Nothing Phone (4a) Pro vs Xiaomi 15 Ultra | TechTalkTown
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro vs Xiaomi 15 Ultra
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
Nothing
8.5
The $499 phone to beat
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
Xiaomi
8.6
The camera king, software aside
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.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
What Reviewers Agree On
The camera is the best on any phone of its generation — the 1-inch-type Leica main plus 200MP periscope outclass Samsung and Apple for stills.
Photography reviewers repeatedly call it 'the best camera experience bar none' and 'a camera with a phone attached'.
The 6.73-inch 2K display is gorgeous and extremely bright (lab ~3,100–3,200 nits at low APL, 1,920Hz PWM) for excellent flicker handling.
Snapdragon 8 Elite delivers flagship performance that still feels top-tier well over a year later.
The Leica-style titanium-and-glass/eco-leather design is premium and instantly recognizable as a serious camera.
It's significantly cheaper than the Galaxy S25 Ultra and iPhone for comparable or better camera hardware.
Deal Breakers
HyperOS mimics iOS, ships with quirks you must tweak out of the box, and has small persistent bugs and reportedly weak long-term battery health.
The global model's ~5,410mAh battery (vs 6,000mAh in China) often ends the day under 30%, with a notable idle drain.
The huge protruding camera bump blocks many wireless chargers and adds significant thickness/weight.
8K video is over-sharpened and Xiaomi Log is capped at 4K, making the 8K mode largely unusable for serious work.
No official US availability and no US carrier/iMessage-style ecosystem support.
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.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
Pros
The camera is the best on any phone of its generation — the 1-inch-type Leica main plus 200MP periscope outclass Samsung and Apple for stills.
Photography reviewers repeatedly call it 'the best camera experience bar none' and 'a camera with a phone attached'.
The 6.73-inch 2K display is gorgeous and extremely bright (lab ~3,100–3,200 nits at low APL, 1,920Hz PWM) for excellent flicker handling.
Snapdragon 8 Elite delivers flagship performance that still feels top-tier well over a year later.
The Leica-style titanium-and-glass/eco-leather design is premium and instantly recognizable as a serious camera.
It's significantly cheaper than the Galaxy S25 Ultra and iPhone for comparable or better camera hardware.
Cons
HyperOS mimics iOS, ships with quirks you must tweak out of the box, and has small persistent bugs and reportedly weak long-term battery health.
The global model's ~5,410mAh battery (vs 6,000mAh in China) often ends the day under 30%, with a notable idle drain.
The huge protruding camera bump blocks many wireless chargers and adds significant thickness/weight.
8K video is over-sharpened and Xiaomi Log is capped at 4K, making the 8K mode largely unusable for serious work.
No official US availability and no US carrier/iMessage-style ecosystem support.
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'.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
A Leica-inspired two-tone design with a titanium frame and textured-glass or eco-leather back, dominated by a massive circular camera island that 'screams this phone means business'. It's solid, hefty and unmistakably a camera — but the bump is divisive and blocks many wireless chargers.
It's designed to resemble Leica's dedicated camera hardware, right down to the two-tone silver-and-black finish and compact 'Ultra' corner logo.
Metal frame, a textured glass or eco-leather back, and a massive circular camera bump — in the hand it's solid and hefty, no getting around that.
The titanium frame rounds off toward the edges making it comfortable and grippy, though it's more squared-off than the iPhone — comfort goes iPhone 16 Pro Max, then S25 Ultra, then the Xiaomi.
Because of how far the camera unit protrudes, it doesn't charge on a Pixel Stand or many wireless chargers unless you balance the camera bump on the pad.
The colourway and finish make it look like a camera — Leica on the lens, 'Ultra' lighting on the side — Xiaomi is openly selling this as a camera with a phone attached.
Build quality is still very solid 8–10 months in with an IP68 rating, with zero slowdown in general use.
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.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
A 6.73-inch 2K AMOLED with curved edges, 120Hz, a 3,200-nit peak and 1,920Hz PWM dimming. Reviewers call it gorgeous and one of the brightest screens around, with the lone caveat that real-world auto-brightness measured lower than the headline number.
The 6.73-inch display is gorgeous, super sharp and crazy bright — fantastic indoors and out, second only to the Galaxy S25 Ultra in direct sunlight thanks to Samsung's anti-glare tech.
On paper it has the brightest screen at 3,200 nits (vs 2,600 on the Samsung, 2,000 on the iPhone) and supports 1,920Hz PWM dimming so it flickers much less than its rivals.
Lab testing clocked ~3,175 nits at 20% APL — basically stare-at-the-sun-and-still-see-your-screen territory.
The maximum achievable auto-brightness is only around 1,150 nits, which is rather disappointing for this level of phone, though still usable under sunlight.
It has 3,200 nits peak brightness across a 25% area rather than the usual 1% window — a genuinely usable peak.
