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    • The Best Smartphones You Can Buy in 2010
    • Top 10 Touchscreen Phones
    • Review: Nokia N8
    • HTC Desire HD vs. HTC Desire Z
    • HTC Desire & HTC Legend Compared
    • HTC Wildfire review
    • HTC Desire review
    • Top five reasons to get the iPad
    • UK Apple iPhone Deals & Tariffs Compared
    • HTC Wildfire versus Best of the Rest
    • LG Pop vs Samsung Monte
    • Nokia E7 review
    • Top HTC Mozart features
    • Top 5 SIM-Free budget smartphone deals
    • Top features of the Nokia 7230
    • Nokia C3 Review
    • BlackBerry Storm vs BlackBerry Storm2 - Battle of the Touchscreens
    • The Top 10 Budget Phones
    • HTC Desire versus Google Nexus One
    • Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro review
    • Motorola Milestone XT720 review
    • Review: BlackBerry Torch 9800
    • Review: LG Optimus GT540
    • Review: Nokia E5
    • Review: Nokia C7
    • Nokia C3-01 Touch and Type review
    • Why you need to buy the HTC HD7
    • Top 5 reasons to get the HTC Legend
    • Nokia E7 vs BlackBerry Torch 9800
    • HTC Sensation vs Samsung Galaxy S2
    • Everything you need to know about the iPhone 5
    • Everything you need to know about the HTC EVO 3D
    • Motorola Atrix vs iPhone 4
    • Buyer's Guide: Sony Ericsson's Xperia Range
    • Samsung Galaxy S vs Samsung Galaxy S II Mini
    • Best Smartphone Deals for April
    • HTC Pyramid vs Motorola Atrix
    • Samsung Galaxy S vs HTC Incredible S
    • iPhone 4 vs HTC Desire S
    • HTC Incredible S vs Nokia N8
    • HTC Wildfire S: Everything You Need To Know
    • iPad 2 vs the best of the rest
    • Best smartphones deals for March
    • Everything you need to know about Apple's iOS4.3
    • The Very Best BlackBerry Handsets
    • Android 2.3: Handsets getting the update
    • Nokia & Windows Phone 7: What to expect
    • Best smartphones of February
    • The best Qwerty smartphones of 2011
    • App store battle: Android Market vs Apple App Store
    • HTC Desire HD vs HTC Incredible S
    • Why you need to buy Apple's iPad 2
    • HTC Desire vs HTC Desire S
    • LG Optimus One vs HTC Wildfire S
    • Why you need to buy an Android 3.0 tablet in 2011
    • Best Tablet Devices of 2011
    • Best HTC smartphones of 2011
    • Best Android phones under £150
    • Windows Phone 7 or BlackBerry OS 6?
    • The best camera phones
    • Top 5 iPhone 4 alternatives
    • Samsung Galaxy S vs Samsung Galaxy S II
    • HTC Desire S vs HTC Desire
    • Best Smartphones of MWC 2011
    • iPad vs BlackBerry PlayBook
    • Apple iOS4.3 vs Android 3.0
    • iPhone 4 vs Samsung Galaxy S
    • Top 5 Premium Smartphones
    • Android or Windows Phone 7
    • Top 5 Budget Android Smartphones
    • HTC Desire HD vs Google Nexus S
    • iOS4.3 Preview
    • Windows Phone 7: Buyer's guide
    • Top 10 reasons to buy a HTC Desire Z
    • HTC Desire HD vs iPhone 4
    • Top 5 Reasons To Buy The BlackBerry Torch 9800
    • Best HTC Smartphones
    • Top 5 gaming smartphones of 2010
    • BlackBerry Buying Guide
    • WIndows Phone 7: Top Tips
    • Top 5 tablets from CES 2011
    • Motorola Xoom vs BlackBerry PlayBook
    • Why Android 2.3 kicks ass
    • Top 5 CES 2011 smartphones
    • iPad 2: what to expect
    • Android hints and tips
    • iPhone 4 Tips and Tricks
    • Apple iPad top tips and tricks
    • Top five BlackBerrys of 2010
    • Apple iOS vs Google Android vs Symbian^3
    • Top five Nokia phones of 2010
    • Nokia N8 vs HTC Desire HD
    • Top five Android phones of 2010
    • Samsung Monte vs Samsung Wave
    • Apple iOS4.2: Top Features
    • 5 Reasons the Nokia C3 kicks Ass
    • Top 5 HTC phones of 2010
    • iPhone 4 vs. Google Nexus S
    • Motorola Milestone 2 vs Nokia E7
    • Android vs iOS4.2
    • Top 5 reasons the BlackBerry Bold 9780 kicks ass
    • Top 5 reasons the Google Nexus S kicks ass
    • Motorola DEFY vs. Nokia X6
    • Top 5 Music Phones
    • iPad vs Samsung Galaxy Tab
    • Top 5 budget smartphones
    • Top 5 gaming smartphones
    • 5 Reasons the BlackBerry Bold 9780
    • iPhone 4 vs. Nokia N8
    • Top 5 reasons the BlackBerry 9780 kicks ass
    • Top reasons to buy the LG Optimus One
    • HTC Desire vs HTC Desire HD
    • BlackBerry Torch 9800 vs HTC Desire Z
    • Buyer's Guide: The Dell Venue Pro
    • Top 5 reasons the Nokia N8 kicks ass
    • HTC Desire HD vs Samsung Galaxy S
    • Top features of the Samsung Genio Qwerty
    • 7 reasons why the Nokia 5230 still kicks ass
    • Top reasons to get the Nokia C3
    • Buyer's Guide: BlackBerry Curve 9300
    • Buyer’s Guide: T-Mobile Pulse Mini
    • 5 Reasons the Samsung Omnia 7 kicks ass
    • Motorola DEFY review
    • Top 5 reasons to get the iPhone 4
    • Top features of the Samsung Galaxy S
    • Why choose the HTC Wildfire?

