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Google Pixel 10a review: Almost identical to last year's, but still excellent value

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Budget phones like the Google Pixel 10a might not be as flashy or, frankly, overpowered as flagships like the Pixel 10 Pro XL or Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, but they're arguably more important now more than ever. The global memory shortage is squeezing everything from MacBooks to gaming consoles to TVs, but budget phones are taking it the hardest. Designed with the thinnest of profit margins, a budget phone cannot simply tack on an extra $100 and call it a day like the Galaxy S26. The expectation of quality between a $200, $300, and $400 phone is too steep a curve.

A previously $400 phone could theoretically compete at $500 against phones like the Google Pixel 10a, but that was already a hard sell last year and the year before. The Pixel A-series headlines this segment year after year with near-unbeatable value and the best camera under $500, and the Pixel 10a keeps that price tag and title once again.

Despite its minuscule mechanical upgrades, its sole design change harkens back to Android's early days and makes the Google Pixel 10a the most satisfying Pixel I've held in this chaotic decade. It almost makes me want to forgive the 'budget-saving' cop-out that would've made this reliable but unremarkable phone actually fun.

Almost.


Design: The returning flat back makes me miss PixelSnap's magnets all the more

It's a striking design, but we also miss the iconic camera bar, which has been absent since the 8a on the budget Pixel line.

If you looked at product images of the Pixel 9a and 10a, your only Spot the Difference points would be the color, the now-matching speaker grills, a relocated SIM tray, and that seemingly minuscule ring around the camera. It's yet another aluminum-framed slab phone, even more generic than most since it lacks any definition or deformation on the rear plastic cover. It's downright yawnworthy until you put the Pixel 10a in your hand and (eventually) set it on your desk.

Before we get to that flat back, let's discuss what's not mounted under it. Google chose to use older 10W Qi wireless charging coils instead of the magnetic PixelSnap Qi2 array it debuted on the Pixel 10 to keep prices down. On the surface, this would appear to be a relatively harmless corner to cut for a budget phone — magnetic cases and stickers can give us everything except that efficient magnetic charging profile — but it's an absolutely wasted opportunity.

This could be us, but you're not playing, Google!

Even if it didn't get 15W charging speeds, PixelSnap would've been a tentpole feature for the 10a, just as MagSafe is the biggest upgrade of the $599 Apple iPhone 17e. The convenience of never worrying about alignment on a magnetic charge alone is life-changing, to say nothing of the accessibility of universal mounting and diverse phone grips to reduce strain on your hands. The Pixel 10a shouldn't need a phone case to accomplish this since Google developed an entire ecosystem for it last year, especially since the 10a's design finally fixes one of the biggest reasons to buy one today: making your phone sit flat and still on a table.

I am a case queen — both writing about them and personally picking them out for all my friends and family — but the Pixel 10a's sheer rear sincerely makes me want to go caseless, especially with this bold Berry red colorway. After a near-decade of ever-increasing raised rings and bulging bump-outs, Google has given us an easily one-handed phone that is smooth top-to-bottom without any protrusions to make me constantly adjust my grip.

The lens is easy to smudge, but sits super smoothly with the phone's chassis.

The camera glass is the barest point-millimeter recessed to limit damage from uneven or dirty tabletops, and my fingers can seamlessly shift the phone up or down to hit that cursed top-right corner or summon Gemini from the navigation bar. There's no avoiding fingerprints on the camera, but Pixel Camera will warn you to wipe them off.

Neither the composite plastic back nor the aluminum frame felt slippery despite their smooth profiles, thanks to the Pixel 10a's satin finish, which keeps it shiny without letting it slide right off your glass coffee table. Said aluminum frame has moved the SIM tray from the bottom to the left side, allowing for speaker slots on either side of the USB-C port. There isn't an actual speaker under the left slot to give us stereo sound, but at least it looks symmetrical.

The aluminum frame has a gorgeous satin finish.

The corners on the Pixel 10a are noticeably curvy, like most recent Pixels. While it looks good, I've found it can turn controls and touch targets at the very edge of the screen into a needle's eye instead of a wide square, especially in landscape apps and control-heavy games. I've usually been able to hit the target after multiple taps or flipping the phone 180 degrees, as the bottom corners appear to be a smidge smaller.

