iPhone 17 Pro Max vs Galaxy S25 Ultra: the showdown of 2025 begins! – soofaa.shop

iPhone 17 Pro Max vs Galaxy S25 Ultra: the showdown of 2025 begins!

The iPhone 17 series is now available to purchase, and the iPhone 17 Pro Max is — as expected — the new top-tier phone from Apple. It comes with a new design and “camera plateau”, improved cameras with better zoom and nighttime performance, and of course a faster processor.

It’s the natural competitor is Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Ultra, which has been out for about 8 months now. Samsung’s camp offers not one but two zoom cameras, enhanced digital zoom with AI, a lot of Galaxy AI features and Gemini on board for a full-rounded package of smart. Plus, Samsung rocks a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite tuned for Galaxy, squeezing some more GHz out of an already powerful chip.

So, does the iPhone 17 Pro Max have enough upgrades and pizzazz to cut down on Samsung’s momentum? Or is the Galaxy S25 Ultra the one flagship that will get loyal Apple fans to switch? 

iPhone 17 Pro: $0.00/mo. at Verizon

$0
/mo

$30
55

$31 off (100%)

The powerful iPhone 17 Pro is finally here! You can now get the new Pro with an upgraded design and a brilliant display for as low as $0.00/mo. at Verizon. You must set up a new line on an Unlimited Ultimate plan and trade in a device to take advantage.


Buy at Verizon

iPhone 17 Pro Max: $2.77/mo. at Verizon

$2
77
/mo

$33
33

$31 off (92%)

The impressive iPhone 17 Pro Max is available at Verizon. Right now, you can save up to $1,100 on the premium device when you activate a new line and trade in an eligible device. The promo is only available with an Unlimited Ultimate plan.


Buy at Verizon

Save up to $700 on the 512GB Galaxy S25 Ultra!

$719
99

$1419
99

$700 off (49%)

Get the mighty Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra for up to $700 off with the official Samsung Store. To get the discount, you must provide an eligible trade-in in good condition.


Buy at Samsung

To find out the answer, we will be putting the two flagships through our gauntlet of battery, camera, performance, and display tests, plus a pinch of anecdotal experience. Let’s go!

The iPhone 17 Pro Max was, surprisingly, redesigned. It’s not wildly different but it does have a rather peculiar new camera bar on the bach. A camera plateau, Apple calls it. It’s also now back to being made with aluminum. As a reminder, premium iPhones have been made with stainless steel since the iPhone X, then titanium for a couple of years — the 15 Pro and 16 Pro. And now we are back to aluminum. Presumably because it’s better at dissipating the heat from the A19 Pro processor, and is lighter.

The Galaxy S25 Ultra still features a titanium-coated frame. It’d be interesting to see if Samsung drops it now that Apple has. And its cameras are still the “floating” style rings in the top left of the phone’s back, which does result in some uneven wobble. On the upside — they do look kind of sick.

The matte glass back on the iPhone is now the Ceramic Shield. 4x more durable against cracks, compared to whatever glass Apple was using before that. It’s also a much smaller subsection of the phone’s back — there’s a lot more aluminum back there now, with the matte glass being a small “pane” in the lover 2/3rds of the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max. That is where the MagSafe charging coil and its magnets live, and it needs to be not metal, so that the wireless charging can happen in the first place.

The Galaxy S25 Ultra has an all-glass back with a matte finish — it’s a Gorilla Glass Victus 2, which is well-known for its durability. 

On feel in the hand, the iPhone does have a whole new camera bar to get used to. However, you can quickly learn to rest it against your index finger, and its smooth sailing from then on. Otherwise, the beveled frame feels nice and soft against the palm. The Galaxy S25 Ultra itself had a bit of a redesign this year, now also delivering flat frames and slightly rounded corners, but its frame is not beveled. Some users like the sharp edges — they provide the feeling of better grip. Others have the harsher feel of it.

Both phones also offer a 6.9-inch screen panel. The iPhone is slightly thicker, and a bit heavier:

The iPhone 17 Pro Max does have more buttons on its exterior — there’s the power button, the volume keys, then the muti-functional Camera Control button and programmable Action button. That’s a lot from a company who, just a few years ago, was venturing to remove all buttons from its phones. Samsung takes it easy here with just power, volume up, and volume down.

