and are built on a 3 nm semiconductor process.
  • Both phones support 64-bit processing and use big.LITTLE CPU technology with 8 threads.
  • Both phones have a multi-lens main camera with built-in optical image stabilization.
  • Both phones have a dual-tone LED flash with 2 LEDs.
  • Both phones feature a BSI CMOS sensor with phase-detection autofocus and continuous autofocus during video recording.
  • Both phones run Android 15 and include clipboard warnings, location privacy options, and camera/microphone privacy options.
  • Both phones support theme customization and allow blocking of app tracking.
  • Cross-site tracking blocking is not available on either phone.
  • Mail Privacy Protection is not available on either phone.
  • Both phones support wireless charging at 15W, fast charging, and reverse wireless charging.
  • Neither phone comes with a charger in the box, and neither has a removable battery.
  • Neither phone has a 3.5 mm audio jack, but both feature stereo speakers.
  • Both phones support aptX and LDAC audio codecs.
  • Neither phone includes a radio.
  • Both phones support 5G, NFC, USB Type-C with USB 3.2, and have no external memory slot.
  • Both phones have a fingerprint scanner and a gyroscope.
  • Both phones include a video light and do not have a sapphire glass, curved, or e-paper display.
  • Both phones support Wi-Fi 4, Wi-Fi 5, Wi-Fi 6, Wi-Fi 6E, and Wi-Fi 7.
  • Both phones support DirectX 12 and OpenGL ES 3.2, and have integrated graphics.

Main Differences

  • Weight is 204 g on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 162 g on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Thickness is 8.6 mm on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 7.2 mm on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Height is 152.8 mm on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 146.9 mm on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Volume is 94.61 cm³ on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 74.57 cm³ on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Screen size is 6.3″ on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 6.2″ on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Pixel density is 495 ppi on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 416 ppi on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Resolution is 1280 x 2856 px on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 1080 x 2340 px on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Typical brightness is 2200 nits on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 2600 nits on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Internal storage is 1024 GB on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 512 GB on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • RAM is 16 GB on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 12 GB on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • AnTuTu benchmark score is 961,489 on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 3,050,000 on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • The chipset is Google Tensor G5 on Google Pixel 10 Pro and Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Geekbench 6 multi-core score is 5,712 on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 10,050 on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Geekbench 6 single-core score is 2,267 on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 3,175 on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • RAM speed is 4200 MHz on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 5300 MHz on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Main camera resolution is 50 & 48 & 48 MP on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 50 & 12 & 10 MP on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Optical zoom is 5x on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 3x on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Front camera resolution is 42 MP on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 12 MP on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Maximum video recording is 2160p at 60 fps on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 4320p at 30 fps on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Laser autofocus is present on Google Pixel 10 Pro but not available on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Direct OS updates are available on Google Pixel 10 Pro but not on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • PC mode is available on Samsung Galaxy S25 but not on Google Pixel 10 Pro.
  • Battery capacity is 4870 mAh on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 4000 mAh on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Wired charging speed is 30W on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 25W on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • aptX HD support is present on Google Pixel 10 Pro but not available on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • aptX Adaptive support is present on Samsung Galaxy S25 but not available on Google Pixel 10 Pro.
  • aptX Lossless support is present on Samsung Galaxy S25 but not available on Google Pixel 10 Pro.
  • Number of microphones is 3 on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 2 on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Bluetooth version is 6 on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 5.4 on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Emergency SOS via satellite is available on Google Pixel 10 Pro but not on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • Crash detection is available on Google Pixel 10 Pro but not on Samsung Galaxy S25.
  • ANT+ support is present on Samsung Galaxy S25 but not available on Google Pixel 10 Pro.
  • SIM card support is 1 SIM + 1 eSIM on Google Pixel 10 Pro and 2 SIM + 2 eSIM on Samsung Galaxy S25.
Specs Comparison
Google Pixel 10 Pro

Google Pixel 10 Pro

Samsung Galaxy S25

Samsung Galaxy S25

Design:
water resistance Waterproof Waterproof
weight 204 g 162 g
thickness 8.6 mm 7.2 mm
width 72 mm 70.5 mm
height 152.8 mm 146.9 mm
volume 94.61376 cm³ 74.56644 cm³
Ingress Protection (IP) rating IP68 IP68
has a rugged build
can be folded

Both phones share the same IP68 waterproof rating, meaning neither has an advantage in water and dust resistance — both can handle submersion under typical real-world conditions. Neither offers a rugged build or a foldable form factor, so they compete squarely as standard glass-slab smartphones.

