Nothing Phone (4a) Pro vs Samsung Galaxy S25+ | TechTalkTown
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro vs Samsung Galaxy S25+
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
Nothing
8.5
The $499 phone to beat
Samsung Galaxy S25+
Samsung
8
The unflashy choice that's right for most
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
What Reviewers Agree On
The new metal unibody makes the 4a Pro look and feel more premium than Nothing's own £799 Phone 3 — the slimmest, most 'pro'-feeling Nothing yet.
The 6.83-inch 1.5K 144Hz AMOLED is the best display Nothing has ever shipped, with strong real-world outdoor visibility around its realistic 1,600-nit figure.
The dual 50MP main plus 50MP 3.5x periscope-telephoto system is rare flagship-tier camera hardware at $499 and the single biggest reason to buy.
Nothing OS 4.1 on Android 16 is clean, bloat-free and has some of the best design consistency of any Android UI, Google included.
At $499 — the exact price of a Pixel 10a — it's outstanding value, with several reviewers preferring it outright to the 10a.
Pros & Cons
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
Pros
The new metal unibody makes the 4a Pro look and feel more premium than Nothing's own £799 Phone 3 — the slimmest, most 'pro'-feeling Nothing yet.
The 6.83-inch 1.5K 144Hz AMOLED is the best display Nothing has ever shipped, with strong real-world outdoor visibility around its realistic 1,600-nit figure.
The dual 50MP main plus 50MP 3.5x periscope-telephoto system is rare flagship-tier camera hardware at $499 and the single biggest reason to buy.
Nothing OS 4.1 on Android 16 is clean, bloat-free and has some of the best design consistency of any Android UI, Google included.
Detailed Comparison
Design & Build
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
The defining change this generation: a metal unibody that ditches the transparent back for a minimal lower half and a distinctive rectangular camera island, topped by a slimmed-down Glyph Matrix. Reviewers overwhelmingly call it the slimmest, most premium Nothing ever — but the redesign is genuinely polarising, and the IP65 rating is one notch below the flagship norm.
A $499 phone that looks and feels higher-end than last year's flagship Phone 3, helped in large part by the new metal design.
An upgraded metal unibody ditches the iconic transparent back for a more minimal look in the bottom half, while a new rectangular camera island in Nothing's distinctive style helps it stand out.
It's the slimmest Nothing phone ever and just feels more pro and more premium in the hand.
The Glyph Matrix uses 137 mini-LEDs that are 57% larger and twice as bright as the Phone 3's interface — and the silver version is the best-looking, while the black metal can look almost plasti-dipped.
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50W wired charging beats anything Google, Apple or Samsung offer below £500.
Deal Breakers
Only 3 years of OS updates (6 years of security patches) — well behind the 7 years Google and Samsung give at this price.
No wireless charging at all — sacrificed for the metal back.
The battery is only an 80mAh increase over last year and runs marginal next to 6,000–7,000mAh budget rivals.
Measured brightness (~700 nits SDR, ~1,550 HDR) is nowhere near the 5,000-nit headline.
The camera is inconsistent — low-light and deep zoom are merely average rather than class-leading.
Samsung Galaxy S25+
What Reviewers Agree On
The Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy delivers fast, fluid performance with noticeably better thermals than the S24+ — gaming sessions don't stutter and the phone stays cooler under load.
The 6.7-inch QHD+ Dynamic AMOLED 2X with 120Hz and 2,600-nit peak brightness is one of the best displays on any smartphone, full stop.
Battery life on the unchanged 4,900 mAh cell easily lasts a full day, with most reviewers ending around 25-40% remaining.
Samsung's seven years of OS upgrades and security patches is a best-in-industry commitment that justifies the long-term investment.
One UI 7 is Samsung's most polished software ever — the split Quick Settings/notifications shade, snappy animations and Circle to Search are genuine improvements.
Build quality is excellent and the body is meaningfully slimmer (7.3mm) and lighter (190g) than the S24+ despite identical screen size.
At $999 it's $300 cheaper than the S25 Ultra while sharing the chip, RAM, display tech, AI features and update window — it's the value pick of the S25 lineup if you want a big phone.
