Google Pixel 10a vs Samsung Galaxy A36 5G | TechTalkTown
Google Pixel 10a vs Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
Google Pixel 10a
Google
7.8
Great budget pick, lazy upgrade
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
Samsung
7.4
Long-supported budget Galaxy
Google Pixel 10a
What Reviewers Agree On
The fully flush camera module is the single most-celebrated change — the 10a lies dead flat on a table with no wobble, a rare and appreciated departure in 2026.
The 6.3-inch pOLED is brighter and tougher than the 9a's, hitting 3,000 nits peak with Gorilla Glass 7i replacing the ancient Gorilla Glass 3.
Battery life is reliably all-day on the 5,100 mAh cell, with multiple reviewers reporting two-day endurance on lighter use.
Google's image processing is still the best camera experience you can get for $500 — sharp detail, natural colors, class-leading Night Sight, fast shutter speeds.
Seven years of OS and security updates through 2033 remain industry-leading at this price point.
Pros & Cons
Google Pixel 10a
Pros
The fully flush camera module is the single most-celebrated change — the 10a lies dead flat on a table with no wobble, a rare and appreciated departure in 2026.
The 6.3-inch pOLED is brighter and tougher than the 9a's, hitting 3,000 nits peak with Gorilla Glass 7i replacing the ancient Gorilla Glass 3.
Battery life is reliably all-day on the 5,100 mAh cell, with multiple reviewers reporting two-day endurance on lighter use.
Google's image processing is still the best camera experience you can get for $500 — sharp detail, natural colors, class-leading Night Sight, fast shutter speeds.
Detailed Comparison
Design & Build
Google Pixel 10a
The marquee design change is the camera module — Google ground it down until the lenses sit completely flush with the back, so the phone lies dead flat on a table with no rock or wobble. Otherwise it is dimensionally and visually almost indistinguishable from the Pixel 9a: same 6.3-inch 153.9 × 73 × 9mm chassis, same aluminum frame, same plastic back, same IP68 rating. The new Berry color is the standout, with reviewers from The Verge to 9to5Google to Wired specifically calling it the one to buy.
The 10a's bezels are about 10 percent narrower than the 9a's, slimming the visual footprint without growing the body — Google fully eliminated the camera bump rather than miniaturizing it like last year.
The completely flush camera module is an underrated perk after years of ever-thickening camera bumps — the 10a doesn't rock on a table and neatly glides into a pocket.
The lavender colorway is genuinely beautiful in person — light refracts beautifully off the aluminum frame and composite back, and the matte finish feels secure in the hand.
The new Berry color is a callback to the red Nexus 5 — it catches the eye like nothing else on the market and is the color to buy.
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Faster 30W wired and 10W wireless charging is a welcome but modest bump over the 9a's 23W/7.5W.
The clean Android 16 build with Gemini integration, Material 3 Expressive, Hold for Me, Call Screen, Now Playing and Quick Share to AirDrop is genuinely useful — a key reason the 10a still stands out at $500.
Deal Breakers
No Pixelsnap magnets — the single most-criticized omission, called out by The Verge, Wired, Engadget, Ars Technica, 9to5Google, Gizmodo, Trusted Reviews and SuperSaf as the easy win Google declined to ship despite Apple bringing MagSafe to the iPhone 17e.
Same Tensor G4 chip from 2024 means no AI throughput improvements and breaks the A-series tradition of matching the current-year flagship's silicon — flagged by Ars Technica, TechCrunch, Gizmodo, BGR, and most YouTube reviewers as a value regression.
Capped at 8GB of RAM with 128GB base storage that will feel cramped during the seven-year update window, and the 10a misses the flagship-tier AI features (Magic Cue, Pixel Screenshots, Pixel Studio) that require Gemini Nano's larger memory footprint.
Multiple reviewers — Engadget, TechCrunch, Wired, Trusted Reviews — recommend the cheaper Pixel 9a if you can find it on sale, since it offers ~95% of the same experience for $100 less.
Still no telephoto lens or Wi-Fi 7, while same-price rivals like the Nothing Phone 4a Pro pack a dedicated zoom camera plus 50W charging.
Charging is functional but slow by 2026 standards — full charge takes ~98 minutes per Trusted Reviews testing, and Chinese rivals are pushing 100W in this bracket.
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
What Reviewers Agree On
Samsung's six-year OS and security update commitment is the longest in the budget Android segment and a class-leading reason to buy at this price.
