There are now reports regarding the successor of Nothing’s Phone 3a series, which debuted in the first few months of 2025.
According to a post made early this morning (January 26) by X tipster Anvin, the Nothing Phone 4a has appeared in a significant database (via GSMArena). The tipster’s information is light, but if it’s accurate, that’s probably intentional because the Phone 4a has supposedly received international certification. According to their post, the gadget was found in the TDRA database of the United Arab Emirates. The model’s codename, A069, is mentioned in the listing.
The people at GSMArena draw attention to a prior finding that stated this device’s Pro version was identified as A069P.

9to5Google once highlighted a Telegram tipster, but this database entry didn’t reveal much information (they don’t often). Nothing could compete with Qualcomm’s more mid-range/affordable Snapdragon 7s series CPUs, according to that article, which also claimed that a Phone 4a and 4a Pro were on the horizon. The 4a and 4a Pro could cost between $475 and $540, respectively. According to the rumors, eSIM may only be available on the Pro model.
Once more, the tipster stated that the two might make their debut in March 2026, coinciding with Nothing’s last serie
The Nothing Phone 4a series is coming
Last year, the Nothing Phone 3a transformed that mid-range market for consumers. The business was promoting its move from MediaTek CPUs to Qualcomm chips at the time, giving its smartphones the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3. It was an inexpensive semiconductor that had been enhanced to provide more powerful AI capabilities and improved performance. In gaming and graphical scenarios, the 3a was found to be lower than the 2a in some testing.

Given that the Phone 4a and 4a Pro may include the more recent Snapdragon 7s Gen 4, it is unclear what these devices will offer. Perhaps the gadget can aim higher this year because that chip put a lot of effort into providing flagship-quality gaming capabilities and support. Nothing has confirmed that phone prices will increase in 2026 as a result of increased DRAM and NAND costs, therefore pricing is a problem.

