Google Pixel 9a vs Oppo Find X9 Ultra | TechTalkTown
Google Pixel 9a vs Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Google Pixel 9a
Google
8.6
Best $500 phone you can buy
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Oppo
8.8
The best camera phone of 2026
Google Pixel 9a
What Reviewers Agree On
5,100 mAh battery is the largest in any Pixel ever and delivers 'crazy' battery life — 12h+ in lab tests, comfortable two-day use under light usage, 7-8h screen-on time common in reviews.
$499 retail (often $349-$399 on sale) makes it Wirecutter and Linus Tech Tips' top pick for 'best $500 phone you can buy' — and at $300 sale prices it's an outright steal.
7 years of Android OS and security updates through 2032 — same flagship-tier policy Google gives the Pixel 9 Pro XL on a $500 phone.
Same Tensor G4 chip as the flagship Pixel 9 — runs all Gemini AI features, Magic Editor, Circle to Search, and Pixel-exclusive software with no day-to-day performance gap.
48MP main camera with Pixel image processing punches well above the price tier — daytime photos rival flagship phones and have the 'classic Pixel HDR look.'
Pros & Cons
Google Pixel 9a
Pros
5,100 mAh battery is the largest in any Pixel ever and delivers 'crazy' battery life — 12h+ in lab tests, comfortable two-day use under light usage, 7-8h screen-on time common in reviews.
$499 retail (often $349-$399 on sale) makes it Wirecutter and Linus Tech Tips' top pick for 'best $500 phone you can buy' — and at $300 sale prices it's an outright steal.
7 years of Android OS and security updates through 2032 — same flagship-tier policy Google gives the Pixel 9 Pro XL on a $500 phone.
Same Tensor G4 chip as the flagship Pixel 9 — runs all Gemini AI features, Magic Editor, Circle to Search, and Pixel-exclusive software with no day-to-day performance gap.
Detailed Comparison
Design & Build
Google Pixel 9a
The Pixel 9a's flat-design break from the iconic camera bar polarized reviewers but most warmed up to it — the result is a phone that sits flat on a desk, has the biggest battery space available, and a clean minimalist aesthetic. Plastic back, Gorilla Glass 3 (older spec), and aluminum frame at just 186g make it feel premium for $499 despite the cheaper materials.
Flat design with no camera bump 'reminds me of the Pixel 5 in the best way' — Android Authority reviewer praises the design pivot away from the visor camera bar.
Plastic back, Gorilla Glass 3 display, aluminum frame at just 186g — 'I love the matte finish of the frame, the lightweight feel in the hand' per Linus Tech Tips long-term review.
Missing the iconic camera bar 'does away with perhaps the most unique thing about the Pixel series' — BGR argues the flat design loses Pixel's visual identity.
IP68 dust and water resistance — full ingress protection at this $499 price tier matches the flagship Pixel 9 series.
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Bright 6.3-inch OLED at 2,700 nits peak (100 nits brighter than the Samsung S25 Ultra) with 120Hz adaptive refresh and IP68 dust + water protection.
Deal Breakers
Only 8GB RAM (vs 12GB on Pixel 9, 16GB on Pixel 9 Pro) — Pixel Screenshots app, callotes, and some Gemini Nano features unavailable on the 9a as a result.
23W wired charging is slow — full charge takes ~1h 41m, vs 50W+ on midrange Xiaomi/OnePlus competitors; 7.5W Qi wireless is also slow and non-Qi2.
Plastic back + Gorilla Glass 3 screen — older glass spec, P-OLED display has some 'mura' or grain visibility per SuperSaf, and the back is plastic vs glass on the Pixel 9.
Optical under-display fingerprint sensor is slower and less reliable than ultrasonic — reviewers consistently flag it as the build's weakest UX point.