Where the designs diverge significantly is in size and weight. The Samsung Galaxy S25 is notably more compact and lighter, weighing just 162 g versus 204 g for the Pixel 10 Pro — a 42 g difference that is immediately noticeable during one-handed use or extended holding. The S25 is also slimmer at 7.2 mm thick compared to 8.6 mm, and its smaller overall footprint (reflected in a volume of roughly 74.6 cm³ versus 94.6 cm³) means it slips into a pocket with considerably less bulk. For users who prioritize a phone that disappears into daily life, this gap is meaningful.

The Pixel 10 Pro's larger physical envelope likely accommodates a bigger battery or more complex internal hardware, but strictly on design ergonomics, the Galaxy S25 holds a clear edge — it is lighter, thinner, and more pocketable without any trade-off in water resistance protection.

Display:
Display type OLED/AMOLED OLED/AMOLED
screen size 6.3" 6.2"
pixel density 495 ppi 416 ppi
resolution 1280 x 2856 px 1080 x 2340 px
refresh rate 120Hz 120Hz
brightness (typical) 2200 nits 2600 nits
has branded damage-resistant glass
Gorilla Glass version Gorilla Glass Victus 2 Gorilla Glass Victus 2
supports HDR10
supports HDR10+
Always-On Display
Has a secondary screen
has a touch screen

The shared foundation here is strong: both phones use OLED/AMOLED panels with 120Hz refresh rates, Gorilla Glass Victus 2, HDR10+ support, and Always-On Display — so the real competition comes down to sharpness versus brightness.

On sharpness, the Pixel 10 Pro holds a decisive lead. Its 495 ppi pixel density, driven by a higher 1280 x 2856 resolution, is meaningfully sharper than the Galaxy S25's 416 ppi at 1080 x 2340. That roughly 80 ppi gap is perceptible in fine text, detailed photography, and video — particularly at close viewing distances. For users who scrutinize on-screen content, this is a tangible real-world difference. The Pixel also offers a marginally larger 6.3″ screen versus the S25's 6.2″, though that gap is negligible in practice.

The Galaxy S25 counters with superior outdoor visibility, rated at 2600 nits of typical brightness compared to the Pixel's 2200 nits. That 400-nit advantage can make a genuine difference under direct sunlight. Ultimately, the Pixel 10 Pro edges ahead for most use cases — its sharpness advantage is consistent and always present, while the S25's brightness lead matters mainly in specific lighting conditions.

Performance:
internal storage 1024GB 512GB
RAM 16GB 12GB
AnTuTu benchmark score 961489 3050000
Chipset (SoC) name Google Tensor G5 Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite
GPU name PowerVR DXT 48 1536 Adreno 830
CPU speed 1 x 3.4 & 5 x 2.85 & 2 x 2.4 GHz 2 x 4.47 & 6 x 3.53 GHz
Geekbench 6 result (multi) 5712 10050
Geekbench 6 result (single) 2267 3175
GPU clock speed 1100 MHz 1200 MHz
Has integrated LTE
RAM speed 4200 MHz 5300 MHz
semiconductor size 3 nm 3 nm
Supports 64-bit
DirectX version DirectX 12 DirectX 12
Has integrated graphics
OpenGL ES version 3.2 3.2
Uses big.LITTLE technology
CPU threads 8 threads 8 threads
Uses HMP
Has TrustZone
OpenCL version 2 3
maximum memory amount 16GB 24GB
DDR memory version 5 5

The raw performance gap here is impossible to ignore. The Snapdragon 8 Elite in the Galaxy S25 outpaces the Pixel 10 Pro's Google Tensor G5 by a wide margin across every benchmark: AnTuTu scores of 3,050,000 versus 961,489, and Geekbench 6 multi-core results of 10,050 versus 5,712. These are not marginal differences — the S25 is roughly three times faster in sustained computational tasks. In practice, this translates to snappier app launches, smoother multitasking under heavy load, faster video rendering, and a more capable experience in demanding gaming or AI-on-device workloads.

