
Nov 21, 2025 8:30 AM
The Best Phones With an Actual Headphone Jack
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It’s been nine years since Apple removed the headphone jack from the iPhone. Yes, you can get excellent wireless earbuds nowadays, but maybe you prefer plugging in or don’t want to charge your headphones. The joy of the 3.5-mm headphone connector is that it’s universal. You can use any pair of corded headphones—no need to worry whether the connectivity will blip in and out, no batteries to charge, no dongles to attach, and no earbuds to lose (or earbud cases to run through the washing machine).
There are times when Bluetooth is preferable, but having the option is nice. Unfortunately, every year, another major manufacturer decides to cut the headphone jack from its list of features. In 2025, that’s Samsung, which no longer offers the venerable port on its Galaxy A-series phones. But don’t lose hope! You still have some options, like Motorola’s Moto G Stylus 2025 and the Asus ROG Phone 9. As WIRED’s smartphone reviewer, I go through handsets big and small, cheap and expensive—these are the best phones with the headphone jack.
Read our Best Android Phones, Best Samsung Phones, Best Motorola Phones, Best Pixel Phones, Best iPhones, and Best Cheap Phones guides for more.
Updated November 2025: We’ve added the Moto G Play 2026 and mentioned the ROG Phone 10.
What Happened to the Headphone Jack?
It all began when Apple removed the port on the iPhone 7 in 2016—yes, technically Oppo did it first, but it was Apple’s decision that sparked an industry trend. Apple famously cited space-saving reasons to make the phone slimmer and fit a bigger battery, but it was also to nudge along the burgeoning wireless headphone market (guess who sits at the top right now?). Since then, other companies followed swiftly, until the port was only found on budget and midrange phones.
Now, cheap phones are beginning to lose the port, likely because you can buy decent wireless earbuds for as little as $30 these days. It’s very likely that within the next few years, the 3.5-mm port will disappear entirely from all smartphones.
Does Plugging In Get You Better Audio Quality?
Yes, plugging in a pair of wired headphones means the audio is not compressed, so it’s able to transmit more detail, offering a higher-fidelity audio experience. There’s also little to no latency, meaning there’s no delay between the music coming from your phone to the audio playing through the headphones. Wired connections also have the benefit of zero connectivity issues, and you won’t have to worry about battery life.
On the other hand, today’s Bluetooth codecs are significantly better than those from even 5 years ago. Most people will not hear a huge difference in audio quality when using wired headphones versus wireless headphones.
You Can Use a USB-C Adapter
Not having a 3.5-mm port doesn’t mean you can’t use wired headphones at all with a smartphone. You can buy a USB-C headphone dongle, which plugs into the USB-C port of your smartphone and adds a 3.5-mm port.
Apple USB-C to 3.5-mm Adapter for $9. This adapter from Apple will do the job for any smartphone with a USB-C port—that means Android phones and the iPhone 15 and newer. I recommend buying a few because they’re easy to lose. If you have an iPhone with the Lightning port (iPhone 14 and older), you’ll have to go for a third-party dongle as Apple officially discontinued its adapter.
Google USB-C Earbuds for $26: Alternatively, you can use USB-C earbuds. They’re standard wired earbuds but instead of a 3.5-mm connector at the end, it’s a USB-C one that connects to your phone’s charging port. I’ve used these earbuds from Google for a few years—they sound decent and are cheap. You can probably find plenty of other USB-C headphones, just make sure you check reviews to see what’s worth your money.
Scosche Car FM Transmitter for $22: This isn’t a solution for people with wired headphones, but if you’re like me and have an older car without Bluetooth and have had mixed results with dongles, I recommend this adapter. Plug it into your car’s 12-volt port, and turn on your FM radio to the station displayed on the device’s screen. Once you pair your smartphone to it via Bluetooth, your music will transmit over the air to the FM station, almost exactly as if your car had Bluetooth. It’s seamless, and this comes with a 3.5-mm cable that goes from this device to your car’s auxiliary port.
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Best Overall
Motorola
Moto G Stylus 2025
If a headphone jack is a must-have on your next phone, Motorola’s Moto G Stylus 5G 2025 strikes the best balance of performance, aesthetics, features, and price. Not only does it have the jack, but it also stores a stylus inside, putting to shame any other company that cited space-saving reasons to nix the port. The gorgeous blue vegan leather finish on the back truly makes this phone stand out, putting the Blue Man Group to shame. The performance, powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset, is nice and smooth, and you get a 120-Hz 6.7-inch OLED screen to boot. It’s slim, despite the 5,000-mAh battery, which lasts a full day and then some with average use. And the 50-megapixel main camera is reliable day or night as long as you keep still when tapping the shutter button.
Motorola goes above and beyond, stuffing this phone with twice the amount of typical storage at 256 GB; there’s also a microSD card slot to expand space, wireless charging, and an IP68 rating, so it will survive an accidental drop in the pool. For the first time, Motorola’s also offering two years of Android OS upgrades on its Moto G phones, meaning you can hold onto it a little longer before it won’t get new features. (You’ll still get three years of security updates.) Just remember that Moto phones are heavily discounted during big sale events, so I recommend waiting for a sale.
