Motorola parts are one of the most fragmented ranges in the UK repair trade. Unlike Samsung's Galaxy A/S split or Apple's single iPhone line, Motorola sells three genuinely different product families — Moto G (budget), Moto Edge (mid-range to flagship), and Razr (foldable) — each rebadged and re-specced almost every year, often with near-identical model names across regions (Moto G54 vs G54 5G vs G54 Power). That's why screens, batteries, and charging ports are so easy to mismatch. This guide is the single starting point for sourcing the right Motorola part: it maps every current family to the correct part type, gives realistic UK trade pricing, and routes you to the specific model guide you need.

Which Motorola series do you have?

Before ordering any part, identify the series — the model number alone doesn't tell you the screen technology or battery connector type.

  • Moto G series (G04, G24, G34, G44, G54, G55, G64, G85, Power and Play variants) — Motorola's volume budget line. Mostly LCD or IPS panels on entry models, moving to OLED on G54/G55/G85 and above. This is the highest-volume repair job in the Motorola range by unit count.
  • Moto Edge series (Edge 40, Edge 50, Edge 50 Pro, Edge 50 Neo, Edge 50 Fusion, Edge 60, Edge 60 Pro, Edge 70 Fusion, Edge 70 Ultra) — Motorola's mid-range to near-flagship line. Curved-edge pOLED and OLED panels, higher refresh rates (120–144Hz), and tighter frame tolerances that make cheap aftermarket glass a poor fit.
  • Moto One / Moto X / Moto E series — older or entry-tier lines, still common in refurbished and trade-in stock. Parts availability is thinner and lead times longer than G or Edge.
  • Razr (foldable) — flip-form OLED with a hinge assembly; screen and battery replacement is a specialist job, not a same-day counter repair, and parts pricing sits well above the rest of the range.

Quick way to check: the model name is printed under Settings > About phone > Model number, and it's also usually on the SIM tray or under the battery cover on older units. Always match by exact model number, not just "Moto G" or "Edge" — a G54 screen will not fit a G54 Power.

Motorola parts comparison table — which part, which series, what it costs

Series Screen type Typical screen price (GBP, trade) Battery price (GBP) Charging port / flex Repair difficulty Where to go next
Moto G (entry: G04, G24, G34) LCD/IPS incell £15–£22 £12–£18 £8–£14 Easy — adhesive-mount, no curved edges Moto G screen guide
Moto G (mid: G54, G55, G64, G85) OLED / P-OLED £20–£32 £14–£20 £9–£15 Moderate — OLED handling care needed Moto G screen guide
Moto Edge (40, 50, 50 Neo) Curved P-OLED, 120Hz £28–£38 £16–£24 £11–£17 Moderate–hard — curved frame fitment Moto Edge screen guide
Moto Edge (50 Pro, 60 Pro, 70 Ultra) Curved OLED, 144Hz, LTPO £34–£48 £18–£26 £12–£18 Hard — flagship-grade calibration Moto Edge screen guide
Moto One / X / E series LCD or early OLED £16–£26 £13–£19 £8–£14 Easy–moderate Moto One collection
Razr (foldable) Foldable OLED + hinge £65–£120+ £22–£30 Specialist flex only Hard — foldable-specific tools required Contact trade team for sourcing

Prices reflect current wholesale/trade rates at Supreme Phone Parts and move with panel type (LCD vs OLED) and grade (aftermarket, OEM pull, or OEM/service pack). Trade account holders get tiered pricing on volume orders — see our wholesale buyer's guide for how tiers work.

Motorola screens: what actually differs between series

The core difference across the Motorola range is panel technology, not just size. Entry Moto G models (G04, G24, G34) still ship with LCD or basic IPS incell displays — cheaper to source, more tolerant of handling, and the most common walk-in repair. From the G54 upward, and across the whole Edge line, Motorola moved to OLED and P-OLED panels, which means true blacks, better contrast, but more sensitivity to pressure damage and static during fitting, and a higher unit cost.

Edge-series screens add a further complication: curved-edge glass. A flat aftermarket panel will not seat correctly in an Edge 50 Pro or Edge 60 Pro frame — you need a panel spec'd for that exact curve radius, which is why Edge parts carry a premium over Moto G equivalents even at similar screen size. For step-by-step fitting notes and OLED handling tips specific to each family, see the dedicated guides: Moto G series wholesale guide and Moto Edge OLED wholesale guide.