The 6.7-inch FHD+ Super AMOLED with 120Hz refresh and ~1,900-nit peak HDR brightness punches above the phone's price bracket and is one of the best displays under $400.
Build quality is exemplary for the price — dual Gorilla Glass Victus+ front and back, IP67 dust/water resistance and a thinner, lighter chassis than the A35.
Wired charging has jumped from 25W to 45W, taking the 5,000 mAh battery from 0 to ~60-66% in 30 minutes and a full charge in ~68-70 minutes.
Real-world battery life from the 5,000 mAh cell easily lasts a full day, with reviewers regularly ending with 20-40% remaining.
Awesome Intelligence (Circle to Search, AI Select, Object Eraser, Edit Suggestions, custom filters) brings a meaningful slice of Galaxy AI features down to the A-series without the bloat seen on the S25 line.
Deal Breakers
The Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 is barely an upgrade over 2022's Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 and benchmarks at or below the outgoing Exynos 1380 in the cheaper A35 — multiple reviewers reported stutters, with one Wired test finding the carrier-locked A36 actually slower than the $100-cheaper A26.
Samsung removed the microSD card slot that the A35 still had, so 128 GB or 256 GB is the storage ceiling — repeatedly flagged on Reddit as a deal-breaker for long-term-update buyers.
No wireless charging — competitors like Motorola's Moto G Power and Moto G Stylus 2025 offer it at the same or lower price.
The rear cameras are the exact same hardware as the A35 (50MP main, 8MP ultrawide, 5MP macro) with only a new ISP and Awesome Intelligence software changes; ultrawide and low-light output remain noisy.
USB 2.0 only and Wi-Fi 6 only (no 6 GHz / Wi-Fi 6E) — connectivity is dated for a 2025 phone you're meant to keep for six years.
Seven years of OS and security updates through 2033 remain industry-leading at this price point.
Faster 30W wired and 10W wireless charging is a welcome but modest bump over the 9a's 23W/7.5W.
The clean Android 16 build with Gemini integration, Material 3 Expressive, Hold for Me, Call Screen, Now Playing and Quick Share to AirDrop is genuinely useful — a key reason the 10a still stands out at $500.
Cons
No Pixelsnap magnets — the single most-criticized omission, called out by The Verge, Wired, Engadget, Ars Technica, 9to5Google, Gizmodo, Trusted Reviews and SuperSaf as the easy win Google declined to ship despite Apple bringing MagSafe to the iPhone 17e.
Same Tensor G4 chip from 2024 means no AI throughput improvements and breaks the A-series tradition of matching the current-year flagship's silicon — flagged by Ars Technica, TechCrunch, Gizmodo, BGR, and most YouTube reviewers as a value regression.
Capped at 8GB of RAM with 128GB base storage that will feel cramped during the seven-year update window, and the 10a misses the flagship-tier AI features (Magic Cue, Pixel Screenshots, Pixel Studio) that require Gemini Nano's larger memory footprint.
Multiple reviewers — Engadget, TechCrunch, Wired, Trusted Reviews — recommend the cheaper Pixel 9a if you can find it on sale, since it offers ~95% of the same experience for $100 less.
Still no telephoto lens or Wi-Fi 7, while same-price rivals like the Nothing Phone 4a Pro pack a dedicated zoom camera plus 50W charging.
Charging is functional but slow by 2026 standards — full charge takes ~98 minutes per Trusted Reviews testing, and Chinese rivals are pushing 100W in this bracket.
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
Pros
Samsung's six-year OS and security update commitment is the longest in the budget Android segment and a class-leading reason to buy at this price.
The 6.7-inch FHD+ Super AMOLED with 120Hz refresh and ~1,900-nit peak HDR brightness punches above the phone's price bracket and is one of the best displays under $400.
Build quality is exemplary for the price — dual Gorilla Glass Victus+ front and back, IP67 dust/water resistance and a thinner, lighter chassis than the A35.
Wired charging has jumped from 25W to 45W, taking the 5,000 mAh battery from 0 to ~60-66% in 30 minutes and a full charge in ~68-70 minutes.
Real-world battery life from the 5,000 mAh cell easily lasts a full day, with reviewers regularly ending with 20-40% remaining.
Awesome Intelligence (Circle to Search, AI Select, Object Eraser, Edit Suggestions, custom filters) brings a meaningful slice of Galaxy AI features down to the A-series without the bloat seen on the S25 line.