Deal Breakers
The camera hardware is entirely carried over from the S24+ (and S23+) — same 50MP main, 12MP ultrawide, 10MP 3x telephoto — and now lags rivals like the OnePlus 13 and Pixel 9 Pro that ship 50MP ultrawides and 5x periscope tele lenses at the same price.
Qi2 wireless charging is 'Qi2 Ready' only — the phone has no built-in magnets, so MagSafe-style accessories require buying a separate magnetic case, and third-party cases are hit-or-miss.
Galaxy AI features are guaranteed free only through the end of 2025, with Samsung hinting at a future paid tier and refusing to commit to pricing.
Virtually nothing has changed externally from the S24+ — same shape, same camera island layout, even the same colors-of-the-year feel. Reviewers from The Verge, Wired, Trusted Reviews and 9to5Google all note this directly.
The 3x optical telephoto is a clear weak spot at $1,000 — rivals at the same price now offer 5x periscope cameras that capture noticeably more detail at longer zoom ranges.
At $499 — the exact price of a Pixel 10a — it's outstanding value, with several reviewers preferring it outright to the 10a.
50W wired charging beats anything Google, Apple or Samsung offer below £500.
Cons
Only 3 years of OS updates (6 years of security patches) — well behind the 7 years Google and Samsung give at this price.
No wireless charging at all — sacrificed for the metal back.
The battery is only an 80mAh increase over last year and runs marginal next to 6,000–7,000mAh budget rivals.
Measured brightness (~700 nits SDR, ~1,550 HDR) is nowhere near the 5,000-nit headline.
The camera is inconsistent — low-light and deep zoom are merely average rather than class-leading.
Samsung Galaxy S25+
Pros
The Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy delivers fast, fluid performance with noticeably better thermals than the S24+ — gaming sessions don't stutter and the phone stays cooler under load.
The 6.7-inch QHD+ Dynamic AMOLED 2X with 120Hz and 2,600-nit peak brightness is one of the best displays on any smartphone, full stop.
Battery life on the unchanged 4,900 mAh cell easily lasts a full day, with most reviewers ending around 25-40% remaining.
Samsung's seven years of OS upgrades and security patches is a best-in-industry commitment that justifies the long-term investment.
One UI 7 is Samsung's most polished software ever — the split Quick Settings/notifications shade, snappy animations and Circle to Search are genuine improvements.
Build quality is excellent and the body is meaningfully slimmer (7.3mm) and lighter (190g) than the S24+ despite identical screen size.
At $999 it's $300 cheaper than the S25 Ultra while sharing the chip, RAM, display tech, AI features and update window — it's the value pick of the S25 lineup if you want a big phone.
Cons
The camera hardware is entirely carried over from the S24+ (and S23+) — same 50MP main, 12MP ultrawide, 10MP 3x telephoto — and now lags rivals like the OnePlus 13 and Pixel 9 Pro that ship 50MP ultrawides and 5x periscope tele lenses at the same price.
Qi2 wireless charging is 'Qi2 Ready' only — the phone has no built-in magnets, so MagSafe-style accessories require buying a separate magnetic case, and third-party cases are hit-or-miss.
Galaxy AI features are guaranteed free only through the end of 2025, with Samsung hinting at a future paid tier and refusing to commit to pricing.
Virtually nothing has changed externally from the S24+ — same shape, same camera island layout, even the same colors-of-the-year feel. Reviewers from The Verge, Wired, Trusted Reviews and 9to5Google all note this directly.
The 3x optical telephoto is a clear weak spot at $1,000 — rivals at the same price now offer 5x periscope cameras that capture noticeably more detail at longer zoom ranges.
It's IP65 dust- and splash-resistant — one step below the IP64-rated regular Phone (4a) only on splash, and below the IP68 some early articles wrongly listed; the Glyph is massively slimmed from the Phone 3's 489 lights down to 137.
The 4a's design is gorgeous, but the Pro 'looks like an AI-generated design' — Nothing's look is now seen by some as a parody of its original transparent, Teenage Engineering-like identity.
