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Here it is, the Nothing Phone (4a). I’ve lived with every Nothing phone since the first one blinked into existence, and its transparent, retro-industrial design drew me into a new kind of smartphone that feels tangentially opposite to Apple and Samsung.

Early on, with Nothing Phone 2(a) and Nothing Phone 2, the design did the heavy lifting, as behind the look, the specs were fine, sometimes better than fine, but the story was always the same: look at me. With each release, Nothing tightened the screws on that identity, and Nothing Phone (4a) doesn’t really buck the trend, and why should it?

Now in my hand, the new Nothing Phone (4a) feels like the moment the brand’s mid-range grows into that confidence. At $475, it sits right in the middle of one of the most important markets. As budgets tighten, we’re all looking for good tech at a good price, and if it can come with a little unusual design swagger, so be it. In many ways, Nothing Phone (4a) feels more assured than past ‘(a)’ releases, as Nothing finally knows what its “(a)” series is for.

A white smartphone on a wooden desk

The Phone 4(a) is the latest mid-range from Nothing, and the blend of updated specs, trech and design finally makes sense. (Image credit: Nothing / Future)

Apple iPhone Air, but at 204.5g and 8.55mm thick, it hits a comfortable middle ground.

A white smartphone on a wooden desk

The new design has been inspired by the Snowy Owl, can you see the body and little face? (Image credit: Nothing / Future)

Samsung GN9 main sensor with a 50MP Samsung JN5 periscope offering 3.5x optical zoom. The telephoto is the quiet shift in quality and ambition compared to the Phone 3(a), offering greater sharpness at range and being a usable day-to-day camera.

Photos of a fern against an old stone wall

The new 50MP and 3.5x optical zoom are an excellent addition as this mid-range price. (Image credit: Future)

There’s also an 8MP ultra-wide and a 32MP front camera, with video topping out at 4K 30fps. Nothing’s TrueLens Engine 4 handles tone mapping and multi-frame processing, including Ultra XDR capture that merges 13 RAW frames for stronger dynamic range. What all that tech jargon means in everyday use, as I discovered, is this phone has cameras that can effortlessly capture wide shots, high-res selfies, and crisp 4K video, and use smart software to make your photos look more natural and detailed.

Add in the Snapdragon 7s Gen 4, paired with 12GB + 256GB, and the Phone 4(a) feels reliably brisk, a touch faster and smoother than previous (a) entries, and generally solid in day-to-day use, whether snapping photos, browsing the web, or writing notes. The slightly larger 5,080mAh battery is a nice addition, and in use, charging was reliably fast, matching Nothing’s messaging of going from near-empty to 50% in around 20-25 minutes.

Android 16, remains one of the cleanest Android skins I’ve used – though I use Nothing every day, so it’s something I’m used to and enjoy. Monochrome iconography, generous spacing, and restrained animation make it a pleasure to use. I particularly like the treatment of Google Discover, bold black bars, and oversized cards that feel deliberate and easy to read.

Essential Space, Nothing’s AI hub for notes, screenshots, voice memos, and reminders, continues to be pushed, but I’ll be honest, it remains a peripheral platform for me. While I can see the advantages – it analyses and groups content into context-aware collections, and offers AI-enabled notes and summaries – to date, I’ve dipped in rather than fully committed, but it’s getting harder to ignore.

For example, Essential Key captures screenshots, recordings, or voice notes straight into the system. Essential Search has quietly become a go-to, swiping up to find contacts, messages, photos, or apps beats hunting manually. There’s AI around missed calls, smarter summaries, and on-device voice tools rolling out via OTA that clean up transcripts and strip filler words.

A white smartphone on a wooden desk

Behind the headline-making new cameras and upgrades, Nothing continues to make strides with AI and its Essential Space. (Image credit: Nothing / Future)

Embrace it or not, it’s with Essential Space that Nothing is doing some interesting stuff. While my eyes are always drawn to the new design, the colours, the Glyth lights, and the industrial rear ‘sketches’, it’s in this novel AI-enabled ecosystem of apps and tools that the brand can find a voice as unique as its product design.

In this sense, Nothing Phone (4a) doesn’t reinvent the brand but rather offers another small step towards a unique future, and if it has fun with cute owl designs and flashy LEDs along the way, tinkering with design and nudging performance upwards, all the better. Some may say Nothing Phone (4a) is the brand staying in its lane, comfortable but confident, I’d say look closer as there’s something more Essential at play.