Comparing the Google Pixel Pro to the Nothing Phone means crossing market segments: one is a premium buy, the other a value-focused option. The question is less about which is "better" and more about whether the flagship experience is worth the extra spend for your actual use case.
Reaching maturity, early rumors about next model coming out
Reaching maturity, early rumors about next model coming out
No upcoming deals in the radar 😑
Clearance discounts on Phone (3a) after Phone (4a) launch
A new Nothing Phone model has been announced, which changes the calculus here. If you are leaning toward the Nothing Phone, you may be better off waiting for the new generation or hunting for a clearance deal on the current one. The Google Pixel Pro has no imminent successor, making it the safer immediate buy.
Current deals favor the Nothing Phone, which is in an active discount window. If price is a major factor, now is a particularly good time to consider it.
The Google Pixel Pro series is for the photography enthusiast and Android purist who wants the absolute best camera on any smartphone paired with timely updates straight from Google. It's perfect for users who rely on Google's ecosystem — Gmail, Docs, Photos, and AI tools like Gemini — and want a phone that gets better over time through software. If you value computational photography, clean Android, and 7 years of guaranteed updates, the Pixel Pro is the gold standard.
The Nothing Phone series is for the user who is tired of boring smartphone designs and wants something that genuinely stands out. It is perfect for design-conscious buyers, tech enthusiasts, and anyone who values a clean, bloatware-free Android experience similar to stock Android but with unique personality. If you want a phone that sparks conversation, delivers reliable daily performance, and comes from a brand with a bold vision for the future of tech, Nothing is for you.
Both series are evenly matched on timing right now. Your decision should come down to ecosystem preference, software update commitments, and which feature set matches your daily habits.
Not sure how we calculate these ratings? Read our methodology →