Even people who don't always love Nothing's designs appreciate that the brand is trying to make a phone more unique than a 'plain black glass slab'.
Samsung Galaxy S25+
Samsung slimmed the S25+ to 7.3mm and dropped 6-7g in weight versus the S24+, but otherwise the design is unchanged — same flat aluminum frame, same Gorilla Glass Victus 2 front and back, same IP68 rating, same camera island. Reviewers split between 'this is fine, the design didn't need fixing' and 'this is the S24s.' Notably, the S25+ does not get the Ultra's titanium frame or Gorilla Armor 2 anti-reflective glass.
The design is basically the same as last go-around — flat edges, curved corners and Samsung's signature stoplight rear camera arrangement, with the flat edges making the phone feel more secure in hand.
Both S25 and S25+ are 0.4mm thinner than their predecessors — the slimmest Galaxy phones in nearly a decade barring foldables.
Comparing to the OnePlus 13 and Pixel 9 Pro XL, the Galaxy S25 Plus definitely feels like the slimmest device — slim 7.3mm chassis with weight dropping to 190g.
The Galaxy S25 Plus looks like the Galaxy S24 Plus and the other Plus phones that came before — Samsung is hoping sleek new colors help it stand out.
Within two days of using the Navy color, the glass back gathered scratches — durability of the glass is questionable.
Samsung has reached the design that's the least offensive to anyone and looks the most modern — the design is sound and looks good even if it isn't exciting.
Build quality is impeccable — the smartphone is nice and light in your hands and has a very high-quality feel to it.
From the outside these phones are almost indistinguishable from the last ones — this is a Galaxy S 24s, a spec bump with the same design.
The S25 Plus doesn't get the Ultra's Gorilla Armor 2 glass — it's not as tough and doesn't have the same anti-reflective properties, but overall still feels premium.
The Coral Red online-exclusive color is the standout this year — back is a bright matte red with darker blood-red edges, a contrast you don't get on the standard colors.
Display
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
A 6.83-inch 1.5K AMOLED at 144Hz with 2,160Hz PWM dimming — reviewers agree it's the best screen Nothing has built, with realistic outdoor brightness around 1,600 nits. The headline 5,000-nit peak, though, only materialises with special HDR test files; everyday brightness is far lower.
Nothing's best-ever display: a 144Hz panel with 1,600 nits of outdoor brightness and a claimed 5,000 nits peak; the main camera is solid too with nice detail and well-reproduced colours.
A claimed 1,600-nit outdoor brightness is realistic — no major visibility issues outdoors even in strong sunshine, putting it among the best affordable phones, and Nothing OS has some of the best design consistency of any Android UI.
The 4,500-nit HDR peak was only validated with specific HDR test files, not actual video playback — real-world output is around 700 nits in SDR and 1,550–1,600 in HDR.
The '5,000-nit peak brightness' spec means nothing in practice — a marketing figure pulled from a single-pixel measurement.
144Hz refresh (vs 120Hz on the regular 4a) and 1,600 nits white brightness / 5,000 nits peak, marketed as 66% brighter than the Phone (3a) series — though there's no extra output on a small 10% window.
High-frequency PWM dimming makes it better suited to users sensitive to screen flicker, although slight flickering is still present.
Samsung Galaxy S25+
Near-universal praise for the 6.7-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X — 1-120Hz LTPO, 1440p resolution, 2,600-nit peak brightness, HDR10+. Two important caveats: this panel does NOT get the Gorilla Armor 2 anti-reflective coating that defines the Ultra's display, and PWM dimming is conservative at 480Hz, which Notebookcheck flags as potentially bothersome to sensitive eyes.
The 6.7-inch panel has a bump up to 1440p resolution from the 1080p on the S25 — the extra resolution is necessary with such a big display.
Samsung's displays are vivid, bright and gorgeous with refresh rates up to 120Hz — the bigger S25+ has a higher-res QHD+ 6.7-inch display.
It's bright, it's vibrant and it makes all your content look great — Samsung's reputation for displays remains intact.