Cons
The Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 is barely an upgrade over 2022's Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 and benchmarks at or below the outgoing Exynos 1380 in the cheaper A35 — multiple reviewers reported stutters, with one Wired test finding the carrier-locked A36 actually slower than the $100-cheaper A26.
Samsung removed the microSD card slot that the A35 still had, so 128 GB or 256 GB is the storage ceiling — repeatedly flagged on Reddit as a deal-breaker for long-term-update buyers.
No wireless charging — competitors like Motorola's Moto G Power and Moto G Stylus 2025 offer it at the same or lower price.
The rear cameras are the exact same hardware as the A35 (50MP main, 8MP ultrawide, 5MP macro) with only a new ISP and Awesome Intelligence software changes; ultrawide and low-light output remain noisy.
USB 2.0 only and Wi-Fi 6 only (no 6 GHz / Wi-Fi 6E) — connectivity is dated for a 2025 phone you're meant to keep for six years.
Glance at the Pixel 10a and you'd really struggle to tell the difference from last year's Pixel 9a — the design is near-identical apart from a sliver of extra thickness at 9mm.
On the outside, you literally cannot tell the difference versus last year's Pixel 9a — same dimensions, same shape, super safe, super generic, super flat.
The fully flush camera module is reminiscent of smartphones from over a decade ago, and in a stagnant market this kind of nostalgia play goes a long way toward feeling refreshing.
After dropping the previous one, the Pixel 10a's more rounded corners feel significantly better against the palm than the older 7a — a welcome ergonomic change.
If you have the 9a, you really don't need the 10a — the camera module being flat is essentially the only meaningful visual change.
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
Samsung gave the A36 a real glow-up in materials this generation: Gorilla Glass Victus+ on both the front and back, a thinner and lighter chassis than the A35, and IP67 dust/water resistance. The frame is still plastic, which keeps the A36 a step below the A56's aluminium-and-glass build, but reviewers consistently say it doesn't feel cheap. The unified camera island replaces the separate-lens look of the A35 and is divisive — some say it looks dated, others find it sleek and more S-series-like.
Build is dual Gorilla Glass Victus+ front and back with IP67 dust/water resistance, and the phone is now 14 grams lighter at 195g compared to the 209g A35.
The piano-black colorway attracts smudges and dust easily, and next to the Moto G Stylus or Nothing Phone (3a) under $400 the design feels generic and devoid of personality.
The A36's plastic frame and plastic camera surround feel a clear step below the A56's aluminium frame and flat metal camera surround, and the extra $100 for the A56 buys a noticeably more premium feel in hand.
Despite the plastic frame and plastic rear, the A36's build quality is exemplary, gaps are even, and it does not feel cheap.
The three rear lenses have been unified into a single oblong camera island, and the A-series no longer looks like an S-series phone — a draw for some, a downgrade for others.
The Awesome Lavender colorway has a holographic rainbow finish that shifts color depending on the angle and adds genuine character to an otherwise utilitarian design.
Reddit's r/Android sums up the build verdict as 'Superb build, dual Gorilla Glass, IP67' — a rare community pro for a budget Galaxy.
Display
Google Pixel 10a
The 6.3-inch 1080×2424 pOLED with 120Hz refresh is identical in resolution and panel tech to the 9a, but Google bumped peak brightness 11% to 3,000 nits and finally replaced the ancient Gorilla Glass 3 with Gorilla Glass 7i. Reviewers agree it is good rather than great — bright enough for outdoor use, sharp, fast — but the bezels remain noticeably thick by 2026 mid-range standards, and the panel still ships with 120Hz off by default.
The Gorilla Glass 7i upgrade from the ancient Gorilla Glass 3 might secretly be the best improvement here, bringing the screen's protection and feel closer to the base Pixel 10.
After two weeks of use I can't see a single scratch on the Pixel 10a's screen — the Gorilla Glass 7i upgrade noticeably improves on the older Gorilla Glass 3.
The display is fast, responsive, vibrant, and the on-screen fingerprint sensor is in an easy-to-reach spot toward the middle of the phone.
Display brightness climbs to 3,000 nits at peak, matching the iPhone 17 Pro — readability is excellent even on sunny days outdoors.
Slimmer bezels than the 9a, but still pretty thick — only a 0.8% increase in screen-to-body ratio, and noticeably thicker than the OnePlus Nord 5 or Honor 400.