Android 16 stable update launched with screen-brightness bugs, lock-button lag, and auto-rotate failures — most fixed in subsequent updates but a rough first month.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
What Reviewers Agree On
One of the best — frequently the best — camera phones of 2026, with a uniquely versatile quad Hasselblad system and class-leading 10x optical zoom
Class-leading battery life: a 7,050mAh silicon-carbon cell routinely delivers 8–10+ hours of screen-on time and can stretch to two days
100W SuperVOOC wired and 50W AirVOOC wireless charging — roughly 0–100% in 45–52 minutes
Stunning, distinctive Hasselblad-inspired design widely called one of the best-looking phones of the year
Excellent, very bright display — ~3,600 nits HDR peak and ~1,800 nits full-screen outdoors
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 delivers top-of-chart benchmark performance
Best-in-class video on an Android phone, with strong stabilization and 8K30 / 4K120 Dolby Vision across lenses
Deal Breakers
Heavy and large (≈236–239g, ~9.1mm) with a polarising oversized circular camera island
Expensive (≈€1,699 / ~$1,100+ in China) with limited or no official availability in many markets
ColorOS trails Samsung and Google on AI-feature depth and integration, and feels iOS-derived to some users
Mediocre sustained performance — 3DMark stability around 49% with peak performance dropping within a minute
48MP main camera with Pixel image processing punches well above the price tier — daytime photos rival flagship phones and have the 'classic Pixel HDR look.'
Bright 6.3-inch OLED at 2,700 nits peak (100 nits brighter than the Samsung S25 Ultra) with 120Hz adaptive refresh and IP68 dust + water protection.
Cons
Only 8GB RAM (vs 12GB on Pixel 9, 16GB on Pixel 9 Pro) — Pixel Screenshots app, callotes, and some Gemini Nano features unavailable on the 9a as a result.
23W wired charging is slow — full charge takes ~1h 41m, vs 50W+ on midrange Xiaomi/OnePlus competitors; 7.5W Qi wireless is also slow and non-Qi2.
Plastic back + Gorilla Glass 3 screen — older glass spec, P-OLED display has some 'mura' or grain visibility per SuperSaf, and the back is plastic vs glass on the Pixel 9.
Optical under-display fingerprint sensor is slower and less reliable than ultrasonic — reviewers consistently flag it as the build's weakest UX point.
Android 16 stable update launched with screen-brightness bugs, lock-button lag, and auto-rotate failures — most fixed in subsequent updates but a rough first month.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Pros
One of the best — frequently the best — camera phones of 2026, with a uniquely versatile quad Hasselblad system and class-leading 10x optical zoom
Class-leading battery life: a 7,050mAh silicon-carbon cell routinely delivers 8–10+ hours of screen-on time and can stretch to two days
100W SuperVOOC wired and 50W AirVOOC wireless charging — roughly 0–100% in 45–52 minutes
Stunning, distinctive Hasselblad-inspired design widely called one of the best-looking phones of the year
Excellent, very bright display — ~3,600 nits HDR peak and ~1,800 nits full-screen outdoors
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 delivers top-of-chart benchmark performance
Best-in-class video on an Android phone, with strong stabilization and 8K30 / 4K120 Dolby Vision across lenses
Cons
Heavy and large (≈236–239g, ~9.1mm) with a polarising oversized circular camera island
Expensive (≈€1,699 / ~$1,100+ in China) with limited or no official availability in many markets
ColorOS trails Samsung and Google on AI-feature depth and integration, and feels iOS-derived to some users
Mediocre sustained performance — 3DMark stability around 49% with peak performance dropping within a minute
Bright 'Peony' fuchsia-pink color option 'looks anything but cheap' — Android Authority highlights the color choices as a strength of the otherwise minimalist design.
JerryRigEverything durability test: 'Despite the plastic back, Gorilla Glass 3 display, and simplified design, the Google Pixel 9a performed admirably in JerryRigEverything's brutal durability test.'
Battery repair 'do not buy' warning: 'Unlike many modern phones, Apple iPhones included, the Google Pixel 9a doesn't feature adhesive strips with built-in pull tabs that make the battery easier to remove.'
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
A Hasselblad-camera tribute in phone form — vegan leather, a symmetrical 'master eye' module and a Hexagon-inspired ring. Gorgeous to most, oversized to some, and undeniably heavy.
One of the best-looking phones of the year.
Inspired by the Hasselblad X2D camera — the most beautiful phone of 2026 so far.
The perfectly symmetrical 'master eye' camera module and Hasselblad-style shutter button clearly pay tribute to the brand's classic camera aesthetics.
The hardware is insanely ambitious, but the first thing you notice holding it isn't elegance — it's size and weight.
It weighs about 239g and measures ~9.1mm thick — a genuinely big phone.
Some find the huge circular camera apparatus ugly, when we usually ask for less intrusive camera bumps.
Display
Google Pixel 9a
A 6.3-inch P-OLED with 2,700 nits peak brightness (100 nits brighter than the Samsung S25 Ultra), 120Hz adaptive refresh, 1080p resolution, and Gorilla Glass 3 protection. Reviewers love the brightness in sunlight and the dynamic refresh between 60 and 120 Hz, but some flag a visible 'mura' or grain pattern on the panel and slightly chunky bezels for the price tier.
