Samsung wants to sell you a Galaxy phone, and it doesn't care how much you're willing to spend. It's two folding phones and three new Galaxy S20 flagship phones are all priced somewhere between $1,000 and $2,000. If that's too costly, try one of its six older Galaxy S10 models and Note 10. They're going for $600 to $1,100.

And if you're unwilling to spend $600 to buy one of those 11 phones? Well, Samsung is now plugging that hole with a half dozen more Android phones that start as cheap as $110.

Samsung's new Galaxy A range includes the A01, A11, A21, A51, A51 5G, and A71 5G. Each model has an escalating mix of capabilities, which we'll get to below, but all of them run Android 10 and come with a MicroSD card slot so you can add more storage if you need (and you might). Samsung hasn't commented on whether these phones will receive regular security or version updates, or for how long.

The Galaxy A01 and A11 ($110 - $180)

Samsung's Galaxy A01. Photograph: Samsung

At $110, the A01 is the cheapest of the lot. It has a 5.7-inch nearly HD (720p) screen with a notch to house the selfie camera on the front. You get a dual-lens camera system: the main camera is paired with a depth camera used for improved portrait mode. There’s a 3,000-mAh battery, which should keep the phone running for a day considering its low-power specs, and there’s no fingerprint sensor. You only get 2 GB of RAM and 16 GB of internal storage, so don’t expect it to run any intensive apps or games like Fortnite well. It won't have the storage to hold them, either. It will debut exclusively at Verizon starting April 9 and will release on other networks in the following weeks.