The new Pro iPhones come in a surprisingly limited selection of colors — Silver, Deep Blue, and Cosmic Orange. On one hand, I am happy that we at least have one quirky and fun color for the Pro line iPhones. On the other, it’s kind of shocking that the black or Space Gray are entirely gone right now.

The Galaxy S25 Ultra comes in Titanium Gray, Titanium Black, Titanium Whitesilver, and Titanium Silverblue. Further variants are exclusive to the Samsung.com store — Titanium Jadegreen, Titanium Jetblack, and Titanium Pinkgold.

No surprises expected here — the iPhone 17 Pro Max has a 6.9-inch Super Retina XDR OLED display with dynamic 1-120 Hz ProMotion. This is rivaled by the Galaxy S25’s 6.9-inch Dynamic AMOLED x2 1-120 Hz. These are very good screens and we expect we will have little to complain about.
The big news here is that Apple is using a new 7-layer anti-reflective coating. Samsung has been using something of the sort since the Galaxy S24 Ultra and I’ve been ranting and raving about how amazing it is and how it helps the AMOLED panel pop out even more. The iPhone 17 Pro Max does have slightly less glare, but the S25 Ultra still beats it

Both of these phones can hit excellent brightness numbers. Yes, the Samsung is a bit lower, but its anti-reflective coating being better gives it a leg up in real life use scenarios. But what’s even cooler is that both display panels hit sub-1 nit measurements for minimum brightness. That’ll make both excellent bedsude buddies. Plus, there’s the blue-light filter and automatic whitepoint adjustment on both, so they are catered to being easy on the eyes.

Performance and Software

Apple silicon vs the Samsung-Qualcomm partnership

Apple’s A-series chips have been at the top of the game for years. However, over the past couple of generations, silicon-slinger Qualcomm really caught up. Especially since it partnered with Samsung for design and manufacturing — that might be a coincidence, we really don’t know how much hand in the process Samsung had. After all, Sammy’s own Exynos chips are not amazing.

In any case, the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Made for Galaxy inside the Galaxy S25 Ultra is an excellent performer. But Apple’s A17 Pro is an entirely new beast, and it now has the vapor cooling chamber to back it up for sustained performance. Results?

CPU Performance Benchmarks:

Wow, what a showdown! Both of them give respectable performance in the single-core test, but yes, the A19 Pro does pull ahead by quite a bit. However, for multi-core, they are neck-in-neck. If you’ve been making your decision based on benchmark numbers, this is going to be a tough nut to crack!

The Galaxy S25 Ultra does start off a bit higher than the iPhone 17 Pro Max. However it throttles down lower, and faster. To be clear — the 3DMark test is specifically designed to force phones to throttle. It’s a question of how long it will take and how much they will slow down. The iPhones over the past couple of years took half a cycle to go way down. However, the upgraded vapor chamber seems to be doing wonders this year — the iPhone 17 Pro Max throttles slowly over 3 benchmar cycles and then settles at a “lowest” score that is still quite high!

For storage,  the iPhone 17 Pro Max repeats the previous tiers — 256 GB minimum, then 512 GB, 1 TB, and a new 2 TB upgrade. The Galaxy S25 Ultra comes with 256 GB, 512 GB, 1 TB.

With iOS 26, we have a new aesthetic to enjoy. Apple calls the new design Liquid Glass, and it layers transparency, animations, and glass-like effects throughout the OS. You can go subtle or max it out with the new Clear Look mode, which really leans into the transparency vibe.
On the practical side, there’s a new dynamic wallpaper that shifts based on time of day and notifications. Music gets animated album artm, while the Camera app has been simplified — you swipe to access extra modes, making the interface cleaner and more minimalistic.

The real productivity boosts, though, are in the Phone and Messages apps. Call Screening and Spam Filtering make their iOS debut, and Live Translate now works in real-time during calls — a long-awaited answer to Samsung’s equivalent features. What’s more, Messages adds chat backgrounds, typing indicators, and group polls.

Other tweaks include Smarter Apple Maps routing based on your habits, and a less cluttered Photos app that finally makes albums easier to reach.