Cameras
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
The headline value play: a 50MP Sony LYT-710 main with OIS, a true 50MP 3.5x periscope telephoto (80mm) with OIS, and an 8MP ultrawide — flagship-tier hardware Samsung and Apple don't put in phones at this price. Output is characterful and the telephoto is a genuine win, but reviewers consistently flag inconsistency, average low-light and a gimmicky 140x digital zoom.
Triple rear system: 50MP Sony LYT-710 main (f/1.9, OIS), 8MP ultrawide, and a 50MP periscope telephoto with 3.5x optical zoom (80mm, f/2.9, OIS).
Both the main and periscope-zoom cameras are 50MP and deliver strong results for this price range; the zoom in particular stands out from competitors and even allows for extreme digital zoom.
Having a proper dedicated telephoto shooter is a genuine love, although the camera experience itself is a little bit inconsistent at times.
It's not clinically the best camera, but the shots have a bit more soul to them.
Low-light performance isn't the best, and image quality when you zoom right in isn't the best out there — not bad, just not class-leading.
The 140x zoom headline grabs attention, but in use it's more about how far the camera can push digitally than something you'd rely on day-to-day.
Not super impressed by the camera or the giant protruding bumps the lenses sit in.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
The whole point of the phone: a Leica Summicron quad system — a 1-inch-type 50MP main, a 50MP 3x telephoto, a 200MP 4.3x periscope and a 50MP ultrawide. Reviewers overwhelmingly rate it the best phone camera of its generation, with the only soft spots being the ultrawide and a missing variable aperture.
A Leica Summicron system: a 1-inch-type 50MP main (23mm), a 50MP 3x telephoto, a 200MP periscope (4.3x optical, ~100mm) and a 50MP ultrawide — the 1-inch main is an unexpected differentiator no one else uses in a globally available model.
As far as phones personally used, this is the best camera experience bar none — if cameras are your top priority you cannot get better than the 15 Ultra.
Main camera-wise the Xiaomi is the best overall, especially for daytime shots and depth of field; at 3x it captures the most detail and at 5x it has the least noise versus the S25 Ultra and iPhone.
Xiaomi did get the best camera hardware, but the leather-camera look is mostly aesthetic — what makes a real camera good is a far bigger lens, and this is still a small smartphone sensor.
Performance
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
The Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 with UFS 3.1 storage is a clear, tangible step up from the Phone (3a) generation — Nothing claims +27% CPU, +30% GPU and +65% AI. It's a perfectly capable everyday chip that feels noticeably quicker, but it's explicitly not a gaming powerhouse and warms up under sustained heavy load.
Backed by OS optimisations and a custom CPU scheduler, the chipset delivers 27% better CPU, 30% better GPU and 65% better AI performance than the Nothing Phone (3a); storage is 147% faster in reads and 380% faster in writes.
Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 is a perfectly acceptable chip across the board, and the upgrade to UFS 3.1 makes this feel noticeably quicker compared to the Nothing Phone (3a) and prior.
The CPU performance difference between the 4a Pro and the vanilla 4a is not massive, but it is still very much notable.
Available in 8GB+128GB, 8GB+256GB and 12GB+256GB configurations, all running near-stock AOSP-style Nothing OS.
Like most phones in this segment, it shows some basic heat build-up during really extensive tasks like gaming or 4K editing in high-end software, though it stays responsive while gaming.
It's by no means a top-notch gaming phone, although the processor is better than the regular 4a's and squeezes out a bit more performance and FPS.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
Snapdragon 8 Elite with up to 16GB RAM and UFS 4.1 — flagship-grade and still excellent a year on. Real-world gaming holds ~57–60fps with acceptable power draw, though heavy synthetic stress tests show meaningful throttling.
Runs Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Elite with up to 16GB RAM and 1TB UFS 4.1; 10 months on it's still an extremely well-balanced phone that feels like a true flagship.
In ~50 minutes of gaming it held a stable ~57–60fps with 4–8W draw — acceptable for the 8 Elite — where some rivals throttle hard and drop to 30fps after 30 minutes.
After 30 minutes of real gaming with apps closing/reopening the CPU sat around 47°C with no overheating — heat only appears in synthetic 3DMark/throttle benchmarks, not realistic use.
In a 3DMark stability run it scored ~70–76% stability (lowest loop ~4,335–4,542), holding 20–43fps.
Under a punishing 60-minute 100-thread CPU throttle test it dropped roughly 40–50% in sustained performance, recovering only slightly better than the S25 Ultra.
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.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
The global model's ~5,410mAh cell (vs 6,000mAh in China) is the phone's weakest area — many reviewers end the day under 30%, with a notable idle drain — though 90W wired charging fully refills it in roughly an hour and Chinese-variant users report much better longevity.
The global variant has a smaller 5,410mAh cell vs the 6,000mAh China variant, and most days the phone is around or under 30% by the end of the day — it could have done with a bigger battery.
With always-on display, 120Hz and intensive camera use it consistently achieved over 15 hours of usage on a single charge in real-world testing.
On the global/Indian 5,410mAh battery, the in-box 90W charger refills it roughly: 18% in 5 min, 67% in 30 min, 90% in 45 min, and a full charge in about an hour.