The 11 percent boost to 3,000 nits matches the Pixel 10, but the difference won't be obvious unless you put a 9a and 10a side by side in strong sunlight.
The display ships with refresh rate set to 60Hz out of the box — you have to manually flip it to 120Hz in settings, which most casual buyers never will.
Coming from a 7a's 90Hz panel, the 10a's 120Hz feels noticeably smoother — and the measured peak brightness over 4,000 nits SDR is brighter than most content you'll ever watch.
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
The 6.7-inch FHD+ Super AMOLED at 120Hz is the standout reason to buy this phone for the money. Notebookcheck measured peak HDR brightness above 2,000 cd/m² and GSMArena clocked 1,230 nits in auto mode — better than most rivals in this bracket. The catch is a 120Hz/240Hz low-frequency PWM dimming pattern that can bother PWM-sensitive eyes, and the bezels are still wider than the cheapest competition.
Peak HDR brightness measured over 2,000 cd/m² in lab testing — exceptional for a sub-$400 phone and even brighter than Samsung's claimed 1,900-nit spec.
The display gets nice and bright for sunny-day use, though colors can look slightly washed out at peak auto brightness.
GSMArena measured the panel at 430 nits manual and 1,230 nits auto, up from the A35's roughly 1,000 nits, and the adaptive 120Hz dynamically drops to 60Hz to save battery.
In HDR, Short Circuit's lab not only met Samsung's 1,900-nit claim but exceeded it, making for an excellent HDR viewing experience on an OLED panel.
Performance
Google Pixel 10a
Google broke A-series tradition by reusing the Tensor G4 from 2024 instead of pairing the 10a with the current flagship Tensor G5. Real-world performance is fine — Pixel UI is fluid, animations are smooth, light gaming works — but benchmarks confirm what reviewers expected: the 10a is closer to a mid-range chip than a flagship. The 8GB of RAM cap is the bigger long-term concern for a phone that will get updates through 2033.
Same Tensor G4 chipset as the Pixel 9a, same 8GB of RAM — there are essentially no performance gains this year, which you might notice when switching between many apps.
The Tensor G4 isn't bad at all for a $500 phone — Pixel animations are smooth, apps open quickly, and the move to an Exynos 5400 modem brings Satellite SOS plus better thermal behavior.
Even with average gaming sessions like Diablo Immortal at high settings and 60fps, the phone stayed cool to the touch for an hour straight — thermal management is solid.
Trusted Reviews measured 4,551 Geekbench 6 multi-core, 1,753 single-core, and 2,608 in 3DMark Wild Life with a 91% stress-test stability — solid mid-range numbers for a flagship-tier chipset from a year ago.
The 10a's 1700–1750 single-core Geekbench score lags the Pixel 10's 2,300+ by a meaningful margin, and multi-core drops to ~4,500 vs ~6,000 — measurable, but rarely felt during everyday browsing.
It's just the chip. Like Tensor G5 is Google's latest, and the A-series traditionally got the flagship chip — this year they're not even doing that, so the 10a feels like a software-defined product more than ever.
The Tensor G4 paired with 8GB of RAM means the 10a can't run the updated Gemini Nano model — missing on-device AI features include Magic Cue, Pixel Screenshots, call notes, notification summaries, and on-device call translation.
8GB of RAM might be skimpy seven years from now, but right now Pixel keeps apps in memory well enough — and the 10a runs fewer AI models in the background than the flagship Pixels.
Genshin Impact at 60fps fell to 24–30 fps with quick heat buildup — the 10a isn't aimed at gamers, but for casual or battle-royale sessions at moderate settings it holds its own.
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
The A36's Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 is the phone's most consistent weak point. Notebookcheck found it benchmarks roughly the same as the Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 from 2022, and in many tests the older Exynos 1380 in last year's A35 was actually faster. Wired's review went further: the carrier-locked A36 actually felt slower in daily use than the $100-cheaper Galaxy A26 sitting next to it. Reviewers agree it's still fast enough for everyday browsing, social, and light gaming, but anyone who games heavily should look elsewhere.
The carrier-locked AT&T A36 produced visible stutters and felt sluggish out of the box, with the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 actually scoring lower in benchmarks than the Exynos 1380 in the $100-cheaper A26.
