Nothing isn’t slowing down. After introducing the Phone (3a) and Phone (3a) Pro back in March, the company is already deep into preparations for their next mid-range duo, if a new leak is to be believed.
According to the latest rumour, the upcoming Nothing Phone (4a) and Phone (4a) Pro will both be powered by Snapdragon 7‑series chipsets, most likely from Qualcomm’s newer Gen 4 lineup. The exact split isn’t clear yet: the leak suggests that either both phones could share the same chip, or Nothing might reserve the Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 for the Pro model and give the regular 4a the slightly toned‑down 7s Gen 4 instead.
One detail that does seem locked in is eSIM support, which is reportedly exclusive to the Pro variant. As for colours, the information is a bit messy, but the palette mentioned includes blue, pink, white, and black. It’s not yet clear whether both models will share the same set of colours or be divided between them.
Pricing is where things get a bit more interesting. For a configuration with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage, the leak mentions two separate price tags: $475 and $540. The most reasonable interpretation is that the lower price belongs to the standard Phone (4a), while the higher one is for the Phone (4a) Pro, but the original formatting of the leak leaves room for doubt.
Nothing Headphone (a)
The same source also claims Nothing is preparing a new audio product to launch alongside the phones: the Nothing Headphone (a). This model is said to be very close in concept to the Nothing Headphone (1), but with a complete plastic construction instead of any metal accents. Colour options for the Headphone (a) are pink, yellow, white, and black.
For reference, the current Nothing lineup includes the Phone (3a), which starts with an 8GB/128GB variant, and the Phone (3a) Pro, offered with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage in various markets. The alleged pricing for the 4a series suggests Nothing might be nudging its mid-range phones slightly upmarket with this generation.
As always with early leaks, all of this should be treated with caution until Nothing makes things official, but the pieces do line up with the company’s usual release rhythm and product strategy.