The Pixel 10 Pro pushes back on the storage and memory front, offering up to 1024 GB of internal storage versus the S25's 512 GB cap, and 16 GB of RAM compared to 12 GB. More RAM supports more apps held in memory simultaneously and gives a buffer for memory-intensive tasks. The Pixel's RAM also runs at 4200 MHz versus 5300 MHz on the S25, so even here the S25's memory subsystem is faster, partially offsetting the Pixel's capacity advantage.

The Samsung Galaxy S25 holds a commanding advantage in this category. Unless raw storage capacity is the primary concern, the Snapdragon 8 Elite's performance lead is substantial enough to be felt in everyday use — not just in benchmarks — making the S25 the clear winner for performance-focused buyers.

Cameras:
megapixels (main camera) 50 & 48 & 48 MP 50 & 12 & 10 MP
wide aperture (main camera) 1.68 & 1.7 & 2.8f 1.8 & 2.2 & 2.4f
Has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) main camera
megapixels (front camera) 42MP 12MP
has built-in optical image stabilization
video recording (main camera) 2160 x 60 fps 4320 x 30 fps
Has a dual-tone LED flash
number of flash LEDs 2 2
has a BSI sensor
has a CMOS sensor
has continuous autofocus when recording movies
Has phase-detection autofocus for photos
supports slow-motion video recording
has a built-in HDR mode
has manual exposure
has a flash
optical zoom 5x 3x
has manual ISO
has a serial shot mode
has manual focus
has a front camera
Has laser autofocus
has manual white balance
shoots raw
has touch autofocus
has manual shutter speed
can create panoramas in-camera
wide aperture (front camera) 2.2f 2.2f
Has timelapse function
Has a front-facing LED flash
has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) front camera
supports HDR10 recording
has a front-facing camera under the display
Has a RGB LED flash

Across the rear camera system, the Pixel 10 Pro pulls ahead in almost every resolution metric. Its ultrawide and telephoto lenses clock in at 48 MP each, compared to 12 MP and 10 MP on the Galaxy S25 — a gap that means the Pixel captures significantly more detail when shooting beyond the main lens. The optical zoom advantage reinforces this: 5x on the Pixel versus 3x on the S25, giving the Pixel a longer reach before digital zoom degrades image quality. The Pixel also adds laser autofocus, which can improve focus speed and accuracy, particularly in low-light or fast-moving scenes where phase-detection alone may struggle.

Video is where the S25 reclaims ground. It supports recording up to 4320p at 30 fps (8K), while the Pixel tops out at 2160p at 60 fps (4K). For most users 4K 60fps is more practically useful — smoother motion, easier editing, and smaller file sizes — but the S25's 8K ceiling is meaningful for users who want maximum resolution for cropping or future-proofing footage. The front camera is another stark divergence: the Pixel's 42 MP selfie sensor dwarfs the S25's 12 MP, offering considerably more detail for selfies and video calls.

On balance, the Pixel 10 Pro holds the stronger camera package for still photography and selfies, with higher-resolution sensors across every lens, greater optical zoom, and laser autofocus. The S25's 8K video capability is a notable counterpoint, but it is a niche advantage that won't sway the majority of users.