Aside from slightly higher clock rates, the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 is functionally the same chipset as 2022's Snapdragon 6 Gen 1, and the Nothing Phone (3a)'s Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 is roughly 10-15% ahead in Geekbench.
Benchmarks on the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 are roughly the same as last year's A35, with only a minor boost in raw graphics — overall performance is adequate for daily tasks and light gaming.
Geekbench 6 results land at roughly 1,019 single-core and 2,947 multi-core after a year of updates — clearly on the lower end of the $400 bracket compared to phones like the Galaxy S25 FE.
Camera
Google Pixel 10a
The 48MP f/1.7 main with OIS, 13MP f/2.2 ultrawide and 13MP selfie carry over byte-for-byte from the Pixel 9a — no new hardware. What is new is Camera Coach and Auto Best Take, both pulled from the Pixel 10 series, and the absence of a telephoto lens that the Galaxy S25 FE and Nothing 4a Pro both ship at this price. Critics agree this is still the best $500 camera experience on Android thanks to Google's image processing, though shooting beyond 2x or in low light reveals the small sensor's limits.
Photos are pleasingly exposed with sharp details and natural colors — overall it's a very respectable system for the money, even if a 2x or 3x optical zoom lens would be welcome on a future A-series.
No other $500 phone offers a comparable camera experience — Google's image processing brings out detail in bright and dim areas, and Night Sight is great for situations where rivals fall apart.
Camera Coach is too slow because it relies on a cloud model — by the time the AI responds, the cat has walked away, so its utility is limited to static scenes.
Auto Best Take works as advertised — Google merges multiple group photos so everyone looks their best, finally solving the problem of no single frame having everyone smiling.
The main 48MP impresses despite the small 1/2.0-inch sensor — sharp focus, natural colors, and some of the best skin tones of any phone on the market.
Camera Coach impedes the flow of taking a photo — I have little reason to use it, but Google's conversational photo editor in Photos is genuinely useful.
Without a telephoto lens you're limited to 8x super-res zoom, and things get blurry beyond 3–4x — Google's processing cleans up a 2x crop well enough but starts to look artificial.
The 10a continues Pixel's longstanding fear of saturated colors and deep shadows — the camera feels stuck where it was in 2021 or 2022, and I miss the bigger generational leaps from earlier Pixels.
The 13MP ultrawide sensor is smaller and tends to lose details, and it lacks autofocus — fine for casual use but a step behind the main camera in low light.
Side-by-side, the Pixel 10a's photos look slightly crisper and more vibrant than older Pixels — clearly an improvement, even if it's mostly the same hardware on paper.
The cameras are identical to the Pixel 10 except for the missing 5x telephoto — same main, same ultrawide, same processing, same Camera Coach. The only real ceiling is zoom flexibility.
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
The camera hardware is essentially unchanged from the A35 — 50MP main with OIS, 8MP ultrawide and 5MP macro on the back, with a new 12MP selfie (down from 13MP but with larger pixels). Reviewers agree the new selfie is a genuine improvement; everything else lives or dies by Samsung's image processing and Awesome Intelligence software. Main-camera daylight shots are punchy but sometimes oversaturated, the ultrawide is best avoided in low light, and there's no telephoto — just digital zoom up to 10x.
Main-camera daylight shots have plenty of detail and a nicely wide dynamic range, but exposure and color rendition can be inconsistent and Samsung's processing brightens shadows too much.
Colors can be a little off and you need to stay very still in low light to avoid a blurry image — the usual faults of camera phones in this price bracket.
The new 12MP front camera is a real upgrade over the A35's 13MP unit — selfie image quality has excellent detail and natural skin tones.
Selfie camera looks great with super-natural skin tones — Short Circuit found the front camera the strongest shooter on the phone.
Battery & Charging
Google Pixel 10a
The 5,100 mAh cell is identical to the 9a's — Engadget measured 28 hours in their video rundown (matching last year), and most reviewers report comfortable all-day life with two-day endurance on lighter use. Charging is the bigger story: wired jumps from 23W to 30W (~50% in 30 minutes, full in ~98 minutes), and wireless from 7.5W to 10W. The non-negotiable disappointment is the lack of Pixelsnap magnets — every single reviewer flags it.
The 10a ran 28 hours in Engadget's video rundown test — exactly where the Pixel 9a landed last year, putting it middle of the pack for 2026 flagships.
After a heavy workday — off charger at 8am, messaging, snaps, scrolling, evening event — the 10a still had 26% left by midnight. Two-day life is achievable on lighter use.
