Summary created by Smart Answers AI
In summary:
- Tech Advisor reports the Nothing Phone (4a) will likely face a price increase when it launches in early 2026 due to surging memory costs from the AI boom.
- CEO Carl Pei explains that memory prices have tripled and could increase five-fold by year-end, forcing brands to raise prices by 30% or downgrade specifications.
- The Phone (4a) will upgrade to UFS 3.1 storage from UFS 2.2, but Nothing plans to focus on intentional design over raw performance specifications.
The forthcoming Nothing Phone (4a) is likely to receive a price hike when it launches in early 2026, and might not feature much in the way of technical upgrades.
Nothing CEO Carl Pei, formerly the driving force during the early years of OnePlus, has issued a lengthy yet fascinating post on X titled Why Your Next Smartphone Will Cost More.
In it, Pei writes about the market pressures set to affect all smartphone manufacturers in 2026. He states that the old era of smartphone components getting cheaper, thus leading to year-on-year improvements without accompanying price bumps, is over.
Thanks to the AI boom, memory prices are surging – up to three fold already, according to Pei, with a further five-fold increase coming by the end of the year – and that’s going to have a knock-on effect for the smartphones you buy in 2026 and beyond.
We had heard all of this before, of course. What’s interesting here are the comments specifically referring to Nothing’s forthcoming smartphone line-up.
“Brands now face a simple choice: raise prices, by 30% or more in some cases, or downgrade specs,” writes Pei. “Pricing will inevitably also increase across our smartphone portfolio, particularly as we will upgrade some products launching this Q1 to UFS 3.1.”
That last reference seems to refer to the Nothing Phone (4a) and the Nothing Phone (4a) Pro, which is set to launch in the first part of 2026. Last year the Nothing Phone (3a) and Nothing Phone (3a) Pro hit the market in March with slower UFS 2.2 storage.
Pei tries to put a positive spin on this inevitable price rise, calling it an opportunity to “innovate differently”. With the claims that “how a phone looks and feels matters far more than its raw numbers”, he seems to suggest that the company’s mid-range offerings for 2026 might not pack the same power as it rivals.
“2026 is the year the “specs race” ends,” Pei concludes, while “The era of intentional design is just beginning.”
Which seems to suggest that the Nothing Phone (4a) series will be more expensive than its predecessor, without being any faster.

