We’ve already looked at some of the worst processors in Android history, but what about the other end of the spectrum? Well, this is our look at the best Android processors in history.
1. Snapdragon 800 and 801

2013 marked a time of upheaval in the Android processor space. Nvidia had scaled back its smartphone SoC efforts, Texas Instruments was winding down its mobile operations, and ST-Ericsson’s NovaThor processors were all but dead. Qualcomm was the big beneficiary here, consolidating its Android chipset lead as a result. But you were mistaken if you thought the company would rest on its laurels.
The Snapdragon 800’s arrival in smartphones in 2013 took over from the Snapdragon 600 flagship that powered several flagships earlier that year. While the Snapdragon 600 was a mild upgrade over its predecessor, the Snapdragon S4 Pro, the Snapdragon 800 served up a new CPU and an Adreno 330 GPU said to be over twice as fast as its predecessors (which shared the same GPU).
The Snapdragon 800 and 801 powered some of Android’s most iconic smartphones.
The company would follow up with the Snapdragon 801 in early 2014, which was an iterative upgrade but offered higher CPU and GPU clock speeds and a faster ISP. But no matter which option you picked, you received powerful silicon with plenty of bells and whistles.
The Snapdragon 800 and Snapdragon 801 powered some of the most iconic smartphones in history back in 2013 and 2014. Between the LG G3, OnePlus One, Samsung Galaxy S5, and Sony Xperia Z series, the era served up some stellar handsets. Qualcomm certainly had a part to play in this.

We said a while ago that this might be the greatest Exynos chipset ever made, and we stand by that opinion today. In fact, we’re going so far as to call it one of the best Android processors ever.
The 14nm Exynos 7420 was released in 2015 and was Samsung’s sophomore 64-bit flagship chipset, going up against the 64-bit Qualcomm Snapdragon 810. Unlike Qualcomm though, Samsung delivered a processor that wasn’t prone to overheating. The end result was that Samsung opted to use the Exynos 7420 in the Galaxy S6 series exclusively that year.
More reading: When Samsung’s Exynos was the best flagship chipset for Android
The use of the Exynos 7420 also meant Samsung dodged bad press associated with the overheating Snapdragon 810, as other OEMs like HTC and LG were stuck with the comparatively hot Snapdragon 810 chipset or the less powerful Snapdragon 808 instead.
Notable phones: Meizu Pro 5, Samsung Galaxy S6, Samsung Galaxy Note 5
3. Snapdragon 625

The chipset sported excellent endurance and battery life thanks, in particular, to the then-tiny 14nm design and a power-sipping octa-core Cortex-A53 CPU layout. Snapdragon 625 handsets like the Moto Z Play and Redmi Note 4 became renowned for offering two days of battery life, without the massive battery previously required up until that point.
More on Qualcomm: All of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon smartphone processors explained
Xiaomi used the Snapdragon 625 for a ton of phones and there’s even an argument to be made that it stuck to the SoC for way longer than necessary. But it’s a testament to the processor that manufacturers used it for so long. In fact, Qualcomm produced the Snapdragon 450 in 2017, which was essentially a Snapdragon 625 at an even cheaper price. The Snapdragon 450 found its way into devices like the Samsung Galaxy A11, Galaxy A20s, and Redmi 5.
Notable phones: BlackBerry KeyOne, Huawei Nova, Motorola Moto Z Play, Xiaomi Mi A1, Xiaomi Redmi Note 4
4. HiSilicon Kirin 970

The arrival of the Kirin 970 in late 2017 showcased that Huawei was looking to surpass the competition. For the first time in the industry, the chip introduced a neural processing unit (NPU), a dedicated piece of silicon used for machine learning tasks.
More reading: A guide to HiSilicon Kirin processors
Huawei beat Apple and the rest of the industry to the AI silicon punch.
Apple unveiled its own machine learning silicon weeks after the Kirin 970’s reveal with the A11 Bionic, while competitive chips from Qualcomm and Samsung arrived the following year. Today, the industry is leaning on AI silicon more than ever for features like real-time speech transcription, object removal, secure authentication, and more. But it was Huawei that was first to offer this hardware.
Notable phones: Honor Play, Honor View 10, Huawei Mate 10 series, Huawei P20 range
5. Mediatek Helio G90T

The Helio G90T was pretty powerful at the time — Mediatek even marketed it as a gaming-focused chipset. In this octa-core setup, you’ve got two Cortex-A76 and six Cortex-A55 cores, along with a rather impressive Mali-G76 MP4 GPU. This graphics part was found in rival flagship chipsets at the time, albeit with more graphics cores.
Related: Everything you need to know about Mediatek processors
Bottom line: The launch of the G90T showed that a smooth gaming experience wasn’t just the domain of Qualcomm’s flagship chips and applied to budget-tier phones as well.
Notable phones: Realme 6, Realme 8 (Helio G95), Redmi Note 8 Pro, Redmi Note 10S (Helio G95)
6. Snapdragon 660

The 14nm Snapdragon 660 makes our list of the best Android processors as it brought a powerful octa-core CPU with four heavyweight Cortex-A73 cores and four Cortex-A53 cores, blowing the Snapdragon 625’s CPU out of the water. In fact, we still seldom see four performance cores in mid-range processors today. It’s worth noting that this wasn’t the first mid-range Snapdragon chipset with performance cores, but it saw much wider adoption than most previous attempts.
Read more: What is Quick Charge? Qualcomm’s fast charging protocol explained
Notable phones: Blackberry Key2, Nokia 7 Plus, Realme 2 Pro, Xiaomi Mi A2, Xiaomi Redmi Note 7
7. Snapdragon 855

The 7nm Snapdragon 855 also offered a number of other company firsts, such as the now-standard tri-cluster CPU arrangement (performance, medium, efficiency cores), a Hexagon Tensor Accelerator chip for improved machine learning, support for Wi-Fi 6, and optional support for an external 5G modem.
More Qualcomm coverage: Samsung Galaxy S22 benchmarked — Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 versus Exynos 2200
The Snapdragon 855’s performance and feature-set were so impressive that the design is still around today in the form of the Snapdragon 860. The 860 powers the Poco X3 Pro and Xiaomi Pad 5 and is essentially a Snapdragon 855 Plus with even higher clock speeds.
Notable phones: Google Pixel 4 series, LG V50, OnePlus 7 series, Samsung Galaxy S10 family (Snapdragon), Samsung Galaxy Note 10 range (Snapdragon)
8. Snapdragon 765G

The 5G era started in 2019 with flagship phones, but you can definitely argue that it kicked off in earnest in 2020 due to the Snapdragon 765G. Qualcomm’s first mid-range 5G processor helped make 5G more mainstream, offering both sub-6GHz and mmWave support and landing in a host of affordable phones that year.
More on 5G: The best 5G phones you can buy right now
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 765G really helped accelerate affordable 5G.
The Snapdragon 765G wasn’t perfect though, as the GPU was worse than even the older flagship silicon. It could still run many games at a smooth frame rate, but it wasn’t ideal for high refresh rates. But the fact that the LG Velvet and Google Pixel 5 used this SoC demonstrated the faith that major manufacturers had in its capabilities.
Notable phones: Google Pixel 5, Google Pixel 5a, LG Velvet, LG Wing, Nokia 8.3, OnePlus Nord
Are there any other all-time great smartphone processors that should be on the list? Let us know by leaving a comment below.