Operating system:
Android version Android 15 Android 15
has clipboard warnings
has location privacy options
has camera/microphone privacy options
has Mail Privacy Protection
has theme customization
can block app tracking
blocks cross-site tracking
has on-device machine learning
has notification permissions
has media picker
Can play games while they download
has dark mode
has Wi-Fi password sharing
has battery health check
has an extra dim mode
has focus modes
has dynamic theming
can offload apps
Has customizable notifications
has Live Text
has full-page screenshots
supports split screen
gets direct OS updates
has PiP
Can be used as a PC
Has sharing intents
has a child lock
Supports widgets
Is free and open source
Has offline voice recognition
has voice commands
Tracks the current position of a mobile device
is a multi-user system
has Quick Start

Running the same Android 15 base, these two phones share an remarkably similar software feature set — privacy controls, dark mode, dynamic theming, split-screen, Picture-in-Picture, on-device machine learning, and offline voice recognition are all present on both. For the vast majority of day-to-day software interactions, users switching between the two would notice little functional difference.

Two divergences are worth attention. The Pixel 10 Pro receives direct OS updates from Google, meaning it gets new Android versions and security patches on day one, without waiting for a manufacturer to repackage and delay them. The Galaxy S25 does not have this, as Samsung's One UI layer requires its own update cycle. Over a multi-year ownership period, this can translate to weeks or even months of delay per update — a meaningful security and feature gap. Conversely, the S25 supports PC mode, allowing the phone to be used as a desktop computing environment when connected to a display, which the Pixel 10 Pro lacks entirely.

For most users, direct OS updates is the more impactful differentiator — it affects software freshness and security throughout the device's lifespan. PC mode is a genuinely useful capability but appeals to a narrower audience. On OS grounds, the Pixel 10 Pro holds the practical edge for long-term software reliability.

Battery:
battery power 4870 mAh 4000 mAh
has wireless charging
Supports fast charging
charging speed 30W 25W
wireless charging speed 15W 15W
has reverse wireless charging
comes with a charger
has a removable battery
has a battery level indicator
has a rechargeable battery

Capacity is the headline story here. The Pixel 10 Pro packs a 4870 mAh battery against the Galaxy S25's 4000 mAh — an 870 mAh difference that represents roughly a 22% larger reservoir of energy. All else being equal, a bigger battery means more hours between charges, and that gap is large enough to be felt over the course of a heavy-use day. Neither phone includes a charger in the box, so both users will need to source their own.

Wired charging follows the same pattern: the Pixel tops out at 30W versus 25W on the S25, meaning it not only starts with more capacity but also refills faster. Wireless charging is identical on both at 15W, and both support reverse wireless charging — useful for topping up accessories like earbuds. These shared wireless specs mean neither phone has an edge in cable-free charging scenarios.

The Pixel 10 Pro is the clear winner in this category. A larger battery combined with faster wired charging gives it a meaningful endurance and convenience advantage over the Galaxy S25, particularly for users who push their phone hard or cannot always guarantee access to a charger throughout the day.

Audio:
has a socket for a 3.5 mm audio jack
has stereo speakers
has aptX
has LDAC
has aptX HD
has aptX Adaptive
has aptX Lossless
Has a radio
number of microphones 3 2

Neither phone offers a 3.5mm headphone jack, so wireless audio is the primary focus — and this is where the two take meaningfully different paths. Both support aptX and LDAC, covering the most widely used high-quality Bluetooth audio codecs. Beyond that shared baseline, their codec support diverges: the Pixel 10 Pro adds aptX HD for higher-bitrate audio over compatible headphones, while the Galaxy S25 skips aptX HD in favor of aptX Adaptive and aptX Lossless. aptX Adaptive dynamically adjusts bitrate for stable low-latency connections, and aptX Lossless enables bit-perfect CD-quality audio over Bluetooth with compatible hardware — a more forward-looking codec stack overall.

For microphone capture, the Pixel 10 Pro holds an edge with 3 microphones versus the S25's 2. An additional microphone improves noise cancellation, spatial audio capture, and call quality — particularly useful in windy or loud environments. Both phones feature stereo speakers and no radio, so speaker output is equal in configuration.

This category is genuinely split depending on the user's priorities. The Galaxy S25 offers a more advanced wireless audio codec suite — particularly aptX Lossless — for audiophiles with compatible headphones. The Pixel 10 Pro counters with a superior microphone array, which matters more for voice calls, recordings, and video. Neither holds an outright overall advantage; the better choice depends on whether output quality or input quality matters more to the individual user.

