Motorola’s latest entry in the value-focused “G” series, the Moto G67 Power 5G, wants to solve a familiar problem: give you flagship-style features (big battery, crisp screen, decent cameras) without the flagship price.
It’s built around a literal battery heavyweight — a 7,000 mAh cell — but it also brings a modern Snapdragon chip, a 50MP Sony sensor, and a surprisingly polished design.
In this write-up I’ll break down what matters — battery life, performance, camera, display, software, and whether it’s worth your money — in plain language so you can decide if this is the power phone you actually need.
Big battery, small worry: what the 7,000 mAh means in real life
The headline figure is the massive 7,000 mAh battery. In everyday use that usually translates to multi-day battery life for moderate users and a full two days (or more) for light-to-moderate users.
For heavy users — gaming, navigation, lots of video streaming — you’ll still likely finish the day with a comfortable buffer. Motorola pairs that battery with what it calls Silicon Carbon battery tech (optimizations under the hood) and supports rapid-ish charging for a cell of this size, so downtime is minimized compared with older ultra-large batteries.
If your top priority is “leave the charger at home and not worry,” this is exactly the kind of specification you want.
Performance: Snapdragon 7s Gen 2 — more than enough for most
Under the hood the Moto G67 Power runs a Snapdragon 7s Gen 2 chipset, a modern mid-to-upper midrange system-on-chip that balances efficiency and performance. Combined with 8GB of RAM (Motorola advertises RAM Boost that can expand “virtual” RAM up to higher levels), the phone handles everyday multitasking, social apps, media consumption, and most games smoothly.
It’s not a gaming flagship, but casual and even fairly demanding titles run well at reasonable settings. For people moving up from older budget phones, the experience will feel notably snappier.
Display: 6.7-inch FHD+ with a 120Hz feel
Motorola outfits the G67 Power with a 6.7-inch FHD+ display that supports a 120Hz refresh feel and “Display Colour Boost” enhancements for punchier visuals. What that means practically is smoother scrolling and slightly crisper video and web browsing compared with a 60Hz panel.
The large screen is great for streaming and reading; combined with the long battery it’s a solid match for media lovers. While the panel isn’t the brightest or most color-accurate on the market, it’s more than adequate for day-to-day use and offers excellent value at this price point.
Cameras: 50MP Sony sensor and usable multi-lens shooting
The main camera is a 50MP Sony sensor, which is a smart move for Motorola: Sony sensors have become a reliable staple at many price tiers. Expect good daytime photos with decent detail and color; Motorola leans into AI and processing to make images pop.
The phone also supports 4K recording from all lenses (a useful perk if you shoot video), and there are the usual software extras — night modes, portrait bokeh, and point-and-shoot enhancements. Low-light performance will be competent but not class-leading; if you’re a serious mobile photographer there are better options, but for everyday snaps and social sharing the G67 Power is very capable.
Build and durability: a premium feel with rugged credentials
One surprise is how refined the phone looks and feels. Motorola offers vegan-leather finishes and a design that reads more upscale than its price tag.
Even better, the device carries MIL-STD-810H durability testing and Gorilla Glass protection, along with IP-level splash resistance, which together mean this phone is built to survive drops, dust, and spills better than many rivals in the segment. In short: it doesn’t feel like a cheap plastic slab — and that matters when you hold it every day.
Software: near-stock Android with helpful additions
Motorola continues its tradition of near-stock Android with small, thoughtful additions that don’t bloat the system. The Moto G67 Power ships with Android 15 out of the box and includes Motorola utilities like Moto Actions and some battery-saving features.
The UI is clean, responsive, and less cluttered than many heavily skinned competitors, which is a plus for users who prefer simplicity and longevity (less junk = longer smoothness over time).
Storage and memory: real-world flexibility
You’ll find configurations with 128GB or 256GB of internal storage, and the base RAM sits at 8GB, with Motorola’s RAM Boost feature that can allocate more memory when needed.
For most people this provides plenty of room for apps, photos, and videos; and if you habitually keep a ton of media, the higher storage option is a sensible pick. Note whether the model sold in your market supports microSD expansion — check local listings before you buy if expandable storage matters to you.
Connectivity and extras: 5G, stereo sound, and helpful sensors
As the name implies, the phone is 5G-capable, so it’s future-proofed for faster mobile networks where available. It also includes the usual suite of sensors — fingerprint reader, gyroscope, accelerometer — plus stereo speakers that make media playback more enjoyable than single-speaker alternatives. Motorola often includes some small hardware niceties (clean haptics, good call quality), and this model follows that trend.
Price and value: who is this for?
In India, Motorola priced the Moto G67 Power aggressively, aiming at the sub-₹16,000 bracket (check current retailer listings for exact pricing, offers, and launch discounts). That pricing places it against other strong contenders in the “value with extras” space: phones that try to balance battery, camera, and display without forcing you to pay flagship premiums.
If you value battery life, a large screen, clean Android, and solid day-to-day performance more than top-tier camera systems or the absolute fastest GPU, this phone delivers a compelling package.
Downsides: where compromises show
No phone is perfect. The G67 Power compromises in a few predictable places to hit its price target: the camera, while solid, won’t beat flagship sensors with larger optics and multi-frame processing; the screen, while fast, isn’t the absolute brightest or most color-accurate on the market; and while performance is very good for the class, extreme mobile gamers will find more optimized devices elsewhere.
Finally, if you want wireless charging or an ultra-slim design, this is probably not the device for you — the huge battery adds bulk and weight.
Practical verdict: who should buy it?
Buy the Moto G67 Power 5G if:
- You want multi-day battery life without carrying a power bank.
- You prefer a large, smooth display for video and reading.
- You like near-stock Android with minimal bloat.
- You want a durable phone with a premium touch at a midrange price.
Skip it if:
- You need the absolute best mobile camera system.
- You demand the thinnest, lightest phone available.
- You’re a competitive mobile gamer chasing the highest FPS at max settings.
Final thoughts
Motorola has always excelled at balancing features and price in the “G” series, and the Moto G67 Power 5G continues that tradition — except now it leans heavily into battery endurance while keeping the design and essential specs pleasantly contemporary.
It’s the ideal companion for power users who hate charging anxiety but still want a modern experience: a big, smooth screen, competent cameras, reliable performance, and a genuinely long battery life. If that ticks your boxes and the price aligns with your budget, the G67 Power is one of the more sensible midrange buys this season.
