E-ink. No data. Minimal by design.
Pros & cons
What the Mudita Pure is
Mudita Pure is a minimal phone developed by Mudita, a Polish design company. According to manufacturer documentation, the phone features an e-ink display, a custom OS (MuditaOS), calls, SMS, an offline music player, a meditation timer, a notes app, and a basic alarm. It deliberately omits any internet data connectivity — the design philosophy, per Mudita's documentation, is to create a device that is functionally incapable of connecting to the internet, rather than one that simply chooses not to.
Network compatibility — critical caveat
The Mudita Pure operates on 2G/3G GSM networks. This is the most important specification to verify before purchasing. In the United States, major carriers shut down 2G networks between 2017 and 2022; the Mudita Pure is not functional as a phone on US networks. In most of Europe, 2G/3G networks remain available as of this review, but phase-out timelines vary by country and carrier. Mudita's website provides a carrier compatibility checker. Verifying network support in your region is not optional — it determines whether the device functions at all.
Design and build
The Mudita Pure has received design awards including the Red Dot Design Award. According to manufacturer specifications, the device uses a low-power e-ink display intended to reduce eye strain and extend battery life significantly compared to LCD or OLED screens. The physical design is understated: a slim rectangle with minimal controls, available in white and grey. User reports consistently describe the build quality as premium relative to its feature set.
Who should buy it
Mudita Pure is best suited for users in regions where 2G/3G networks remain reliable — primarily Europe — who want a device that is physically incapable of internet browsing. It is also worth considering for anyone who specifically values the e-ink display and the integrated meditation timer, or who is drawn to Mudita's open-source development approach. For users who want an offline-capable music player bundled with their minimal phone, Mudita Pure is the more complete package than many alternatives.
Who should skip it
US-based users should skip the Mudita Pure entirely — there are no major carrier networks in the United States that support it. European users should verify 2G/3G availability with their specific carrier before purchasing. Anyone who needs 4G connectivity, hotspot capability, or a more certain long-term software support path should consider the Light Phone II instead.
The bottom line
Mudita Pure earns a Shortlist for the narrow audience it serves well: European users on compatible 2G/3G networks who want a beautifully designed, internet- incapable phone. For that user, it delivers a genuinely considered product. For everyone else — particularly anyone in North America — the network limitation makes it a non-starter. Always check carrier compatibility before purchasing.
Vs. closest alternative
Both Mudita Pure and the Light Phone II are e-ink minimal phones with no social media or browser. The Light Phone II has 4G LTE and works on all major US networks; the Mudita Pure uses 2G/3G and does not work in the US. The Light Phone II has more practical tools (directions, podcasts, hotspot); the Mudita Pure goes further — there is no data connectivity possible at all, which is more absolute but also more limiting. For US users, the Light Phone II is the only practical choice. For European users wanting maximum minimalism, Mudita Pure may be worth the trade.
Read Light Phone II review →FAQ
Does the Mudita Pure work in the United States?
No. The Mudita Pure operates on 2G/3G GSM networks. US carriers (AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon) shut down 2G and 3G networks between 2017 and 2022. The device cannot make calls or send texts on US networks.
Can I use the Mudita Pure for music without a SIM card?
Yes. According to manufacturer documentation, the offline music player works without a SIM card or network connection. The phone loads music files via USB connection to a computer.
Is MuditaOS open source?
According to Mudita's documentation, MuditaOS has open-source components available on GitHub. This gives technically inclined users some visibility into the software, though the phone is not designed for custom firmware installation.