Connectivity & Features:
release date August 2025 January 2025
has 5G support
Wi-Fi version Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be), Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax)
SIM cards 1 SIM, 1 eSIM 2 SIM, 2 eSIM
Bluetooth version 6 5.4
has an external memory slot
Has USB Type-C
USB version 3.2 3.2
has NFC
Has a fingerprint scanner
has emergency SOS via satellite
has crash detection
has a gyroscope
supports ANT+
Has a heart rate monitor
has GPS
has a compass
supports Wi-Fi
Has an infrared sensor
Head SAR (US) 0.99W/kg 1.13W/kg
Body SAR (US) 1.39W/kg 0.92W/kg
Head SAR (EU) 0.99W/kg 1.29W/kg
Body SAR (EU) 0.99W/kg 1.36W/kg
has an accelerometer
has a cellular module
Has a barometer
has an HDMI output
Uses 3D facial recognition
Has an iris scanner
Stylus included
supports Galileo
Has motion tracking
Has optical tracking
Has a built-in projector

Wireless connectivity is largely matched between these two — both support Wi-Fi 7, 5G, NFC, USB 3.2 Type-C, and Galileo GPS. The Pixel 10 Pro does pull ahead with Bluetooth 6 versus the S25's Bluetooth 5.4, a newer standard that brings improvements in connection stability, range, and energy efficiency for wireless peripherals. Neither phone offers expandable storage or an infrared sensor, keeping that playing field even.

Two safety-oriented features create a more meaningful divide. The Pixel 10 Pro supports emergency SOS via satellite and crash detection — neither of which the S25 offers. Satellite SOS can be a genuine lifeline in areas without cellular coverage, and crash detection automatically alerts emergency services after a severe impact. These are features that rarely matter until they matter enormously. On the flip side, the Galaxy S25 accommodates 2 physical SIMs and 2 eSIMs simultaneously, compared to the Pixel's 1 SIM and 1 eSIM — a tangible advantage for frequent travelers or users managing separate personal and work numbers. The S25 also supports ANT+, useful for connecting to a broader range of fitness and sports equipment.

Overall, the Pixel 10 Pro holds the stronger hand in this category. The combination of newer Bluetooth, satellite emergency SOS, and crash detection represents a more impactful feature advantage than the S25's dual-SIM flexibility and ANT+ support, particularly for users who value safety and future-proof wireless standards.

Miscellaneous:
has a video light
Has sapphire glass display
Has a curved display
Has an e-paper display

The miscellaneous specs for these two phones are identical across every data point provided: both include a video light, and neither features sapphire glass, a curved display, or an e-paper display. There is nothing in this category that differentiates one from the other.

This is a clear tie — no advantage can be assigned to either the Pixel 10 Pro or the Galaxy S25 based solely on the specs available in this group.

Comparison Summary & Verdict

After examining every specification, it is clear that both phones excel in different areas. The Google Pixel 10 Pro stands out with its larger 4870 mAh battery, higher-resolution front camera at 42 MP, greater optical zoom at 5x, more internal storage at 1 TB, direct OS updates, emergency SOS via satellite, and crash detection — making it the stronger choice for photography enthusiasts and users who prioritize autonomy and safety features. The Samsung Galaxy S25, on the other hand, dominates in raw processing power with its Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset, vastly superior benchmark scores, a brighter 2600-nit display, 8K video recording capability, a more compact and lighter design at just 162 g, and PC mode support — making it ideal for power users and those who want the fastest, most versatile Android experience available.

Google Pixel 10 Pro
Buy Google Pixel 10 Pro if...

Buy the Google Pixel 10 Pro if you want a larger battery, superior optical zoom, a high-resolution selfie camera, direct OS updates, and built-in safety features like emergency SOS via satellite and crash detection.

Samsung Galaxy S25
Buy Samsung Galaxy S25 if...

Buy the Samsung Galaxy S25 if you prioritize raw processing power, a brighter and more compact display, 8K video recording, a lighter design, and the flexibility of dual SIM plus PC mode support.