Rating: 4/5
nothing was launched with a clear strategy: It is not about the absolute firepower but what you can do with the resources you have to deliver the best possible experience and yet stand out from the competition. Four generations later, the UK-based brand is sticking to its guns – refining its product lineup along the way. At a starting price of Rs 39,999, the Phone (4a) Pro has now stepped up as the brand’s most significant launch of 2026, bringing elements from its flagship lineup along with the responsibility with more confidence than you expect from a mid-range device. This is not just a spec sheet upgrade over the standard Phone (4a) but a statement about what Nothing to stand for: design-first, software-clean, distinct from everything else in the market, and best value for money product that you can arguably get in the Indian market. We published a quick review days after the phone was launched, touching upon the basics of what this phone gets right, and below we are taking a deeper dive into why this may be your next phone.
The Nothing Phone (4a) Pro price
At a starting price of Rs 39,999 for the base 8GB+128GB option, while the higher-end 8GB+256GB configuration is priced at Rs. 42,999. Lastly, the top-end Nothing Phone 4a Pro with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage is listed at Rs. 45,999.
Design and display: Nothing’s most refined phone yet
The Phone (4a) Pro marks a clear and probably the biggest shift in Nothing’s design philosophy. Gone is the full transparent back that defined earlier models, and there is a metallic body with a matte finish, flat edges and gently curved corners that certainly makes it feel more premium in the hand. Notably, the transparent element has not disappeared entirely, rather it has been concentrated in the camera module, which makes it feel intentional rather than obligatory. The result is a phone that looks cleaner, tougher, more composed than its predecessor, while still retaining the visual identity that Nothing fans recognize.

Subtle branding and certification details are etched into the rear panel. There is also a small circular indent at the bottom-left corner, a thoughtful addition to help you pull the phone out of tight pockets using two fingers. In real life scenario, it totally depends on how ‘tight’ pants you wear but it’s useful if you wear skinny jeans. The Phone (4a) Pro comes with the IP65 rating for dust and water resistance – falling slightly short of protection standards that a bunch of competitors offer. The optical fingerprint scanner – located slightly lower than where it is generally located is thoughtful because in that way, it is easier for people with smaller hand to unlock it without struggling – given that the phone has a wider design.One of the standout design elements of Nothing phones has been the camera module with glyph interface. The transparent camera housing is the Phone (4a) Pro’s most visually striking feature, and Nothing has made it count. The layout is deliberately asymmetric with one camera sits in its own ring, while the other two are housed in a horizontal pill-shaped cluster. Integrated into this camera island is a Glyph Matrix display, larger than the version found on the flagship Phone (3). While the individual micro LEDs are physically bigger here, which increases brightness but reduces sharpness and clarity.

The Glyph Matrix supports notifications, incoming calls, messages, timers, charging indicators, a digital clock, moon phase display, solar path and battery status.The Nothing Phone sports 6.83-inch AMOLED display with a 1.5K resolution with 100 percent DCI-P3 color gamut coverage, HDR10+ support and a 144Hz adaptive refresh rate but in real life usage, the display caps at 120Hz in most scenarios. The viewing experience is enjoyable with colors are punchy and vibrant by default. Viewing angles are wide, HDR content on YouTube and Netflix renders with good shadow detail and clarity.The display is complemented by an equally well-performing dual stereo speakers that prioritize the higher frequency range, making dialogue and treble-heavy content sound crisp and clear even at higher volumes but lack depth/ thump.
Performance: Smooth and efficient
The Nothing Phone (4a) Pro is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chip that handles everyday tasks like breeze. App launches are fast, multitasking is smooth and the phone never felt like it was struggling under the kind of workloads it was subjected during our review period. Gaming performance is solid for casual to moderate titles, and the phone manages heat well during extended sessions. The chipset is efficient in day-to-day use. Apart from the hardware, the most important part of performance is how good the software is and how it works with the available resources. The phone gets Nothing OS 4.1, built on Android 16, and it is one of the most enjoyable software experiences available on an Android phone right now. There is hardly any bloatware, no pre-installed third-party apps and no intrusive advertising anywhere in the interface. You can choose the black and white visual theme, which is consistent across widgets, depth-effect wallpapers, camera presets and AI-powered photo editing tools. You can choose the Android 16 default theme if you prefer colored icons.The Essential Space feature, accessed via the dedicated Essential Key on the left edge, stores screenshots, voice memos, notes, and other content, with AI-powered summarisation to make it easy to revisit. The phone ships with a commitment to four years of OS updates and six years of security patches for long-term ownership.
Cameras: Perform where it counts
The Phone (4a) Pro carries a triple rear camera system: a 50MP Sony LYT700C primary sensor, an 8MP ultrawide with a 120-degree field of view, and a 50MP periscope telephoto with OIS supporting up to 140x digital zoom. The front camera is a 32MP shooter.

The upgrade from the standard Phone (4a) is most apparent in the primary and telephoto cameras (review). The slightly larger primary sensor gathers more light, which in turn, producing images with finer detail and better low-light performance. Add to the mix of AI processing, the photos turn out to be a good 8.5 out 0f 10 most of the times, hardly leaving anything to complain about.The periscope telephoto captures noticeably more detail than its predecessor, though AI processing does much of the heavy lifting at higher zoom levels. The in-built zoom levels in the camera app work well, offering true color reproduction with color science leaning toward cool tones. We also found slight oversaturation in some scenario, provisioning a slight boost in colours. Portrait shots have good edge detection with right amount of blur, essentially making portrait shots look more natural.





Selfies from the 32MP front camera are acceptable. Overall camera performance is reliable for everyday photography with the primary and telephoto lenses standing out for portraits and night shooting.
battery
The Nothing Phone 4(a) Pro packs a 5,400mAh battery with 50W wired fast charging gets the job done for regular users. During real-world use, daily screen time averaged around five hours which is a normal for this segment. The phone provides a day’s backup for browsing, streaming, social media and light gaming.
Verdict
At Rs 39,999, the Nothing Phone (4a) Pro occupies a clear space in the mid-range market. While it may not be the most powerful option at this price, it offers an overall experience that is hard to achieve and quantify but easy to appreciate. The phone feels premium, looks distinctive, runs clean and clutter-free software, and delivers reliable performance across the scenarios that most people actually care about in their daily lives.A premium-feeling design, clean software, and dependable performance make this Nothing’s most compelling mid-range release but it is not without certain trade-offs. The phone stands out due to its design and a polished software experience, making it easier to recommend to those want a reliable performance.