On the Chinese 6,000mAh variant with a power-efficient chip, the battery was still at 78% after not charging for three nights.
There's a real idle-drain issue — 20 minutes of light morning use can drop 5–6%, and it persists even with extra-dim settings enabled.
Software & AI
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
Nothing OS 4.1 on Android 16 is the universal favourite: near-stock AOSP functionality with a distinctive monochrome visual identity, almost no bloatware, and AI that's present but not forced. The one hard reservation is update length — only 3 years of OS upgrades against 6 years of security patches.
Nothing OS sticks close to a clean, near-stock Android (AOSP) experience in functionality, but stands out with its distinctive visual identity.
After a week the phone is 'absolutely brilliant'; software is where Nothing phones shine, even if the camera 'window' at the top of the display is basically a pseudo-iPhone look.
Software is where Nothing phones absolutely shine — the clearest reason to pick this over rivals.
There's a smattering of AI here, but it's not shoved down your throat — and the software is basically the same clean setup as the regular Nothing Phone (4a).
Unlike Samsung's Galaxy AI which is in your face from day one, Nothing's AI stays out of the way — an impressive, restrained package overall.
Nothing's take on Android 16 has some of the best design consistency you'll find on any Android UI, Google included.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
HyperOS (now on the Android 16 / HyperOS 3 track) is the phone's most criticized aspect: it heavily mimics iOS, ships with quirks you must tweak, and carries small persistent bugs — though it adds genuinely useful touches like a Super Island and AI features, and Xiaomi has improved it via updates.
Out of the box it gives a really iPhone-like feel and you have to go in and change things before it behaves how you want.
Long-standing requests are still ignored — no combined notification/control center, removed options like front-camera switching while recording video, and the dropped variable aperture.
HyperOS adds a useful Super Island (tap to expand or switch to a floating window) and direct drag-and-drop into chats, with OS 3 refining the control center.
Xiaomi's animations are nearly iOS-level and arguably better than stock Android, but the software is still seen as subpar for the Western market.
Xiaomi now offers a longer software-update commitment (reported up to 6 years) — a meaningful improvement for long-term buyers.
Value vs Competition
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
At $499 it directly undercuts the experience-per-dollar of the same-priced Pixel 10a and iPhone 17e, and several reviewers would take it over the 10a without hesitation. The closest internal threat is its own cheaper sibling, the standard Phone (4a), which shares the same cameras for $150 less.
From the design to the software and cameras, this is a phone that should absolutely not be slept on — at the price of a Pixel 10a, 'I'd take this 10 out of 10 times over a 10a.'
Vibes and great value for under $500 — a balanced all-rounder.
Against its immediate rivals the Pixel 10a and iPhone 17e it looks impressive: a larger, brighter, faster display, more cameras, and Nothing's unique design including the Glyph Matrix.
A premium balanced package with polished software and really good cameras — recommended, even if it's not perfect on the IP rating or front-camera 4K.
The biggest problem for the 4a Pro is its own little brother — the standard 4a costs much less and gets the exact same cameras.
While the (4a)'s design is still the best in the Nothing range, the (4a) Pro is a close second, and its speakers sound better than the standard model's.
Xiaomi 15 Ultra
Roughly $893 in China and ~$1,220+ imported globally, it undercuts the Galaxy S25 Ultra and iPhone while comfortably winning the camera comparison. The catch is it's an import with no official US presence — a phone you 'probably can't buy' but the camera benchmark to beat.
It launched at 6,499 yuan (around $893) in China; Xiaomi's Ultra line has always been more camera-centric than Samsung or Apple's top models.
It combines top-tier hardware, excellent cameras and strong performance at a more competitive price point than its rivals.
The Xiaomi wins the camera part comfortably, but the Galaxy S25 Ultra may be the better all-rounder — a 'maybe' that hangs on whether the S Pen matters to you.
It's 'an excellent phone you probably can't buy' — one of the best devices that simply isn't officially sold in the US.
Watching YouTube, Netflix or gaming, the display still feels flagship-level 10 months in.
The only slightly underwhelming lens is the ultrawide — still better than most competitors, but a noticeable dip versus the other three excellent rear lenses, especially in video.
Long-term, it can still be inconsistent and struggles with skin tones; some shooters miss the Xiaomi 14 Ultra's variable aperture and prefer its colour and mood.
Out of the box it gives a very iPhone-like feel and you have to dig in and change things, but performance itself is amazing alongside the camera, battery and display.
After 6 months of careful charging, battery health held at 97% with 191 cycles — degradation isn't a concern with sensible habits.
HyperOS contained a lot of small bugs and one user's battery health dropped to 70% in two years of light use before they switched to Samsung.
The camera is absolutely phenomenal, but everything else about it sort of falls short for some owners coming from a Pixel.
If you care about US carrier support or ecosystem features like iMessage/FaceTime, or want something lighter and simpler, you may still be happier with an iPhone or Galaxy.