Motorola batteries: connector types and swelling risk

Motorola batteries across the G and Edge ranges are glued in with pull-tab adhesive strips rather than clips, which is straightforward once you know to heat the rear panel gently before pulling. Battery capacity has grown steadily — most current Moto G models sit at 5000mAh, Edge models at 4500–5500mAh — so replacement batteries need to match rated capacity, not just physical size, or you risk BMS (battery management system) rejection and a phone that won't charge past a fixed percentage.

Swelling is the most common Motorola battery fault we see returned. If the back glass or screen is lifting at the edges with no drop history, check the battery first — Motorola's adhesive-mount design means a swollen cell pushes the display up before it becomes visually obvious from the back.

Charging ports and back glass: the parts people forget

Charging port flex assemblies are USB-C across the entire current Motorola range (no Micro-USB models left in active UK stock as of 2026), but the flex cable itself is not interchangeable between G and Edge series — connector position and mounting screws differ. Back glass is a straightforward swap on Moto G models (adhesive-only) but on Edge Pro/Ultra models the glass is bonded closer to the mid-frame and antenna lines, so replacement needs more care to avoid snapping the wireless charging coil where fitted.

Common Motorola repair costs at a glance (parts only, GBP)

  • Moto G screen: £15–£32 depending on model and panel type
  • Moto Edge screen: £28–£48 depending on model tier
  • Battery (any Moto G/Edge model): £12–£26
  • Charging port flex: £8–£18
  • Back glass: £6–£15 (Moto G), £10–£20 (Edge)

These are parts-only trade prices, not retail repair labour costs — a repair shop's customer-facing price will typically add labour and markup on top.

How to order the right Motorola part — step by step

  1. Confirm the exact model number via Settings > About phone, or the SIM tray/battery cover printing.
  2. Identify the series from the table above (G, Edge, One/X/E, or Razr).
  3. Check screen technology — LCD vs OLED — since this affects both price and handling risk during fitting.
  4. For Edge-series curved panels, always confirm curve radius/frame compatibility before bulk ordering, not after.
  5. Order battery by rated mAh capacity match, not visual size alone.
  6. For trade/bulk orders, set up a trade account for tiered pricing and next-day UK delivery.

Frequently asked questions

Are Motorola Moto G screens interchangeable between models?

No. Even within the same year's line-up (G54, G54 5G, G54 Power), connector position, panel size, and mounting points can differ. Always match by exact model number rather than assuming a "Moto G" part fits all Moto G phones.

What's the difference between Moto G and Moto Edge parts?

Moto G is Motorola's budget line — mostly flat LCD or entry OLED screens, lower part cost, easier fitting. Moto Edge is the mid-range to flagship line — curved OLED/P-OLED panels, higher refresh rates, and a fitting process that requires more care around the curved frame edge. Edge parts typically cost 40–60% more than equivalent Moto G parts.

How much does a Motorola screen replacement cost in the UK?

Trade parts pricing runs from roughly £15 for an entry Moto G LCD panel up to £48 for a Moto Edge Pro/Ultra curved OLED panel. Retail repair pricing (including labour) is typically parts cost plus £20–£40 depending on the shop.

Do all current Motorola phones use USB-C charging?

Yes — every Motorola model in active UK circulation as of 2026 uses USB-C. There are no Micro-USB Motorola models left in current trade stock, though older second-hand Moto E/One devices in circulation may still use it.

Why is my Motorola battery swelling?

Swelling is usually age- or charge-cycle related rather than a manufacturing fault, and it's the most common cause of screen lifting on Motorola devices, since the battery sits directly under the display with no metal shield in between on most models. If a screen looks like it's lifting at the edge with no impact damage, check the battery before ordering a new screen.

Can I buy Motorola parts in bulk for a repair shop?

Yes. Supreme Phone Parts offers trade accounts with tiered pricing and next-day UK delivery for bulk Motorola orders across the G, Edge, and One/X/E ranges. See our wholesale buyer's guide for account setup.

Are Razr foldable parts the same price as Moto G or Edge parts?

No — Razr foldable screens (with integrated hinge-area OLED) are significantly more expensive than either flat-line series, typically £65–£120+ per screen, reflecting the specialist tooling and lower production volume of foldable panels.

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