Battery life has been OK — the 10a lasts a full day with average use but still requires daily charging, and heavier travel use pushes me to top up in the afternoon.
The 10a actually outperformed my personal Pixel 10 on raw battery life — and on lighter days I squeezed two full days of use out of a single charge.
Wired charging hits 30W and delivers ~50% in 30 minutes as advertised, with a full charge in about 98 minutes — serviceable but not class-leading.
No Pixelsnap magnets is the biggest letdown — Google should have brought Qi2 wireless charging to the A-series the way Apple brought MagSafe to the iPhone 17e.
The lack of Pixelsnap is the biggest let down here by far — Google should have found a way to get it on the 10a, and a third-party magnetic case ruins one of the best aspects of this phone's design.
There are no Pixelsnap magnets inside the 10a, which feels arbitrary — almost as if Google is gating the feature to make the $800 Pixel 10 look like a better upgrade.
Adding Pixelsnap magnets across the entire Pixel 10 lineup would have been a clean win and a great moment for Google — instead the A-series gets left out yet again.
Wireless charging up to 10W from 7.5W is a real bump — but without Pixelsnap, I can't imagine throwing this thing on a wireless charger very often.
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
The 5,000 mAh battery is unchanged from the A35 but the bigger story is charging: 45W wired charging (up from 25W) now hits 60-66% in 30 minutes and full in around 68 minutes — faster than the Galaxy S25 itself. Real-world battery life lands around a full day with 20-40% to spare. The catch: no wireless charging, no charger in the box, and you'll need a separate 45W brick with a 5A-rated cable to hit the advertised speeds.
The 5,000 mAh battery comfortably lasts a day, with Wired regularly ending with 30-40% remaining and occasional heavy-use days dropping to 20% by 11pm.
Samsung's quoted charging math — 30 minutes to 65% and full in 68 minutes — matches what reviewers measured in practice and is faster than the Galaxy S25 itself.
Active-use battery score of 11 hours 38 minutes in GSMArena's standardised test is decent for the class, but actually a touch below last year's A35.
There's no charger in the box, and you'll need a Samsung 45W brick (or compatible USB-PD adapter) with a 5A-rated cable — the 3A cable Samsung ships won't unlock full 45W speed.
Software & AI
Google Pixel 10a
Android 16 with Google's clean Pixel UI, Material 3 Expressive, and seven years of OS and security updates through 2033 — this is the section where every reviewer agrees the 10a still earns its $500. Gemini is a long-press of the power button away, Hold for Me / Now Playing / Call Screen remain genuinely useful, and Quick Share now works natively with Apple's AirDrop. The catch: because of the Tensor G4 and 8GB RAM, the 10a is missing the higher-end on-device AI features (Magic Cue, Pixel Screenshots) that require the larger Gemini Nano model.
Seven years of OS upgrades and security updates through 2033 — the 10a will eventually ship Android 23, matching Samsung's industry-leading support window.
Google's stock approach to Android 16 remains one of the more attractive options — refined, controlled, and stripped of the flashy niche features competitors add.
Google's Hold for Me, AI transcription in Recorder, Now Playing, and contextual Gemini queries are features I've come to rely on — the software is the real reason to buy.
Quick Share to AirDrop is one of the killer features — Pixel owners can transfer files directly to iPhones now, eliminating a long-running cross-platform friction point.
Magic Cue, Pixel Screenshots, Pixel Studio, weather summaries, and call notes are gated to the Pixel 10 — if you're not keen on Google AI overload, this may actually be a selling point.
Pixel Weather's AI summaries generate more slowly than the time it takes me to read the actual weather data — Google Discover pushing AI-summarized stories is similarly tedious.
Software experience is excellent — Google's signature Pixel features reach practically every area of the phone, and the AI tools that actually ship feel genuinely useful day-to-day.
The 10a packs a robust set of theft protection features, device safety tools, and Safety Check perks alongside Gemini AI-driven experiences like on-device translation, call scam protection, audio Magic Eraser, and conversational photo editing.
Software is the star — Pixel UI is best-in-class with seven years of support, and a chunk of users will explicitly prefer this AI-lite build to the flagship's heavier feature load.