6.3-inch 1080p P-OLED, 120Hz adaptive (switches between 60 and 120 Hz), 2,700 nits peak brightness with excellent visibility in sunlight per Tech Chap review.
2,700 nits peak is '100 nits brighter than the S26 Ultra, which also costs around $1,000 more' — per Linus Tech Tips, a remarkable spec parity at flagship prices.
P-OLED 'mura' pattern issue: 'once you see the mural or the grains on the display itself, you can't really unsee it' — SuperSaf flags panel uniformity issues.
Off-axis viewing angles significantly improved over the Pixel 8a per Dave2D — addressed a key complaint from the prior generation.
Hole-punch cutout is 'overly large' compared to flagships — Tech Chap notes the punch hole is bigger than Samsung S25's, producing a less clean look.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
A 6.8-inch LTPO OLED with up to 144Hz and very high real-world brightness — among the brightest screens on any phone outdoors.
6.8-inch LTPO OLED panel up to 144Hz, with a maximum brightness around 1,800 nits and dimming as low as 1 nit.
Hits a staggering ~3,600 nits of peak HDR brightness, making it incredibly easy to see and edit shots in direct sunlight.
In manual mode the display peaks at 840 nits, rising to ~1,156 nits in auto on a 75% white patch and up to ~1,932 nits in the native gallery app.
The smoother 144Hz panel and 3,600-nit brightness outperform Samsung's display.
Cameras
Google Pixel 9a
48MP main camera (f/1.7, OIS, smaller sensor than Pixel 9 but bigger than Pixel 8a's 64MP) + 13MP ultrawide. Pixel image processing produces 'classic Pixel HDR look' that reviewers consistently rate the best camera in the under-$500 price bracket. Macro mode, Add Me, Night Sight, and Magic Editor all included; video capped at 4K 60fps rear / 4K 30fps front and ultrawide.
48MP main camera 'is, without a shadow of a doubt, the best camera on a phone in its price category' per The News Minute long-term review.
Main sensor is smaller than Pixel 9 — 'a substantially smaller sensor than the one on the Pixel 9, but this compromise is what has allowed Google to make the camera bump so tiny' per Tech Chap.
Macro mode now built into the main camera as a Pixel 8a upgrade — newly added at the 9a price tier.
Add Me feature included from flagship Pixel 9 — combines two photos into a group shot via AI overlay.
Ultrawide camera is 'pretty weak and something that has been an issue on previous Pixel A cameras' per Dave2D — secondary lens still trails the flagship Pixels.
Video output capped: rear records 4K 30/60fps, front camera limited to 4K 30fps. Ultrawide only does 4K 30fps. iPhone 14 supports 4K 60fps from front and ultrawide at this price tier.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
The reason to buy it. A Hasselblad-tuned quad system with the most versatile zoom on any phone, a true 10x optical periscope and an optional 300mm Hasselblad teleconverter. Near-universally praised, with only minor sharpness and ultrawide caveats.
A 200MP main, 200MP 3x telephoto, 50MP 10x optical telephoto and 50MP ultrawide, all Hasselblad-branded — camera-first overkill in the best way.
Consistently great photos, sharpness and dynamic range with really good color calibration — this phone did basically everything right in the camera department; an incredibly well-rounded smartphone camera.
Is this the best camera phone ever built? — my new favorite camera phone and one of the best Android phones I've ever used.
Even after a direct shootout, still the best camera phone I've ever used.
Detail is very good, but sharpness remains a bit underwhelming on the main camera.
Battery & Charging
Google Pixel 9a
5,100 mAh battery is the largest in any Pixel ever — bigger than the $1,299 Galaxy S25 Ultra's. Tom's Guide measured 13h 8m web surfing on a single charge; reviewers consistently report 7-8 hours of screen-on time and comfortable two-day light usage. Charging is the obvious weak point: 23W wired (full charge in ~1h 41m) and 7.5W Qi wireless are slow vs midrange competitors hitting 50W+.
5,100 mAh battery 'exceeds even that of the premium $1,299 Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra' — per MacRumors, the largest battery ever in a Pixel.
Tom's Guide measured 13h 8m on single charge — 'a significant jump from the Pixel 8a, which topped out at 11 hours and 21 minutes.'