The menu icons in the corner become difficult to tap accurately.

Speaking of the touchscreen, it's still 6.3 inches and marginally brighter than the 9a, though not significantly. The new 3,000-nit max brightness isn't accessible from the brightness slider — it's reserved for HDR content like movies and high-def photos — so in everyday use, the 10a is slightly brighter than the 9a, but the difference is too small to notice unless you put them side by side. It's easy to use outside or inside, though I find Google's auto-brightness algorithm to lag a little during dramatic lighting shifts.

Once again, the Pixel 10a's power button is set to trigger Gemini out of the box rather than opening the power menu. Given that Gemini can also be summoned by pressing the navigation bar or swiping from the bottom corners of the screen, I recommend heading to the gestures menu and swapping it back immediately after you get through the initial setup.

AI integrations: A little more conversation, a lot more action, please

Gemini has been Google's obsession for the last couple of years, and the focus on the Pixel 10a is its continual, topic-traversing Gemini Live and its ability to connect with and control apps to summon your Spotify playlists, compose quick emails, or edit your Google Photos for you.

Gemini's Ask to Edit is especially helpful for tools like Magic Eraser, where previously you had to hope you could be precise enough when circling objects or people you wanted removed. One of Gemini's first 'Make it better' options for my landscape photos at Epcot was to remove the bystanders, effortlessly re-editing to "remove the stroller too" to give me a (mostly) clean shot of Epcot's torii gate without lifting a finger. There are still a few blurred lines and wonkiness if you zoom all the way in, but if you're just cleaning up your vacation photos for Instagram, it's perfect for removing clusters of people, photobombing birds, and problematic decor.

Before the Pixel 10a's 'Make it Better' sweep.
Afterwards, the people have been removed, leaving some bendy fencing, paler colors… and a backpack.

It can't save all of your bad shots — like the fireworks photos we'll get to later — but tools like Auto Best Take and the Gemini-powered Camera Coach try to help you avoid taking one in the first place. Auto Best Take takes a series of shots and stitches together each person's best faces, while Camera Coach gives step-by-step directions for framing your shot and finding the right distance from your target, with an AI-generated preview thumbnail that you'll try to match in the actual photo before hitting the shutter. This process can take half a minute or more, though, so it's best used on still targets rather than hyperactive huskies or kids.

Gemini can guide you through almost any topic imaginable — I took it down a veritable rabbit hole looking for cozy romantasy anime that I haven't watched already — but having to hit the mic button after every response can get old. Gemini Live aims to keep the conversation flowing by continuously listening and responding whenever you trail off. Another benefit of Gemini Live is the ability to share your phone screen or camera view to add context while you debate what couch might fit your cramped living room or which flowers and shrubs at the botanical gardens you can and should plant during your backyard renovation.

Using that camera view while out and about can certainly speed up your decision-making and information gathering, but I seldom used it outside the privacy of my apartment because Gemini Live is solely an audio/video-input mode; you can't use text input without dropping back to the normal conversation window. You also can't see previous Gemini responses while it's active, only the most recent three caption lines appear if you deign to enable them. You can keep talking while you flit between apps, but can't read back the four-paragraph recommendation list it just spent a minute reciting.

The Live visualizer is mildly mesmerizing to watch, but Live's interface should be enabling your conversation, not blocking Gemini's previous research.

Performance: Good enough to almost forget it's a budget phone

Battery life may not be the most important part of its performance, but it's certainly in the top five and a standout on the Pixel 10a. A week is not a lot of time to stress test a battery, but I've managed at least 10 hours of battery life per charge, including the day I took a 40-minute Instagram video call before 1.5 hours of Pokémon Go and over 7 hours straight of Merge Dragons. That might not sound as graphically intense as the likes of Call of Duty or Diablo, but loading my camp has crashed flagship phones and even a couple of Chromebooks. Once I swapped from gaming to reading, the battery easily stretched all day and deep into the night with near-constant use on WiFi with auto-brightness.

Even a three-hour photo spree in the muggiest midday Florida sun didn't keep the Pixel 10a from lasting over a day before needing a recharge, and 30W wired charging speeds made those recharges blessedly brief. 10W wireless charging, on the other hand, feels like a consolation prize for not getting PixelSnap and the more efficient Qi2 magnetic power profile.