The Galaxy S25 Ultra comes with One UI 7 and Android 15 on board, with the full Galaxy AI suite backed up by Google’s Gemini on board. It’s eligible to get One UI 8 and Android 16 — let’s hope that comes soon. So, conversational assistant, text, voice, and call summaries, image generation, cross-app interactions, it’s all here. From here on, it’s about what will come to the Galaxy S25 Ultra via updates. It should keep getting those for 7 years, so up until 2032.

Apple’s iPhones typically get 5 years of iOS support, but that might change, as Samsung and Google have really pushed the envelope on update commitments.

Camera

The eternal camera battles

Both of these phones are leaders in the camera field — both Apple and Samsung have been putting a lot of eggs in the camera basket and the result is that we have competing flagships that can take super high-res photos and videos with excellent stabilization and editing tools. Well, some editing tools are better than others.

The iPhone 17 Pro gets a trio of 48 MP Fusion cameras on the back. Fusion is basically a fancy way of saying that Apple uses sensor crop-in magic to get “lossless” zoom levels and kind of simulate various focal lengths. In this spirit, it can go up to 8x and take 12 MP photos at what can be called “optical zoom”. From then on, it’s all digital, now upgraded to a 40x maximum — up from last year’s 25x, but still a far cry from Samsung’s 100x Space Zoom.

Samsung, of course, employs four different cameras to get actual zoom levels. And its longest lens is a 5x telephoto — the jumping off point for that 100x digital. In our benchmark, the Samsung scores a couple of points higher than the iPhone 17 Pro Max — it’s a negligible difference. It basically tells us that these two cameras are of very similar quality, even if they sometimes decide on slightly different exposures or color grading.

Main Camera

A perfect example where the iPhone picture came out warmer and more vivid, while the Samsung photo is a bit more down to earth, colder and more contrasty. Either style can work for you and there’s the added benefit that Apple does have the Photographic Styles that let you fine-tune said colors and vividness (we take our samples in the default Neutral). 

Apple did promise better night performance and we can see it here. Surprisingly smooth balance between shadows and highlights, with a lot of detail pulled from both. A few months ago, the Galaxy S25 Ultra looked like it had excellent night photos. Now it looks a tiny step behind, with more jagged edges around the grass and slightly more washed out highlights.

Zoom Quality

At 10x zoom, the Samsung wins with better details and less noise. Surprisingly, colors are about the same from both cameras.

Ultra-wide Camera

The ultra-wide camera of the Galaxy S25 Ultra, for some reason, gave us more saturated and vivid images, with skewed greens and blues. A total opposite of the main camera comparison here.

Selfies

The yellowish hues of the iPhone strike again. But details and dynamics from both are great.

Otherwise, the new selfie camera from Apple is entirely new tech — it now uses a square sensor, and allows you to take selfies however you like — horizontal or vertical.

Video Quality

Video Thumbnail

Above, you can see a video sample comparing the quality of the two phones.

Battery Life and Charging

The power of 5,000

Apple typically doesn’t play the battery capacity games. iPhones historically have had smaller batteries than their contemporary competitors, but have made up for it with excellent software and hardware optimizations.

However, one must get with the times. The Pro Max devices usually house big cells — and the iPhone 17 Pro Max pushed beyond that 5,000 mAh barrier! eSIM-only models (US) come wht 5,088 mAh. With iOS, that means 2-day battery life easily. The rest of the world has to make do with 4,832 mAh, which is still more than last year’s model.

Samsung also doesn’t push the envelope too much. Ever since that Galaxy Note 7 snafu, the manufacturer slowed down its battery efforts significantly and now prefers to play it super-safe, just in case. The Galaxy S25 Ultra has 5,000 mAh and it’s pretty OK. It can last you like a day and a half with regular use, and won’t trigger your low-bat-phobia often.

PhoneArena Battery and Charging Test Results:

We finally get a charging speed upgrade. The iPhone 17 Pro Max can now get up to 50% of charge in just 20 minutes on a 40 W power brick. Hooray!

Specs Comparison

Summary

The iPhone 17 Pro Max is a solid upgrade, especially in terms of hardware. It’s sustained performance is a market leader right now, and Apple is poised to take more and more of that mobile gamer niche. The camera updates may be incremental but they are solid. And pro users will enjoy the new ProRes RAW for video for sure.

Bottom line, if you can find the S25 Ultra at a discount, it’s still an awesome phone. If you go and buy the iPhone 17 Pro Max at full price instead, there’s definitely good reason to do so.

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