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Runner-Up
Motorola
Moto G Power (2025)
Wireless charging? Yep. NFC, so you can tap to pay with your phone? Sure thing. Headphone jack? You bet. It only costs $300, but Motorola’s Moto G Power 2025 (7/10, WIRED Recommends) is a stylish phone that checks off a lot of boxes, much like its pricier sibling above. Where it falls short is performance, which isn’t as smooth, so you’ll notice more hiccups and stutters. Still, it has enough horsepower to run most apps without frustration. The main camera sits a rung below, too, though it can capture some decent photos.
The display is sharp and bright (with a 120-Hz refresh rate), has an IP68 water-resistant rating, and will receive Android OS updates up to Android 17, with the usual three years of security updates. The Moto G Stylus 5G is the better phone in performance and cameras, but the Moto G Power is a cheaper alternative if budget is top of mind.
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A Flagship Phone With the Jack
Asus
ROG Phone 9 and Phone 9 Pro
Asus continues to be one of the few Android manufacturers offering headphone jacks in its flagship smartphones. The long-running ROG Phone series is now in its ninth iteration and features not just the 3.5-mm jack, but two USB-C ports so you can charge the gaming phone in any orientation. If all you want is a high-performing device with a headphone port, this is one of your only options with the top-end Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset. However, it’s hard to stomach the $1,000+ price. Asus doesn’t measure up to its peers in some areas—the software can feel clunky, the cameras are lackluster, and I ran into a few bugs in my testing. Not to mention, it will only get two Android OS upgrades and five years of security updates. That’s not great value.
There are two phones in the ROG Phone 9 series: the ROG Phone 9 and ROG Phone 9 Pro. I only tested the former, but the latter is really what most people may want. If you’re going to spend this much on a niche gaming phone, go big or go home, right? The primary difference is that the Pro model has extra Mini-LEDs on the back that light up to show personalized graphics and even enable fun retro games you can play using the air trigger shoulder haptic buttons. The Pro has slightly upgraded cameras, with a 32-megapixel 3X telephoto and a 13-megapixel ultrawide. You can also snag a bundle with Asus’s Aeroactive Cooler, which adds extra buttons to map controls in your mobile games, plus a fan to keep the phone cool and enable longer stutter-free gaming sessions.
The ROG Phone 9 doesn’t work on Verizon’s network in the US. It’ll be fine on AT&T and T-Mobile and their respective mobile virtual network operators. Asus will likely announce the ROG Phone 10 series very soon, so it may be prudent to wait.
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A Phone With a Matte Screen
TCL
60 XE Nxtpaper 5G
A surprisingly good phone for $250, the TCL 60 XE Nxtpaper 5G’s spotlight feature revolves around its matte, paper-like display (7/10, WIRED Recommends). While TCL says it cuts down blue light from entering your eyes (supposedly to reduce eyestrain and improve sleep quality, there’s no substantive evidence that these blockers do much. Instead, you should buy this phone if you think you’ll enjoy the anti-reflective screen, which feels almost like an e-reader. There’s even a switch on the side of the device that lets you enter different modes, like Ink Paper Mode, which turns the screen black and white, makes the color temperature warmer, and offers a Kindle-like reading experience.
Performance is solid for the money, and you get additional perks like a microSD card slot, NFC for contactless payments, and wireless charging. It works on every major US carrier, too.
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An Uber Budget Phone
Motorola
Moto G Play 5G 2026
Want to spend as little as possible? You can probably make do with the Moto G Play 2026, which features 5G connectivity for the first time. Performance is just OK—apps can take a beat to load, and everything generally feels sluggish. Folks I spoke with on the phone said my audio quality didn’t sound great either. You do get a decently sharp and bright screen, two-day battery life, a microSD card slot to expand on the 64 GB of space, and a headphone jack. I’ve spent a week using it, and outside of having to be patient with its performance, it was serviceable.
If your needs are minimal, the Moto G Play 2026 will do the job, though you may want to go for the nearly identical Moto G 2026, which has the same specs but with upgraded cameras and 128 GB of storage. That or catch the aforementioned Moto G Power 2025 on sale—I’ve seen it drop as low as $190.
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A Distraction-Free Phone
Minimal
Phone
If you want to jack in, but also unplug from the world, consider the Minimal Phone (6/10, WIRED Review). This Android handset has a tiny, 4.3-inch e-paper screen and a physical keyboard. It allows you to access all of your favorite apps, but because the screen constantly ghosts and isn’t suited for video playback, you’ll find yourself barely using social media (the cameras are also pretty bad). That’s kind of the point, even if it means suffering through a subpar experience in some apps more than others—the trade-off is relying on your phone less. You can still access modern-day amenities, like Uber, authenticators, and banking apps.
Minimal promises to support the phone with updates for five years, though it’s a new company, so there’s always the risk that it could go under and halt support. The phone has most of the perks you’d want, from the ability to make contactless payments via NFC to wireless charging. Just know that it’s designed to be used less than a normal smartphone—except if you want to jack in and jam out to Radiohead all day.
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A USB-C and 3.5-mm Adapter
Belkin
Rockstar 3.5mm Audio + USB-C Charge Adapter
Dongle is a horrible word, but using one is far cheaper than buying a new phone outright. While a basic USB-C to 3.5-mm adapter will do the job, I prefer this Belkin adapter, which adds a USB-C port next to the headphone jack, allowing you to recharge the phone while playing tunes. The dongle itself is plasticky, so you’ll want to be careful when handling it, but the USB-C connector is long enough that there’s enough clearance for the adapter from your pocket. The charger supports up to 60 watts, which is plenty for phones, tablets, and even most laptops. Belkin offers a two-year warranty.
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