No matter how many webtoons or Reddit threads I scrolled through, the Pixel 10a's screen stayed smooth for everything except Merge Dragons and its hundreds of concurrent object animations. This phone might not have gotten the latest Tensor chipset, but you probably wouldn't be able to tell even in most games.

What you will end up noticing at one point or another is how quickly apps get dropped from the 8GB of RAM when you're multitasking between multiple resource-hungry apps. In everyday use, my apps always reopened right where I left them, but when swapping between the camera and Pokémon Go while out exploring, they'd end up having to reload completely. That's not an issue for Pixel Camera because it's designed to load and launch instantly. For apps with a long startup time like Pokémon Go, the impact is immediate and immense.

However, this only happened while trying to use one of my hungriest apps alongside the hungriest system of a smartphone while also baking in direct sunlight, forcing the system to throttle down so it doesn't fry itself. You'll only run into this under extreme circumstances, though the allotted memory can slow down Gemini's Nano Banana 2 image generator a bit when you start asking for fourth or sixth revisions of your detailed prompt.

As a mobile gamer and multi-tasker, it's hard not to want more RAM in this phone — especially for on-device AI processing — but given current costs, I can only be grateful that Google kept both 8GB of RAM and a $500 price tag. This performance is more than good enough for its budget.

My strongest complaints about the Pixel 10a's performance are actually the software flaws it shares with all Pixel phones. Pixels have been my primary phone for over half of the last decade, I play tech support to an entire family of Pixel 9 Pro XLs, and Android is my foremost area of decade-plus writing expertise.

We can't stop touching the smoothness. Hence fingerprints.

The way Google arranges Pixel's system settings and ignores gaps in its own basic functionality breaks my brain at least twice a day.

The Pixel 10a's Clock app can play alarm music from three different music services and trigger smart home routines, but you can't set the length or number of snoozes on an individual alarm. Pixel's Modes can customize breakthrough notifications down to per-app subcategories, but they can't change your ringer from sound to silent and back. Heck, you can't even find the Sound/Vibrate/Silent toggle anywhere in the main system settings or quick settings; you can only use it from an icon above the pop-up volume slider.

Do you want your watch to keep your Pixel 10a unlocked while you're wearing it? Unless it's a Pixel Watch — which gets its own section in Device unlock alongside fingerprints and facial recognition — you get to play hide-and-seek with Extend Unlock because Google split the Lock screen settings across three other sections.

Speaking of, the Pixel Launcher's settings are split as well between the launcher's Home settings and the Wallpaper & Styles menu in the main Settings app. It's the app drawer grid you set in Home settings, but the home screen grid you set in Wallpaper & styles. If you get there through the Settings app, it doesn't start with the home screen settings.

It opens instead to the lockscreen tab, where only three of its six settings relate to theming your Pixel. Google includes a shortcut to a Theme pack menu that had nothing in it this last month on both the home and lockscreen tabs, but its ever-touted, system-wide Material You color palette is only accessible on the Home screen side — even if you're not using Pixel Launcher.

Are these the most pedantic problems to have with a phone? Absolutely, but they add up, and Google's penchant for non-standard setting locations and refusal to give back anything it's taken away while 'streamlining' the Pixel experience can leave first-time Pixel owners in a lurch — especially those coming from the almost-overstuffed menus of a Galaxy.

Cameras: Just fine shouldn't be the bar for the best phone camera under $500

At its inception and through most of its history, the Pixel a-series' point of pride was its status as the best camera under $400 — now $500. It's kept that title with the Pixel 10a, which makes everything I'm about to say a bit disappointing. Apart from adding more AI to its processing and editing through Gemini, Google hasn't updated the 10a's camera system at all from the Pixel 9a. We have the same 48MP main shooter that you can only zoom in 8x on, and the 13MP "ultrawide" we've had since the Pixel 8a, which often ends up noticeably darker and less defined in anything below bright, outdoor lighting.

Everyday photos of pets, cute clothes, and vacation destinations are decent for social feeds and group chats, but look elsewhere if you're after crisp lines on every leaf and lock of hair. For $500, this is the best phone camera you're going to get outside a three-year-old flagship, but it's not going to be winning you any contests.