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
This is the A36's headline strength. Samsung promises six major OS updates and six years of security patches — the longest commitment in the budget Android segment, beating Pixel, iPhone and effectively everything else in this price bracket. The phone ships with Android 15 and One UI 7 (now upgraded to One UI 8 a year in). 'Awesome Intelligence' brings a thoughtful subset of Galaxy AI — Circle to Search, AI Select, Object Eraser, Edit Suggestions, custom filters — without the heavier AI bloat seen on the S25.
Six major Android upgrades and six years of security patches — effectively undercutting Pixel, iPhone and every rival in this price bracket on long-term software support.
Awesome Intelligence is a scaled-down version of Galaxy AI — you get Circle to Search, AI Select, Object Eraser and Edit Suggestions, but not Now Brief or the full S25 suite.
After a year of use the A36 has already been upgraded to One UI 8, confirming Samsung is staying on top of its update promise rather than letting the A-series fall behind.
The A36 has 'almost none of the AI bloat that has honestly just been more annoying than anything else on the Pixel 9a lately' — basic Circle-to-Search and Object Eraser without the heavier S25 features.
Value vs Competition
Google Pixel 10a
Holding the price at $499 in a year of RAM shortages and broad consumer-electronics inflation is itself a small win — Samsung's Galaxy S26 line all saw price increases this cycle. But the elephant in every review is the Pixel 9a still on Google's store at the same price, and on retailer sale for ~$100 less. The iPhone 17e's MagSafe + A19 upgrade, plus the Nothing Phone 4a Pro's telephoto + 50W charging at the same $499, give the 10a real same-price competition for the first time. Reviewers split: about half explicitly recommend the cheaper 9a; the other half argue the flush camera, Gorilla Glass 7i and Satellite SOS justify the new model for first-time A-series buyers.
It's probably still the best $500 you can spend on an Android phone — but if you can pick up a Pixel 9a for even a few bucks cheaper, you should do that instead.
The Nothing Phone 4a Pro at the same $499 poses tough competition with a bigger and brighter screen, a Qualcomm processor, a dedicated telephoto lens, and 50W charging — making the Pixel 10a a tougher sell.
The Pixel 10a is still $500, the same price as the Pixel 7a from three years ago — against the backdrop of RAM-shortage inflation, flat pricing is more remarkable than it sounds.
Apple's iPhone 17e is the same price as the iPhone 16e but adds MagSafe and a class-leading A19 chip while doubling base storage — making Google look lazy by comparison.
For $499, the 10a is one of the best-balanced Android phones you can buy — Editors' Choice winner for the midrange category despite the unchanged processor.
The Pixel 9a is still on sale for £100 less and has the same chip, specifications, camera, software, and practically the same design — making it a far better buy.
I give the Pixel 10a a 9 out of 10 — still the best phone you can buy new for $500 and the one I'll continue to recommend to casual users or anyone switching to Android.
TechRadar concludes the 10a delivers where it matters most — a comfortable design, strong battery life, a bright display and a dependable camera — and remains one of the best $499 Android options in its class.
If you already have last year's Pixel 9a there is no reason to change — and the Nothing Phone 4a Pro at the same price packs better specs.
If you have to get a Pixel, the Pixel 9a is the better buy with its lower price tag — or even the Pixel 9 for its better features. The 10a should have offered just a bit more to justify the launch price.
The 10a is a 9a in 10a clothing — solid mid-range pick that keeps Google in the game for now, but definitely not worth the upgrade for current 9a users.
On r/gadgets the top-voted comment captures user sentiment: 'Why haven't they reduced the price of the pixel 9a? They're both selling for $499 which makes no sense.'
r/Android's top comment crystallizes the cynicism: 'After Apple announced 17e, 10a seems even more like an insult to the customers in hindsight. That phone improves so much from 16e.'
Samsung Galaxy A36 5G
At $399 the A36 sits in an awkward spot — pricier than its $300 sibling the Galaxy A26 (which Wired argues is the better buy thanks to a more responsive Exynos 1380), $100 cheaper than the much more polished Galaxy A56, and shoulder-to-shoulder with the Nothing Phone (3a), Motorola Moto G Stylus 2025 and Xiaomi Poco X7 Pro — all of which offer something the A36 doesn't (better chip, wireless charging, microSD, more interesting design). The reason to choose the A36 is the six-year update window plus carrier promotions, not the spec sheet.
Most people will not pay full $399 — Samsung and carriers run aggressive launch promos, trade-in offers up to $150 off, and bundle deals on Buds FE and Watch FE.