The Top 10 Budget Phones

While every phone buyer may lust after the latest handsets, it doesn’t mean you can necessarily afford them. However, there’s no need to just make do with a terrible phone that could have conceivably been released four years previously.

We’ve compiled a list of ten phones that are available for under £900 on prepay plans, many significantly under that figure too, for those of you that aren’t looking to spend £25 or more each month on a contract.

There’s a wide variety of feature sets on show too, everything from touchscreen handsets with Qwerty keyboards in tow to more traditional candybar phones with real, clicky buttons. Here’s the run-down of our Top 10 budget phones, they may not be the absolute cheapest but they are the best value...

Touchscreen phones

LG Pop GD510
From £79.00 on Orange

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We have to put our hands up here and admit we didn't call this right in our initial review back in November last year. We felt that the quirky user interface and the lack of 3G would make this touchscreen unpopular in the market place. We were wrong.

It turns out that the combination of touchscreen, decent 3.2 megapixel camera, good multimedia features (including a proper headphone socket) combined with a very competitive price point to make this a massive success - especially among younger people.

As of February 2010, Samsung has shipped over one million of these little fellas worldwide - and a million people can't be wrong, can they?

Samsung Tocco Lite S5320
From £59.90 on Orange/T-Mobile

Check out the latest Samsung Tocco Lite pay as you go deals

The Samsung Tocco Lite follows on from the Tocco F480 as one of the most popular cheap touchscreen phones on the market. It’s newer than the two LG phones in our touchscreen favourites here too, although its feature set is fairly similar.

It uses Samsung’s proprietary OS, so although you won’t be able to benefit from the app store of a true smartphone, the Tocco Lite gives you the feel of one at a greatly reduced price.

LG Viewty KU990 Lite
From £79.90

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When the Viewty was originally released, it became well known for its relatively powerful camera. Nowadays, its 5-megapixel offering sounds a trifle aged, but still beats just about anything in this budget list.

Before the LG Viewty KU990 hit the bargain basement, it used to cost a good chunk of cash more than the LG Cookie. However, they can now be had for a fairly similar outlay. You might prefer the Cookie for its friendly looks, but the Viewty wins out on the camera front if you’re planning on using your mobile as an on-the-go snapper.