My picture parades around Epcot and Disney's Animal Kingdom garnered plenty of pretty angles and easy adjustments now that the quick-access photo controls include color temperature alongside exposure and black levels. It can be tricky to get used to having so many controls up at once while trying to dial in a quick shot on the fly, but it's not enabled by default, and you can swap to a separate shooting mode for a cleaner, if slower, experience.

Night Sight, the bane of my existence on early Pixel A-series phones, is where we can see some of Google's AI shine in stabilizing and processing shots while still capturing most details. Even back on my Pixel 7, Night Sight only gave my unsteady hands varying degrees of blur and smear. Now, on the Pixel 10a, the mode not only uses impressive stabilization but also adjusts its length depending on the type of shot and the level of light it's working with. This means shots with more light or no humans can go too quickly to even see the stabilization ring, while those that need it get the full 1-3 seconds. Nighttime 1x and 2x photos work quite well with or without Night Sight — if you're fast enough adjusting your levels manually.

However, distant concert stages or nighttime spectacles left most of my firework and fountain shots unusable when zoomed in for proper framing or too wide to catch details like faces and projected effects.

1x zoom on Pixel 10a.
2x zoom on Pixel 10a.
8x zoom on Pixel 10a.

That said, 'Super Res Zoom' photos on the Pixel 10a nosedive beyond 2x or 4x digital zoom, even under full Florida sunshine. It renews the same wish I've had for every Pixel A-series and non-Pro Pixel flagship since the Pixel 5: Google, please swap back these milk toast ultrawides for telephotos, as the iPhone 17e and 16e did.

Expedition Everest shot at 1x zoom.
The same shot at 8x zoom.

Whether the object I was zooming in on was 15 feet above me or an entire lakeside away, 6x and 8x zoom photos had no detail at best and no sharpness at all, at worst. I normally only need to test in-motion photos on my standard Kilimanjaro Safari loop, but the Pixel 10a's zoom quality gave me far more issues than the bumpy ride.

1x zoom on Pixel 10a.
2x zoom on Pixel 10a.
8x zoom on Pixel 10a.

Only with the still, sleeping tigers did the resulting photos look passable. I know there's only so much you can do with the camera budget of a $500 phone, but when I can't even take a focused picture of my partner from across the apartment, it should be named something else or not named at all.

Google tries to tout its Macro Focus mode that will imitate a telephoto shot, but it only works if the camera detects that the target object is five centimeters away and nothing else is around it. If, say, the leaves around a flower are too close toward the edges of your image, or your amazingly good food is on too wide a plate, the mode simply will not engage. A toggle in Pro mode or a Macro Focus mode along the carousel could fix this, and we can only hope a future update will do so.

Should you buy the Pixel 10a?

Despite all the grousing I just gave its cameras, the Pixel 10a has been very nice to use as my daily driver for this review period and didn't feel like a downgrade from my (old but flagship) Galaxy S23 until that night of fireworks photography. Since you probably don't live at a theme park or need to take review-quality photos with your phone, the cameras are begrudgingly acceptable for what may be the last 'budget flagship' left standing under that nice, round, technically sub-$500 price point.

While the Pixel 10a isn't a major upgrade over its predecessor or even the 8a, its value is solid, especially at a time when most of its competitors are at risk of being pushed beyond budget pricing or canceled due to shortage-driven memory prices. In essence, one of the biggest reasons to buy the Pixel 10a is simply that it's still $499, it's perfectly decent for almost everything except zoomed-in photography and heavy-duty gaming, and it will get seven years of system and security updates. It will keep your digital lifeline safe from any exploits while you wait for the RAM shortage's surge pricing to settle back down — certainly not happening this year or next.

You can potentially save $70-$100 by opting for the older Pixel 9a, but I'd argue 30W wired charging is worth that extra money all on its own, especially when paired with that flat back and bolder color options — Berry remains my favorite, but the cornflower-blue 'Lavender' is delightful, too.

If Google had included PixelSnap magnets here, the Pixel 10a's bright, 60-120Hz adaptable refresh rate screen would've trounced the iPhone 17e's generations-old 60Hz screen. A magnetic Pixel 10a would've been a camera away from a mid-range killer rather than just the best phone under $500. But you can always buy a magnetic case; I did so for any outdoor excursions during my review because I can't trust my tremor with a PopSocket-less phone, which I need to send back pristine.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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