I’m in the market for a new phone, and I’d like it to be Linux. As I’ve been building a table of options, I thought I’d share it. It’s a wide table; sorry about that.
Phone Display "/nits Size mm/g Cameras CPU GHz Mem GB Battery USBC Lnx US Avail Price Mecha Comet ✅ 🚫 🚫 £649 FairPhone 5 6.46 OLED 1224x2700 161x76x9.6 212 50/50 QCM 6490 1.9 8/256 SD 4500r 3.0 ✅ 🚫 ✅ €499 Furi FLX1s 6.7 LCD 720 x1600 170x76x8 201 20/13 Cortex 2.4 8/128 5000 2.0 ✅ ✅ 🚫 $550 FairPhone 6 (Murena) 6.31 OLED 1116x2484 156x73x9.6 191 50/32 Snap 7sG3 1.8 8/256 4415 2.0 🚫 ✅ ✅ €599 Murena HIROH 6.67 AMOLED 1220x2712 108/32 Cortex 3.35 16/512 5000 ?? ? ✅ 🚫 $900 PinePhone64 5.95 720 x1440 ?? 5/2 ARM 1.152 2/3 3000 ?? ✅ ✅ ?? ?? Purism Librem 5 5.7 IPS 720 x1440 153x75x15.5 263 13/8 ARM 1.5 3/32 SD 4500 3.0 ✅ ✅ ✅ $799 Purism Liberty Phone 5.7 IPS 720 ×1440 5.7 13/8 ARM 1.5GHz 4/128 4500 r 3.0 (v) ✅ ✅ 🚫 $1,999 Jolla 4.5 IPS 540 x960 131x68x9.9 141 8/2 Qualcomm 1.4 1/16 SD 2100 r 2.0 ⭕ 🚫 🚫 N/A Volla ✅ 🚫 ✅ Varies Liberux NEXX ✅ 🚫 🚫 ~€1000 F(x)tec PRO¹ X ? 🚫 🚫 £649 Murena CMF Phone 1 6.67 SAMOLED 1080x2400 194x77x8 197 50/16 Cortex 2.5 8/128 5000 ? ? ✅ ✅ $419 Murena Teracube 2s 6.1 IPS 720x1560 155x73x10 190 20/8 MediaTek 2.35 4/64 SD 4000r 2 (¬PD) 🚫 ✅ ✅ $340 Xiaomi Poco X3 6.67 1080x2400 13/64 Qualcomm 2.3 6/64 5160 ✅ ✅ 🚫 $320 It’s very “me” oriented: it’s biased toward US markets ('cause that’s where I am); it summarizes several features such as the CPU, display, and camera (all of which get spec’d out ad nauseum in marketing) which I’m too lazy to standardize; and it’s biased toward device availability. Since there isn’t a huge selection of options, the minute details hold less relevance.
I welcome updates, clarifications, and corrections; I expect to keep this table up to date until at least such time as I acquire a Linux phone – even if I am forced into using a de-Googled Android in the meantime. Given Google’s shenanigans of late, I am going to factor “Linux-ability” of the de-Googled phones, in the hopes that after Google screws over the forks, we’ll still have the option of installing some future more compatible mobile Linux distribution.
I’ve also considered making a public Cryptopad spreadsheet, but I kind of hate working with SPAs.
Minutia
There are many more potential specs for Display, but not all vendors include all specs: nits, refresh rate, touch sample rates, colors, contrast, and protective glass. This can all be useful information, but not all vendors provide all specs, and it would blow up the table. Therefore, I include the most common information: diagonal size, technology (if provided), and dimensions.
CPU specifics are restricted to the basics. Most specs list # of performance vs efficiency cores, multiple speed specs, and just a ton of information that wouldn’t fit easily into a table; and not all vendors provide the same amount of data in anything like a standard format. So, I include the family and the fastest clock speed, because I’m not sure that even with all the other variables you could calculate an expected standby run time by knowing the slower clock speeds.
Cameras are in megapixels, and are back/front resolutions. I do not care about video capture frame rates, modes or anything else about the camera. I have a real camera for photography.
