Soon after Google gave us our first glimpse of the Pixel 10a, it attracted plenty of heat. Looks identical to its predecessor. A no-upgrade chip situation. A similar status for the camera. And display. And battery. That’s a lot to take in.
It’s almost as if Google pulled an Apple. And somehow, did worse.
But there’s more to this phone than meets the eye. I have only had the chance to push it as my daily driver for a week, which is not enough for a full review. But that spell still gave me enough encouragement to keep driving it as my primary phone without losing my mind over too many missing features.
It just feels reliable.
Is it terrific for $499? That would depend squarely on the spare left in your pocket. You can do better for a $100 extra on the bill, and even leap to the flagship territory for a slightly higher premium. But if you can’t stretch the budget, the Pixel 10a won’t leave you gasping with a case of yet-another-bad-purchase.
What works for the Pixel 10a?
I love phones that don’t scream for attention. I’m looking at you, dear Cosmic Orange iPhone. The Pixel 10a embodies minimalism, and does it nearly as well as the two-tone original Pixel that launched a decade ago. You get metallic slides, a rear shell with a frosted finish, and clean lines.
The size is just about right to avoid palm troubles, and you won’t feel it pulling down your jeans pocket either. It’s a flat slab on both sides, with cold metal on the sides. Notably, there’s no protrusion around the camera lenses, which sit in a flush, black pill offering a beautiful contrast against the rear shell.
Google says the Pixel 10a is its most resilient A-series phone yet. The build is IP68-cleared for dust and water resistance, a shade below the OnePlus 15, but still fairly standard for the industry. Splashes and occasional pool drops are fine, but nothing too adventurous. The real upgrade lies over at the front.

The display shield has been upgraded to Corning Gorilla Glass 7i, which comes as a sigh of relief. But based on experience, I’d strongly recommend a screen protector. I’ve scratched the best that Corning has to offer on a thousand-dollar phone without even knowing, and I don’t have the heart to test the scratch resistance claims on a device that costs nearly half as much.
Another sigh of relief is the display itself. The size remains unchanged at 6.3 inches, and so does the resolution (1080 x 2424 pixels) and 120Hz refresh rate. The big shift is the brightness, which climbs all the way to 3,000 nits, matching that of the iPhone 17 Pro. The display is actually pretty good, actually, and especially for the price tag.
It’s sufficiently sharp, vibrant, and I barely ever came across a situation where I had readability issues, even when using the phone outdoors on sunny days. Additionally, the auto-brightness feature worked fairly well, especially in the bright outdoors.
Then there’s the battery. It’s a fairly respectable 5,100 mAh unit, and given the frugal hardware that it’s driving, it easily went past a full-day stretched across photo capture, an hour of video call, music streaming over Bluetooth, and some serious doomscrolling on X.
Google has sped up the wired charging slightly, and the phone can now fill half the tank in just half an hour. Using a third-party 65W PD charger, it went from empty to full in roughly minutes. That’s not the fastest, but still serviceable, though Chinese have moved to 100W in the same price bracket.
At 10W output, the wireless charging pace has also received a nearly 50% boost. I won’t put too much stress on it, since it takes a lot of time to recharge the phone, but it’s still a practical perk to have. I usually travel with a folding multi-device wireless charging mat, and the Pixel 10a fared pretty well on it without heating too much.
What else works well here?
When you uncover a $500, blistering performance isn’t something at the top of your mind. The Pixel 10a isn’t promising that either, but here’s the interesting part. Instead of downgrading to a mid-range processor, Google has just armed it with a processor that powered its yesteryear Pixel 9 series flagship phones.
On the surface, that’s terrific news. In reality, well, Google’s Tensor G4 silicon isn’t quite a match for Qualcomm or Apple’s best mobile chips. That doesn’t mean it’s a slouch. On the contrary, this phone chews through your usual “phone chores” with ease.
Tensor’s Geekbench and 3DMark benchmark outings show it’s up there with the mainline Pixel 9a and the iPhone 16e with Apple’s mighty A18 chip. In case you are wondering, it can handle PUBG Mobile’s BGMI spin-off at Extreme/Smooth preset at a fairly stable 50-60fps range without getting toasty or stuttering.
There are occasional frame drops, but in my moderately warm surroundings, the temperatures remained well under the 41 degrees Celcius range. It definitely got warm, but not to a worrisome extent. That happened when I pushed Genshin Impact at the 60fps tier, where the output usually fell between the 24-30 fps range, and heat buildup was pretty quick.
I didn’t notice any performance throttling when playing games at moderate to high settings, which is pretty great. I’d like to point out that the Pixel 10a is not targeted at gamers, but for the occasional battle royale sessions, or casual mobile games, it can hold its own.
The camera is your usual Pixel experience. The 48-megapixel main camera takes reasonably sharp photos, with true-to-life colors, plenty of details, and surface texture return. Skin tones look natural, but there’s a bit of disparity in the color chemistry between photos taken by the main and 13-megapixel ultrawide sensor. They’re not bad, but the latter just ramps up the ISO a little bit.
Overall, if you’re not too nitpicky about minute details like highlights and shadow, the Pixel 10a comes out as a reliable pocket snapper. On the software side, the Pixel 10a lands Camera Coach, Auto Best Take, and Macro Focus as the exclusive upgrades. Overall, they work well, but I’ll dig into their pitfalls in my full review.
Talking about software, that’s the real winner. And no, I’m not just talking about the pristine Android experience — though you get a prompt to install a bunch of third-party apps during the first setup. I’m talking about the meaningful Gemini AI-driven experiences, such as on-device translation, call scam protection, audio magic eraser, conversational photo editing, and call assist, which are a few features that really make a difference on a day-to-day basis.
The Pixel 10a also offers a robust set of theft protection features, device safety tools, safety check, and more such quality-of-life perks. Plus, with seven years of promised software support under its belt, this phone can stay updated and zippy as you don’t end up breaking it, or impulsively upgrade to a new model.
It’s one heck of a package, if you know what you want
If I put the Pixel 10a into a competitive perspective, or even see it through the generation-over-generation upgrade lens, it’s a lazy exercise. But if you look at it purely for what it has to offer, this one turns out to be a solid phone for its asking price.
Of course, there’s always an option to spend more and do better, especially if you look at an iPhone. But the Pixel 10 doesn’t come out as a downer, and that’s coming from someone who lives in a market flooded with packed-to-the-gills Chinese Android phones.
The question is whether you chase a specs monster, or reliability with a dose of cutting-edge software perks. The Pixel 10a falls in the latter class, and even though it has its weaknesses, it still feels like a satisfyingly smooth budget phone to me that I won’t mind daily-driving.
