These Are The Best-Selling Phones Of All Time

These Are The Best-Selling Phones Of All Time

In 2021, the world had 7.1 billion mobile phone users, roughly 90% of the global population. The mobile phone is now one of humanity’s most ubiquitous pieces of technology, and these sleek modern devices are a far cry from their hefty, brick-like predecessors.

But what are the most sold mobile phones of all time?

Using data from WikipediaYahoo Finance, and tech analyst firm Omdia, Visual Capitalist’s Pallavi Rao charts out the sales of the mobile phones that have enjoyed unmitigated success.

The Most Sold Mobile Phones of All Time

Heading the list of most sold phones ever is the much-beloved Nokia 1100, recording more than 250 million sales in six years before being discontinued in 2009.

Despite existing at the same time as the first mass-market smartphones (the Nokia E-series and then the iPhone), the 1100s’ price, focus on basic functionality, and pocket size made it a favorite in developing countries.

At second place, another variant of the same line, the Nokia 1110, sold 248 million units.

Rank Mobile Phone All-Time Sales
1 Nokia 1100 250M
2 Nokia 1110 248M
3 iPhone 6/6 Plus 222M
4 Nokia 105 Series 200M
5 iPhone 6S/6S Plus 174M
6 iPhone 5s 165M
7 Nokia 3210 161M
8 iPhone 7/7 Plus 160M
9 iPhone 11/11 Pro/
11 Pro Max
159M
10 iPhone XR/
XS/XS Max
151M
11T Nokia 6600 150M
11T Nokia 1200 150M
11T Nokia 5230 150M
11T Samsung E1100 150M
15 iPhone 5 146M
16 Nokia 2600/
2610/2626/2630
135M
17T Motorola RAZR V3 130M
17T Nokia 1600/
1650/1661
130M
19 Nokia 3310 126M
20 iPhone 8/8 Plus 125M

Ranked third is the iPhone 6 and 6 plus, with a combined 222 million units. Their 4.7 and 5.5-inch screens ushered in the era of large screen smartphones, and they remain Apple’s best-selling iPhones and the best-selling smartphones of all time. In fact, the iPhone 6 was so popular it was re-released in 2017 at a mid-range price level.

The next 17 ranks of the most sold phones are split between Nokias and iPhones, with only the Samsung E1100 (ranked 11th) and and the Motorola Razr V3 (ranked 17th) managing to break the duopoly.

Of course, Nokia and Apple have had very different fortunes in the last decade.

After riding telecom market deregulation, first in Europe, and then in Asia, Nokia failed the transition to smartphones and quickly lost ground to Apple, Google and Samsung.

Microsoft purchased Nokia’s mobile phone business in 2014 to boost their own Windows Phone, but when that failed, Nokia’s phone business was once again sold to HMD Global. Today, HMD Global still makes Nokia phones (including revamps of earlier models) which run on Android OS.

The Modern Mobile Phone Rivalry: Apple vs. Samsung

It’s hard to believe how quickly Apple’s core business has changed from personal computing to mobile phones.

In 2009 iPhone sales contributed about 25% to the company’s revenues. By 2023, half of Apple’s $383 billion revenue came from their phones.

The iPhone routinely dominates the top 10 best-selling phones every year, as evidenced from research by tech analysts Omdia.

2022 Best Sellers 2022 Sales 2023 Best Sellers 2023 Sales
iPhone 13 55M iPhone 14 Pro Max 31M
Galaxy A13 35M iPhone 14 26M
iPhone 13 Pro Max 29M iPhone 14 Pro 24M
iPhone 14 Pro Max 23M iPhone 13 22M
iPhone 11 21M Galaxy A14 20M
iPhone 13 Pro 19M Galaxy A14 5G 14M
iPhone 14 Pro 18M Galaxy A54 5G 14M
Galaxy A03 Core 18M Galaxy S23 Ultra 13M
iPhone 14 17M Galaxy A04e 11M
Galaxy A03 16M Redmi 12C 11M

Source: Data shared by OmdiaNote: 2023 numbers are current up to Q3, 2023.

However, Korean electronics behemoth Samsung’s sales figures aren’t exactly lackluster either. And while the two companies’ business models differ quite a bit, their flagship devices are routinely put up against each other: Samsung winning on battery life and mid and lower-range options, and Apple winning on optimization and security. Both brands have stellar cameras.

And while Apple rules the U.S. smartphone market (52% market share), Samsung edges them out globally with a 22% market share, compared to Apple’s 19%.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 01/27/2024 – 08:45

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/HFg6qwD Tyler Durden

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