Home AT&T Phones AT&T Z221 AT&T Z221 Specs 8.3 User Score AT&T Z221 User reviews Released Sep 27, 2011 Display 2.0 inches 320 x 240 pixels Camera 0.3 MP VGA (Single camera) Hardware 0.06GB RAM Battery 900 mAh Description AT&T Z221 is a basic clamshell quad-band phone with camera, bluetooth, internet browser and 2" color display. Popular Comparisons The AT&T Z221 is most commonly compared with these phones: AT&T Z221 vs Samsung Galaxy S23 AT&T Z221 vs Motorola Moto G Stylus 5G (2023) AT&T Z221 vs ZTE Max XL AT&T Z221 vs Samsung Galaxy A54 5G AT&T Z221 vs Samsung Galaxy A14 5G Specs Compare Display Size: 2.0 inches Resolution: 320 x 240 pixels, 200 PPI Technology: TFT Screen-to-body: 26.60 % Colors: 65 536 Hardware RAM: 0.06GB ROM: 128 MB Device type: Basic phone Battery Capacity: 900 mAh Type: Li - Ion, User replaceable Camera Rear: Single camera Main camera: 0.3 MP VGA Video recording: Yes Design Size comparison Dimensions: 3.76 x 1.92 x 0.73 inches (96 x 49 x 19 mm) Weight: 3.24 oz (92.0 g) Features: Numeric keypad, D-Pad Cellular 3G: Bands 5(850), 2(1900) Data Speed: HSDPA 3.6 Mbit/s, UMTS Connectivity & Features Bluetooth: 2.0 USB: microUSB Hearing aid compatible: M3, T3 Phone features Notifications: Polyphonic ringtones, Vibration, Silent mode, Speakerphone Other features: Voice recording, TTY/TDD Despite our efforts to provide full and correct AT&T Z221 specifications, there is always a possibility of admitting a mistake. If you see any wrong or incomplete data, please LET US KNOW. If you are interested in using our specs commercially, check out our Phone specs database licensing page. Carrier Availability Discontinued AT&T Latest News The vivo X Fold 3 Pro, claimed to be the Android AnTuTu king, now emerges on Geekbench Google Pixel users gain control over default search engine in the EU Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 chipset is all about AI Amazon throws a brilliant discount on the Pixel Buds Pro but only for a limited time Judge says Apple must face a lawsuit over the use of AirTag units to stalk victims Samsung seeks to save money by using its own Exynos chips on more Galaxy phones Popular stories T-Mobile and Netflix have found a fresh way to anger their subscribers A new T-Mobile freebie is headed your way soon -- be sure to claim it on time Woman dies gruesome death trying to save her AirPods after they had fallen Unwieldy iPhone 16 Pro Max will drag Apple back into the fat camp Water is wet, grass is green, and T-Mobile is adding two new fees to its prepaid channel Pixel 9 announcement could have been historically epic but Google just missed that chance