Moto G3, 16 GB. Got it used, have had it a few months. It's my fifth smartphone since first getting a smartphone in 2010. I have always bought them used, generally go for best midrange phone as of 12-18 months earlier, then keep the phone for 18-24 months. Newer phones still have a price premium, older ones start to have battery issues/won't get software security updates for much longer. I look after the phones and resell, so £490 total spent on the 5 and £180 back from resale, so net about £300 for 8 years, not bad compared to others who will effectively pay that per year for their iPhone/latest Samsung. The first two or three phones were each significant jumps up in terms of performance and features, now it's just incremental improvements (I don't play games on phones so don't need the highest performance etc.), the latest one I got mostly for the better camera. Each one has been cheaper than the previous, we are now in the position that you can spend £100 on a phone that to me seems to do everything 95 to 99% as well as the latest and most expensive ones (apart from gaming which is no matter to me, and while the most expensive phones do have even better cameras if I really wanted a great camera I would spend £200 on a Lumix compact camera that would beat any phone, and I'd still have spent less than half the top end phone cost). So smartphones to me have become a pretty cheap item, which is great considering that I still remember going into the computer shop in the mid-1990s and seeing the latest and greatest desktop PC on sale for £2096, the latest and greatest because it was one of the first Pentium II processors so ran at an enormous 400 MHz. Personal computer technology is probably now both 100x faster and 10x cheaper compared to just over 20 years ago, not bad!