LG Cookie KP500
From £45.90 on Vodafone

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The LG Cookie is something of a budget cousin to the Renoir and Pixon. Granted, it lacks several loses several points thanks to its budget feature set, but it remains an attractive handset whose stylish looks belie its low price point.

The Cookie is significantly slimmer than the Viewty too, at 11.9mm depth against the Viewty’s 14.8mm. It may not sound like much in figure form, but those 2.9mm help to make the Cookie seem all the more svelte than its LG buddy.

Alcatel OT-708
From £19.90 on Vodafone

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The Alcatel OT-708 is our brand new ultra-budget favourite. You won’t be able to install mountain-loads of great new apps for it, but the responsive touchscreen, paired with the very low price, impressed us greatly.

For a touchscreen-only device it’s pretty dinky too, with just a 2.4-inch screen. Even so, it’s pretty each to type out text messages using the on-screen virtual keypad. Yep, thanks to the screen’s diminutive size, you only get a virtual numerical keypad rather than a full Qwerty, but we still found it better than some budget button keypads.

 

Text and email phones

LG KS360
From £32.95 on O2

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The KS360 has been doing the rounds as a popular budget handset for ages now, but it remains a decent choice because it’s available for so cheap nowadays, considering it has got a full slide-out Qwerty.

Not only that, it’s got a 2.4-inch touchscreen and a set of real buttons on the phone’s fascia. That’s a lot of navigation methods for a phone that’s now available for well under a hundred pounds. You do pay for it elsewhere in the phone’s feature list, with only 2-megapixels on show in the camera.

If you’re not too bothered about that though, the KS360 comes in a few different colours – for those that are fed up with the legions of silver and black handsets that are the staple of the mobile market.

Samsung B3310
From £34.95 on Vodafone

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Samsung’s answer to the KS360, the B3310, comes in colours even gaudier than its LG rival, but it’s arguably even better equipped on the navigation stakes. Not only has it got a full slide-out Qwerty, a touchscreen and a traditional button D-pad, there’s also a row of number keys alongside the screen.

Yes, it makes the phone look pretty busy and would be an acquired taste even in functionality terms, but there’s no denying it packs a lot in. Elsewhere the feature list is less impressive – 2-megapixel camera and no 3G – but if you’re looking more for the feel of a smartphone rather than its power, the B3310’s not a bad choice.

 

Traditional phones

Sony Ericsson W580
From £77.99 on Vodafone

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Unlike Sony Ericsson’s more recent budget entries, the Sony Ericsson W580i features a screen with a half-decent resolution, 240x320 pixels. It may be a bit longer in the tooth than the newer W395 and S312, but it's got a similar feature set and better build quality.

It’s a slider phone, and although it doesn’t have any advanced features – no 3G, a 2-megapixel camera and no 3.5mm jack – we still think it’s a better choice than Sony Ericsson’s newer releases considering the W580i is now available at a similar price.

Nokia 6300
From £74.99 SIM-free

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The Nokia 6300 has slowly been creeping down the price scale over the past two years, and it’s still a pleasantly compact handset with a reassuring sense of quality. It uses Nokia’s S40 v3 operating system. Although it doesn’t offer the level of functionality that the S60 OS boasts, it’s still fine for everyday mobile usage.

If you’re just looking for a simple, slim and attractive handset to primarily use as a call and text machine, the Nokia 6300 is one of the best phones on this list - in fact it's an all-time classic if you just want a great mobile.

Samsung U600
From £28.95 on Vodafone

Check out the latest Samsung U600 pay as you go deals

When it was first released back in 2007, the Samsung U600 was a pretty expensive phone. Now, you can get hold of it for under £30. A follow-up to the D900, the U600 became very popular thanks to its ultra-slim body and rather slick looks.

It also pips the other traditional button-operated phones to the finish line on the camera front too, with a 3.2-megapixel sensor where the other two only have two megapixels to their name, and autofocus. If you’re looking to indulge in a spot of mobile gaming, the Nokia and Sony Ericsson are still better options, but the U600 is a cool customer.

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