In the battle of the competitive mid-range handsets, Google’s Pixel 9a was seen as one of the best choices in the market. How can Google maintain that success when it launches the Pixel 10a? Given the price-sensitive nature of this market space, getting the price right is critical.
Pixel 10a Decisions
This year’s Pixel 9a launched at $499. Many expected that to match a refreshed iPhone SE for 2025. Apple instead retired the SE line and introduced the iPhone 16e in its place… but at $599, more than $100 over the expected iPhone SE (2025) price.
With prices on other mid-range handsets from manufacturers such as Samsung and Honor at a similar price to the Pixel 9a, the higher specs on Google’s handset were seen as a commercial advantage.
The Pixel 10a is expected to launch in late March, and Google’s pricing decision will be key in several areas. Assuming Apple is moving to a yearly cadence of e releases, will it undercut its leading rival in an updated iPhone 17e? Will it continue to be priced competitively against the Android-powered competition? And would Google happily sacrifice some margin on the handset to bring more people into the Gemini AI service and entrench Google’s approach to mobile artificial intelligence?
Details on the potential choices around its specifications suggest that Google is working hard to keep the bill of materials as low as possible.
Leaked Pixel 10a Specifications
First up is the choice of the chipset. Since Google moved to its own silicon design, the Pixel A models have been equipped with the same Tensor chipset as the larger, more expensive models in the family. The Pixel 9a shipped with the same Tensor G4 as the Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, and Pixel 9 Pro Fold.
Details from the supply chain suggest that the Pixel 10a may stay on the older Tensor G4 rather than the Tensor G5 that the Pixel 10 family launched with in August 2025. That would sacrifice some of the on-device AI performance offered by the other Pixel 10 handsets, but this would likely be compensated for by the features running in the cloud.
Then there’s the impact of sticking with older silicon. It allows the rest of the design to stay relatively steady. Indeed, keeping the external dimensions would be welcomed by case and peripheral manufacturers, as well as by consumers upgrading from the 9a—no doubt there would be some economies of scale in any of the common parts.
Finally, the Pixel team can aim for lower spaces within the individual components. Additional supply chain reporting points to Google stepping back from UFS 4.0 storage specifications in the current Pixel 10 family, to UFS 3.1 for the Pixel 10a. How much difference this will make in day-to-day use is unlikely to be noticeable by the average consumer. Still, it will undoubtedly be evident to the accountants ordering in bulk.
The Biggest Pixel 10a Question
A more interesting question on the price will be around the pricing in the Google Store. The Pixel 9a has been discounted by $100 in the US store for a long time before the Pixel Black Friday offers. There’s every chance that the discount stays in place for Christmas. Will this forever discount carry on into the new year? What happens when the Pixel 10a arrives? Does the Pixel 9a remain discounted, and does the Pixel 10a lock in at $499 for the summer? Or does the continued use of older silicon see the 9a quietly removed from the portfolio, leaving the Pixel 10a as he sole ‘A-class’ on sale as a new handset?
Google has several options in front of it, and many levers it can pull. With many expecting the Pixel 10a to come in at $499, matching the Pixel 9a, it will be clear which levers to pull.
Now read more about the Android world this week, which could impact the market around the Pixel 10a…
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