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Motorola Edge 70 Max Update Policy: Still Vaguer Than Samsung and Google

Androidpure Staff by Androidpure Staff
July 18, 2026
in News

Motorola has finally addressed days of criticism over the Motorola Edge 70 Max, but its statement leaves the Motorola Edge 70 Max update policy almost as murky as it found it. In a comment given to GSMArena on July 17, 2026, the company said: “We can confirm that Edge 70 Max arrives with up to 3 OS upgrades and up to 5 years of SMR” (SMR being Security Maintenance Release, Motorola’s term for security patches). That confirms the more generous of two figures the company had been listing — but the wording still lets Motorola ship fewer upgrades than it implies, and it explains none of the contradictions that caused the confusion in the first place.

Motorola Edge 70 Max shown in Aqua Gray and Dark Shadow
Image: Motorola

What the Motorola Edge 70 Max update policy actually promises now

Read the statement closely and the catch is the phrase “up to.” Motorola committed to up to three OS upgrades and up to five years of security updates. “Up to three” is not the same as three — it is a ceiling, not a floor. Motorola can choose to ship only one or two Android version upgrades and still be technically within its promise, having broken nothing. For the buyer, that means you cannot actually count on a third upgrade; you can only hope for it. A firm commitment tells you what you are getting. This one tells you the most you might get. (The phone launches on Android 16, which with the full three upgrades would reach Android 19 — but the version it ships with is not the issue; the number of upgrades and their duration is.)

The contradiction Motorola still hasn’t explained

The mess started on Motorola’s own websites. The main text on the UK, German and Indian product pages advertised “up to 3 Android OS upgrades and 5 years of security updates.” Yet a footnote on those same pages said something else entirely: “Includes 2 OS upgrades and up to 3 years of security updates starting from the global launch date.” More fine print added that terms “may vary by market, network provider, and/or model.” So a shopper reading a single page was handed two different answers about the same phone.

It got worse across regions. As Android Authority and 9to5Google documented, the UK page cited security coverage running through 2031 in its main text while its own footnote promised just two OS upgrades and three years of patches. Motorola’s Sweden listing, meanwhile, offered only three years for both OS and security updates. GSMArena’s read is that the conflicting footnotes were likely copied over from other Motorola product pages and never updated — a plausible explanation, but one Motorola itself has not offered. Its statement confirmed the higher numbers without addressing why the lower ones were ever published or why different countries still see different figures.

To be clear about what did and didn’t happen: Motorola did not quietly downgrade anyone. It confirmed the better of the two figures, not the footnote’s 2-upgrade version. The problem is not a walk-back — it is that the “up to” hedge and the unexplained regional splits are still sitting there, and buyers are left to guess which listing applies to them.

The clarification may have created a fresh conflict

Here is the sharpest wrinkle. According to 9to5Google and Android Authority, the EU’s EPREL regulatory label for the phone reportedly lists seven years of update support. We have not pulled that EPREL entry ourselves, so treat the seven-year figure as outlet-reported rather than confirmed. But if it holds, Motorola’s newly stated “up to five years” of security updates now sits below the number in the EU’s own regulatory database — meaning the clarification meant to end the confusion may have introduced a new one against a government record.

What this costs you at ₹54,999

None of this would sting as much on a budget handset. The Edge 70 Max is not one. In India it costs ₹54,999 for the 8GB/256GB model and ₹59,999 for the 12GB/256GB version, going on sale July 20, 2026 as a Flipkart online-exclusive, alongside Motorola.in and retail. In the UK it runs about £700 (roughly $947). At that price, the comparison writes itself: Samsung and Google both guarantee seven years of OS and security updates on their flagships in the same bracket. Motorola’s “up to three” OS upgrades is well short of that — and unlike those firm seven-year pledges, it is a ceiling the company is free to undershoot.

Motorola can clearly do better, because it already does: per Android Authority and 9to5Google, its own Signature and Razr Fold models for 2026 are guaranteed seven years of OS and security updates. So the vaguer, shorter commitment on the Edge 70 Max is a choice about where to draw the line, not a technical limit — and here the line falls on the wrong side of a ₹55,000 buyer. There is also the timing. Motorola’s India product page carried the same contradictory listing, and this clarification lands two full days before Indian buyers can even place an order. Anyone deciding whether to spend that money this weekend is doing so with a support commitment that is both shorter and vaguer than the competition’s — and that Motorola still hasn’t fully squared with its own paperwork. Contradictory listings across a company’s own regional sites are not a footnote quirk; they are a transparency problem, and the cost lands on the person trying to figure out what they are actually buying.

Sources: GSMArena, Android Authority, 9to5Google

Tags: Android UpdatesMotorolaMotorola Edge 70 MaxMotorola Edge seriessoftware update policy
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