Active use score 12h 30m in lab tests — 'solid active use score' per Tom's Guide review; comfortable two-day life under light use.
Real-world: 'continues to give me between 8 and 10 hours, sometimes a little bit more, of screen-on time' per long-term Linus Tech Tips review.
23W wired charging is slow — 'a full charge took an hour and 41 minutes' per Tom's Guide; way behind midrange OnePlus 100W or Xiaomi 50W charging.
7.5W Qi wireless charging is slow and non-Qi2 — no Pixelsnap, no magnetic accessories; takes 2-3 hours to fully charge wirelessly.
Battery Health Assistant kicks in at 200 charge cycles to gradually reduce max voltage — 'designed to extend battery lifespan' per Google but reviewers report 'slight charging-speed drops' afterward.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
A genuine highlight: a 7,050mAh silicon-carbon cell that posts some of the best endurance numbers of any 2026 flagship, with fast 100W wired and 50W wireless charging.
Draws power from a 7,050mAh battery — a sizeable increase over the previous generation — with 100W SuperVOOC wired and 50W AirVOOC wireless charging.
Earned an active-use battery score of over 20 hours; with the SuperVOOC charger it went 0–75% in 30 minutes and to full in 45 minutes.
After ~10 hours of continuous use starting at 7am it still had 53% battery, regularly getting 8–9 hours of screen-on time and ~40% left after a 13-hour day.
A PCMark synthetic loop returned 15 hours 2 minutes, and 100W SuperVOOC charging took ~49–52 minutes (the charger isn't included).
With moderate usage you can easily expect more than 2 days of battery life — Oppo finally feels like a truly complete product.
Value vs Competition
Google Pixel 9a
At $499 retail (with frequent sale pricing of $349-$399), the Pixel 9a is the consensus best value in the midrange. Reviewers position it favorably against the iPhone 16e ($599), Samsung A56, Nothing Phone 3a Pro, and Xiaomi Poco F7 Pro. The $300 price gap with the flagship Pixel 9 makes the 9a 'almost comical' to choose against, per Trusted Reviews.
Trusted Reviews: 'The Pixel 9a closes the gap between it and the flagship Pixel 9 more than any 'a' series device that came before it, so much so that the £300/$300 price difference between the two seems almost comical.'
Currently selling at all-time low of $399 (128GB) and $349 (sale) per Gizmodo — 'Save over $100 on an unlocked Google Pixel 9a' makes it among the best deals in midrange Android.
vs iPhone 16e ($599): 'Look at any Android smartphone at the same price point and you get a punch hole camera, which gives the display a far slicker and more contemporary look than the iPhone 17e's notch.'
Wired's verdict: 'Google Pixel 9a: Still the Best Smartphone' — full headline endorsement after months of comparison testing.
vs Pixel 10a: '10a now charges faster at 30W versus 23W on the Pixel 9a, and it does have a newer modem' but '9a remains a more financially-reasonable upgrade, unless you can find a deal on the 10a that brings its price down massively.'
Linus Tech Tips final verdict: 'If you want a $300 value beast, absolutely 100% yes' — at sale prices the Pixel 9a is the no-brainer recommendation.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Premium-priced and hard to buy in many markets, but reviewers broadly conclude it out-cameras the S26 Ultra and Pixel and edges the Vivo X300 Ultra on usability.
Its main compromises are the ~€1,699 price, large 236g body, occasional software concerns and limited availability in some markets.
It feels like Oppo wanted to make the camera first and just happened to also create the best Android phone you can get right now — though it won't win every year-end award.
The base Find X9 Ultra starts at 7,499 yuan in China — roughly £814 / ~$1,100 — but the heaviness and visual pressure are the first impression.
The closest rival is the Vivo X300 Ultra, but the X9 Ultra wins by having a more user-friendly OS.
The Hasselblad alliance delivers a phone that genuinely challenges the Galaxy S26 Ultra on cameras.
The ultrawide is probably the weakest part of the setup — with the first three cameras taking so much space, Oppo reused the Samsung GN5 sensor here.
Night-mode processing — color, contrast and exposure handling — is so much better than the Galaxy S26 Ultra's, and the ultrawide is now one of the best for detail preservation.
The optional 300mm Hasselblad teleconverter delivers ~13x (300mm) optical-feel zoom that retains real telephoto sharpness, extending to ~60x (1380mm).
Charges 0–100% in about 52 minutes on the official 80W charger in a head-to-head charge test.