Mem is RAM/storage, and whether the phone takes SD cards
Battery is in mAh, and an r suffix means replacable
USBC is the supported version of USB-C on the device; (v) means I confirmed it supports 3.0’s video-over-USB; 2.0 never does, but sometimes 3.0 doesn’t, either.
Lnx in this context doesn’t mean “you can boot it,” but “you can make calls” – IE, what most people would consider daily driving. A smart phone is considered functional if
- Calls can be placed and received
- The screen works
- The WiFi works
- The speakers work
- The USB connection works (you can charge the phone)
In particular, VoLTE is becoming mandatory on many networks in the US, and several EU phones apparently don’t support it on US networks (if at all?). Wireless charging appears to require chip support which nobody has implemented Linux drivers for. None of these phones have wireless charging, and if they did, the impression I got was that it wouldn’t work under Linux anyway. Regardless, while some people might have that as a minimum requirement, I do not consider it in the “daily driver” category.
Murena phones come with /e/OS; some are available with Ubuntu Touch.
US is whether or not it works on US networks, AFAICT
Avail is whether you can get your hands on one right now. Several of these are pre-order.
I did not convert Price to dollars, despite this being a US-centric table, because exchange rates are highly variable. A couple of phones I may not flesh out; the Pine64 has embarassing hardware, and I’m fairly certain by now the the Jolla doesn’t work in the US; since my goal is to get a phone for me, I’m not spending time filling in data for a phone which can’t work.
Therefore, while I’m not including all de- Googled phones, I’m including some – especially if Linux support seems to be coming along. I’m also considering only contemporary technology, because even if the battery is replaceable, I’d really not buy myself into having to upgrade soon. Murena, in particular, sells several Pixels (5, 7, 8) with /e/OS.
Phone notes
FairPhone 5
The one phone Murena skipped importing into the US was the FairPhone 5, despite a promising post in 2023 claiming it was coming. It’s the one most interesting, and would probably be at the top of my list. The 6 doesn’t bring a lot to the table and is both larger and more expensive.The Jolla Phone
Jolla no longer makes this phone, and the specs are quite old.Jolla phones ran Sailfish, which is neither Android nor Linux, but which apparently was pretty nice. I have no knowledge of whether it was what privacy wonks would consider “secure”, but it isn’t open source and you can not trust anything that isn’t open source.
Volla phones
None of the Volla phones have ever been imported into the US, and I’ve seen commentary that they both work on US networks, and don’t. Volla phones are quite nice, specs-wise, and it’s a shame we can’t get them in the states.The Ubuntu Touch website lists the Quintus and 22 as fully functional.
F(x)tec PRO¹ X
Another phone with a physical keyboard which looks both fantastic and also perpetually in development with no clear indication of when, or if, it’ll ever be released. The name is absurd and makes me skeptical of the entire project.Murena Teracube 2s
The bootloader on the Teracube is locked, which precludes installing Linux.Xiaomi Poco X3
Something of a dark horse, and a phone dating back to 2020, the Xiaomi shows as having every feature functioning under Ubuntu Touch. Unfortunately, the phone does not support VoLTE under Ubuntu Touch, which hinders its use in the US. The phone hardware itself does.Nobody has this phone in stock, though, so “Availability” is negative, although I suppose it could be found on eBay or something. The non-replacable battery makes buying it used a sketchy proposition.
OC by @Sxan@piefed.zip


Everything seems to work with Ubuntu Touch, though I’ll have to try VoLTE. But sound, Bluetooth, WiFi, GPS, camera’s, etc all seem to work.
Ah, that’s because Ubuntu Touch uses Android’s kernel. I don’t know if this should count as “Linux compatible”
Ahh I see, you were asking about the software side of the audio, not the kernel hardware driver support.
Apparently the same audio components work on other devices just not fairphone 5 yet, and they are still investigating why, per here:
https://wiki.postmarketos.org/wiki/Fairphone_5_(fairphone-fp5)/Audio