The display lacks the anti-reflective coating from the Galaxy S25 Ultra — it still features the same 120Hz dynamic refresh rate and 1440 x 3120 resolution as last year.
Battery & Charging
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
The ~5,080mAh cell reliably gets through a day and endurance improved across all of GSMArena's tests versus the 3a Pro — but it's only an 80mAh bump over last year and looks small next to 6,000–7,000mAh budget rivals. 50W wired charging is the trade-off win; there is no wireless charging at all.
Endurance has improved across the board in all tests compared to last year's Nothing Phone (3a) Pro; with a 68W USB-PD charger the phone peaked at around 42W.
The review unit gets through a day without problems, but it'll certainly be into the red and close to done after about 15 hours of use; the OnePlus 15R has a much meatier battery to last longer.
It's only an 80mAh increase over last year — small fry next to budget rivals like the Poco M8 Pro, which uses silicon-carbon tech to reach 6,500mAh.
50W wired charging is very respectable at this price — besting anything Google, Apple or Samsung offers below £500.
Because the processor isn't power-hungry and the battery is large for the chip, real-world battery life is excellent.
Roughly 13 hours of continuous playback at maximum brightness in a streaming test — impressive for what Nothing is doing at this price.
Samsung Galaxy S25+
Same 4,900 mAh cell as the S24+, same 45W wired and 15W wireless charging caps. The more efficient Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy pushes real-world endurance comfortably to a full day with 25-40% remaining. Real charge time is ~75 minutes wall-to-100% on a 65W charger. The Qi2 Ready implementation without built-in magnets is the consistent frustration, and reviewers note that OnePlus 13's silicon-carbon battery and ~40-minute full charge time make Samsung look complacent here.
The 4,900mAh battery goes all day even with more pixels to light up — frequently ended a day with around 40 to 30 percent battery left and roughly five to six hours of screen-on time.
On several occasions the S25 Plus lasted over 24 hours on a single charge with at least six hours of screen-on time and 10-20% remaining — battery life can satisfy even demanding users.
A quick ten-minute top-up nets around 25%, 50% in 25 minutes, 75% in 40 minutes, and a full charge averages about 1 hour 10 minutes — fastest test was 64 minutes.
Pales in comparison to rivals like the OnePlus 13 which achieves a full charge in under 40 minutes — OnePlus 13's 50W magnetic charger is effectively faster than the S25 Plus on a 45W charger.
Three buying alternatives at $900-$1,000 — OnePlus 13, Pixel 9 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro — each offer something the S25+ doesn't (silicon-carbon battery, best-in-class camera, ecosystem).
Three buying alternatives at $900-$1,000 — OnePlus 13, Pixel 9 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro — each offer something the S25+ doesn't (silicon-carbon battery, best-in-class camera, ecosystem).
The bright LTPO display is a clear pro, but PWM dimming is only at 480 Hz, which can bother sensitive eyes.
Still incredibly bright at 2,600 nits like the Ultra, still supports HDR10+, and still has the impressive color accuracy Samsung is known for — one of the best displays on a smartphone today.
ProScaler tech upscales lower-quality photo and video content to look better at the panel's highest resolution — but it's hard to see whether anything is going on without an old device side-by-side.
Slimmer bezels with 1440p resolution and a 120Hz adaptive refresh rate — the LTPO AMOLED panel hits 2,600 nits peak.
Qi2 is one of the most exciting features coming to Android in 2025, but the S25 Plus is Qi2 Ready only — no built-in magnets, so you need a separate magnetic case and third-party options are hit-or-miss.
Galaxy S25+ carries slightly better battery life than the S24+ — a full day with around 25% left over by the evening, versus the S24+ ending around 20%.
Connecting to a 65W charger, after 15 minutes nearly 45%, after 30 minutes 72% — Samsung's slower 45W cap is a deliberate trade for long-term battery health.
An r/Android upgrader said it best: 'I just wish it was using the new silicon lithium batteries that OnePlus has' — Samsung's choice to stick with the same 4,900 mAh cell is the most-criticized hardware decision in the lineup.