Wired's verdict: 'I would buy a Moto G Stylus 2025 or Nothing Phone (3a) before the Galaxy A26 or Galaxy A36' — Samsung is coasting on brand and carrier reach rather than spec leadership.
If you can stretch $100 more, the Galaxy A56 brings aluminium+glass build, a larger 1/1.56" main sensor, 12MP ultrawide, Exynos 1580 chip and Best Face mode — and Trusted Reviews calls the upgrade meaningful.
Notebookcheck names the Nothing Phone (3a) and Xiaomi Poco X7 Pro as the alternatives to consider if you don't want to lock yourself to the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 — both offer better performance per dollar.
The optical under-display fingerprint sensor is slow and inconsistent compared to the A26's side-mounted capacitive sensor, requiring multiple taps to unlock.
The optical under-display fingerprint sensor is slow and inconsistent compared to the A26's side-mounted capacitive sensor, requiring multiple taps to unlock.
OLED PWM dimming runs at only 120Hz with a 240Hz secondary frequency — too low for PWM-sensitive users who may experience eye strain or headaches.
The screen looks crisp and large for the money, but there is still no official HDR video support flagged by reviewers as a budget compromise.
After a year of use, the 6.7-inch 120Hz Super AMOLED still feels like a full-flagship display in everyday use — bright, smooth, and great for video.
Notebookcheck and Tech Daily both flag that the bezels — particularly along the lower edge — are still wider than what you get on similarly priced Xiaomi or Nothing phones.
Genshin Impact ran at an average 43fps on lowest graphics in lab testing, but only 24fps at high settings — playable but not what gamers should buy this phone for.
The Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 has about half to a third of the gaming performance of a couple-generations-old flagship — daily browsing and social are fine, but heavy 3D games will struggle.
Despite the modest chipset the A36 doesn't get hot under sustained load and survived the prolonged 3DMark Wild Life stress test without significant throttling.
Long-time A-series user on r/Android reports the A36 'is just as stuttery as the A35 and A54' — small generational chip refreshes don't seem to be moving the needle.
All three rear lenses (50MP main, 8MP ultrawide, 5MP macro) carry over from the A35 — only the ISP and Awesome Intelligence software are new, so don't expect a hardware leap.
The 8MP ultrawide is mostly only useful in broad daylight, and the low-megapixel macro lens isn't worth the bezel space at this point — Nothing managed to fit a 2x telephoto into the Phone (3a) Pro at a similar price.
Compared to the A56, the A36's 1/1.96" main sensor is smaller than the A56's 1/1.56" sensor and pairs with an 8MP ultrawide vs the A56's 12MP — the A56 is the clear pick if camera matters.
Zoom tops out at 10x digital — there's no telephoto lens, so anything beyond 2x relies on crop-from-50MP processing.
Both rear and front cameras can record 4K at 30fps with 10-bit HDR on the selfie cam — solid video specs for the price.
No wireless charging at all — Motorola's $300 Moto G Power and $400 Moto G Stylus 2025 both offer it at this price.
After a year of use Dave2D's retrospective measured the A36 charging from 0 to 66% in 30 minutes with no degradation in real-world battery longevity.
The charge bump from 25W to 45W is more about wall-clock time than the spec itself — a full charge is only about 12 minutes faster than the A35 in head-to-head testing.
Samsung's Knox Vault hardware-secured passcode storage and quarterly security patch supply put the A36 on a security footing few sub-$400 phones can match.
Object Eraser in the native gallery works on this phone but not quite as well as on the flagships — a reasonable compromise for the price.
r/Android calls out 'Android 15 with plenty of AI, 6 major updates incoming' as a top pro alongside build and screen, validating the software pitch from the user side.
The A36 cracked Counterpoint Research's global top 10 best-selling smartphones in Q1 2026 — the budget Galaxy thesis is working on a global scale even if Western reviewers are lukewarm.
r/Android's top community reply is blunt: '€380 is €100 too much. You can find Edge 50 Neo under €300 and various other better options.' — sentiment cooler than the spec sheet would suggest.
One year in, even Dave2D's retrospective calls the $399 MSRP 'a little bit on the expensive side' and recommends scoring a deal on the Galaxy S25 FE or stepping down to the cheaper A17 5G instead.
For the buyer who actually values the six-year update window over chip performance, the A36 is the only budget Galaxy with this support length — and that alone is the case for the price.