Google Pixel 10A review: Just buy the 9A


I’m not entirely sure why the Pixel 10A exists.

Google hasn’t upgraded the chipset, cameras, or battery in the new phone, and the tweaks made elsewhere are minimal at best. I think the flat camera island is good! On the one hand, this is not a big problem: The Pixel 9A is an excellent deviceAnd last year it was easy The best phone you can buy for $500 in the US. The new 10A is available to purchase now for the same great price ($499 for 128GB of storage or an additional $100 for 256GB), but with the 9A still selling out and dropping in price, there’s one big question: Why not just buy the 9A — which is almost the same phone — for $50 less?

Image of Google Pixel 10A in front of white tiles, showing the home screenImage of Google Pixel 10A in front of white tiles, showing the home screen

$499

Goodness

  • The streaming camera looks and sounds great
  • Seven years of software updates
  • Support SOS via satellite

The bad

  • It’s the Pixel 9A again
  • Pixel 9A is cheaper
  • You should just buy the Pixel 9A

When Google first showed me the 10A, I struggled to get a good idea of ​​exactly what had changed, so I studied the spec sheets to point out every hardware change Google had made, no matter how small. And here they are:

  • The 10A is 3g lighter than the 9A, and is slightly shorter and thinner, resulting in a slightly thinner bezel around the screen
  • The cameras are perfectly flush with the body, not just nearly flush
  • The screen is protected by Gorilla Glass 7i compared to Gorilla Glass 3
  • The screen is 300 nits brighter at peak brightness and has higher contrast
  • The 10A has 30W wired and 10W wireless charging, up from 23W wired and 7.5W wireless.
  • The 10A supports Bluetooth 6.0, compared to 5.3 on the 9A
  • Supports 10A Satellite SOS
  • It comes in some new colors

That’s not a lot, and none of these features individually seem like game-changers, except perhaps introduction SOS Satellitewhich allows you to contact emergency services even when you are out of cellular coverage. If this, or perhaps slightly faster charging, is enough to make a dent in 10A, then great! I think you may be in the minority.

An image of the Google Pixel 10A in front of white tiles, taken from the side to show off the smoothness of the phone perfectly

It is impossible to see the 10A camera from the side.

Photo of Google Pixel 10A in front of white tiles, camera seen from an angle

Not only is it flat, it’s slightly recessed into the body.

Photo of Google Pixel 10A in front of white tiles, camera seen from an angle

The phone itself is a little thicker to make the effect, but it’s worth it.

Exterior updates are subtle, but welcome. Last year’s 9A dropped Google’s usual camera bar in favor of a smaller camera barely It rose from the back of the phone. With the 10A, Google has pushed this design even further, making the phone a little thicker so that the camera is now not only flush with the body, but a little recessed inward.

It’s a welcome welcome relief to the bulbous cameras on other phones with bigger ambitions. They justify their designs with high-end camera hardware, but since Google has instead decided to stick with older, smaller sensors and focus its photography efforts on software, I applaud the decision to pay that back with the least obtrusive camera design on any smartphone right now.

The phone as a whole looks great, even if the design isn’t particularly new. It is simple, elegant and comfortable to hold with one hand. It’s a little bigger than $799 Pixel 10Despite using a similar 6.3-inch display, the 10A is noticeably lighter, which makes up for the extra size. Typical black – sorry, Obsidian -It looks a little conservative, but the berry and lavender versions look great if you want a pop of color.

Photo of Google Pixel 10A and 9A side by side in front of white tiles

The 10A and 9A look very similar, but they’re not exactly identical.

The 10A has the same 5,100mAh battery as the 9A, although Google claims the phone can last an additional 20 hours in max battery mode. Presumably, this will be thanks to software optimization, although in a press conference Google refused to comment on whether the 9A will receive these same improvements or has already received them. Either way, this is a large enough battery to last one day, but not two, which is basically a good thing. The slightly faster charging speeds are welcome, though they’re still slower than many Android alternatives — and Google hasn’t expanded the charging range Qi2 magnets for the Pixel 10 line All the way to 10A, which would have really seemed like a worthwhile upgrade.

The phone also runs on the same Tensor G4 chipset as last year’s 9A. It’s fast enough for all your daily phone tasks, even if it’s less than the most powerful chipset on the market. Google’s decision not to upgrade the chip for a year seems a bit stingy, but it’s only likely to cause a headache if you’re hoping for a powerful phone for gaming (which it’s not), or plan to keep it for seven years of OS updates, at which point the G4 will be nine years old and feeling a bit old.

The cameras are the same between the phones too, which was inevitable in the past: a feature in Google’s lineup means the Pixel 10 has the same 48MP main and 13MP ultra-wide cameras as the 9A, so this phone gets them too. These cameras looked good enough on the 10, but for a $499 phone, I can’t complain too much. I’m a fan of Google’s somewhat natural handling, especially at night, when it mostly resists the temptation to over-brighten everything. However, the sensors are small, so you’ll encounter limitations fairly quickly in low light, with noisy details and blown-out highlights, especially on the ultra-wide range. However, there aren’t many better cameras at this price, nor are there any in the US, where you’ll need to spend at least a few hundred dollars to get a meaningful upgrade.

Photo of Google Pixel 10A with Camera Coach suggesting ways to frame the photo

Camera Coach’s advice is so basic that I’m not sure who it will help.

The camera is also where you’ll find the two massive software features found on the 10A but not the 9A: Camera Coach and Auto Best Take. Camera Coach is an AI feature that will give you step-by-step instructions on how to frame a photo, most of which boils down to “zoom in to focus on the subject.” I get an error message and refuse to work most of the time when I try it anyway. Auto Best Take is pretty much what it sounds like: an automatic version of the existing Best Take feature, which combines group photos to get the best expression from each person in the same shot. There’s not much reason to spend more on the 10A compared to the 9A, and at a press conference Google didn’t confirm whether it would remain exclusive anyway, or simply roll out to the 9A in a future software update.

Image of Google Pixel 10A in front of a white tile, showing the camera face-to-face

I know I’m annoyed by the lack of change, but let’s be fair: this phone looks pretty great.

We’ve been getting some very frequent phone updates lately: Samsung flagship phones Galaxy S26 I feel like a routine spec update, Apple iPhone 17E phone Mostly it just adds MagSafe and more storage. But both versions put the Pixel 10A to shame – at least they’ve changed Something.

The funny thing is that the Pixel 10A is still the best mid-range phone in the US right now, and one of the best options worldwide as well, which is mostly an indictment of what the rest of the industry is doing at this price point. In six months, when the Pixel 9A sells out its remaining stock, the Pixel 10A will be the best way to spend $500 on the phone. But while last year’s phone is still around, Google’s biggest competitor is Google.

Photography by Dominic Preston/The Verge

March 13 update: The score was changed from 6 to 7.

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