This isn’t just about saving a few bucks; it’s about calling time on a cycle that doesn’t serve us anymore.
Look, I spent a lot of my time on the “other side” of the table. I saw how the marketing machine works. I watched as we polished the narrative to make you feel like your life was incomplete without the latest titanium frame or a lens that can see into your neighbor’s yard.
Now that I’m looking at tech through a consumer lens, the “flagship arms race” feels like a lot of noise and distraction. Here is why I think we should stop paying for a small vehicle’s worth of phone and start investing in what actually matters.
The Overkill Era
Most of us are walking around with R35,000 supercomputers just to scroll TikTok, post our lives on social media, and send emails. It’s the ultimate “too much phone” scenario. Unless you’re a professional mobile gamer or using your phone for filmaking (and I mean real film making, not the trashy kind), you’re paying for performance you will literally never tap into.
The harsh truth is, that extra R20,000 you spend on a flagship phone doesn’t buy you a better life—it buys you anxiety about dropping it or it getting snatched. That money could be an international flight, a family holiday on the coast, a decent chunk towards debt payment or an investment in your own business. Listen, the mid-range is no longer what you know from the 2010’s. They’ve reached a point of “peak usability.” They don’t feel slow, they don’t take grainy photos, and most can actually last a full day and a bit which many flagships struggle to do.
The Real-World Winners (and SA Prices)
So here are some of the mid-rangers I’ve been living with, testing, and recommending to friends lately. They aren’t “show ponies”; they’re tools that get the job done without making you wince at the price tag.

1. Samsung Galaxy A56 5G — ~R 8,999–R 10,699
There’s a reason Samsung is the top smartphone brand in South Africa right now. If I had to pick one phone that gets the everyday stuff right without complaining, it’s this. It has a great screen, a battery that doesn’t die mid-afternoon, and a camera that usually grabs the shot you hoped for. It’s one of the most balanced choices available right now.
2. Honor X9c 256GB 5G — ~R 7,999
Honor has been become a serious contender in the local smartphone arena. Their X series offers massive storage and snappy performance with outstanding durability. It doesn’t have the flashy cinematics in its launch trailers, but for some of the best value out there,it hits the sweet spot. The Honor X9c and recently released X9d should be at the top of your shopping list.
3. Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G — ~R 7,499
This phone makes you wonder why anyone pays more just for a logo. It’s got a massive battery and performance that feels smooth in day-to-day use. It feels expensive enough to be proud of, without the “corporate tax” attached. It’s a solid all-rounder that ticks the boxes people actually care about.
4. Apple iPhone 15 — ~R 13,999
Yes I know, it’s not a mid-ranger, but hear me out: longevity is a form of value. iPhones hold their resale price and get software updates for years. If you’re the type of person who wants to buy a phone and not think about another one until 2030, this is the lowest rung of the Apple ladder that still makes financial sense.
The Bottom Line: Shiny vs. Useful
Let’s make one thing clear. Your phone isn’t a status symbol; it’s the device you use to communicate and run your life. The Samsung A56 and Redmi Note 14 Pro+ feel smooth because they handle the things we actually do—WhatsApp, banking, Instagram—without the drama. The Honor X9c/X9d is a tank, which is everything when you’re out and about. And the iPhone 15 offers peace of mind.
We don’t need next year’s chipset to have a good time. We need a camera that doesn’t embarrass us and a battery that doesn’t make us carry a power bank like a security blanket. At these prices, you aren’t settling for less—you’re choosing more of what you actually need.