Nothing Phone (3a) vs. (3a) Pro

So, the new pair of Nothing devices has caught your eye? There is definitely a lot to like there. However, it is hard to ignore the fact that the two phones are so strikingly similar on paper (apart, of course, from the telephoto camera). That said, there is a notable difference in price. The vanilla Nothing Phone (3a) will set you back around €330 for a base 8GB/128GB model and €380/$379 for a 12GB/256GB one. The Nothing Phone (3a) Pro, on the other hand, will run you €460/$459 for 12GB/256GB.

So, is the Pro really worth the extra cash?

Table of Contents:

For starters, you can compare the complete specs sheets or directly continue with our editor’s assessment in the following text.

Size comparison

The two phones are practically identical in size and footprint, but they look a bit different from the back. The Pro model has quite a protruding camera island on its back, presumably to house the large periscope telephoto camera.

Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

There is also a slight weight difference between them – 10 grams, to be exact. Presumably, this is mostly the extra weight of the periscope camera as well.

Display comparison

The two phones have identical 6.77-inch, 120Hz AMOLED displays. These are pretty sharp and look great in person.

The display on our Nothing Phone (3a) Pro unit is ever so slightly brighter but with poorer brightness uniformity, so it’s possible that our review units have happened to be identically specced screens which come from different vendors.

Battery life

Given that the two phones have the same display, chipset, and battery capacity, it only makes sense that the battery endurance would be identical. Our test numbers for the two phones are well within the margin of error.

Charging speed

Both phones have a 5,000 mAh battery, and Nothing says that they support up to 50W PD+PPS charging. In our testing the two phones peaked at around 30W of charging power and charged with the same speed.

Speaker test

Both (3a) phones have identical hybrid stereo speaker systems. That means that there is one dedicated bottom-firing speaker, and the amplified earpiece acts as the second channel. This inherently brings about some imbalance in the sound output since the two speakers aren’t facing symmetrically. But that’s kind of beside the point.

Despite having identical speaker systems with very similar tuning and output profiles, we noticed that the Pro model was slightly louder during our testing. The difference is hardly huge, but we are willing to give a slight edge to the Pro in this department and a very small victory over the vanilla model.

Performance

Both phones are based on the exact same Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chipset. Nothing says that the Phone (3a) and (3a) Pro are 33% faster in CPU tasks than the Nothing Phone (2a), 11% faster in GPU tasks, and a whopping 92% better at AI tasks.

While technically, both phones have an 8GB/128GB base configuration, as far as the international versions are concerned, you can only get the Pro in a 12GB/256GB variant. So, that is one thing to potentially consider. India also gets an 8GB/128GB variant and an 8GB/256GB one.

As for the vanilla Phone (3a) – it comes with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of non-expandable storage by default and is also available in two other options: 8GB/256GB (India only) and 12GB/256GB (excluding India).

Benchmark performance

Our Nothing Phone (3a) and Phone (3a) Pro review units are both 12GB/256GB models, and as far as our storage testing goes, we believe they are using UFS 2.2 storage chips. Still, it is worth noting that, as per the same tests, the Pro model seems to offer 50% faster random read and write speeds than the non-Pro.

We ran our standard tests on both models and expectedly got very similar burst performance results. Again, within the margin of error.

We are also happy to report that the two models seem to share the same excellent cooling setup. While the surface of the phones can get a bit toasty under prolonged loads, both basically don’t thermal-throttle at all and don’t lose performance.

Camera comparison

The camera setup is the biggest difference in specs between the Nothing Phone (3a) and the Phone (3a) Pro. On the surface, the two phones seem to have the same 50MP main camera, but that is not exactly the case. Best we can tell, the Phone (3a) Pro uses a Samsung ISOCELL GNJ sensor, while the vanilla Phone (3a) uses a Samsung ISOCELL GN9.

Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

The telephoto cameras are not identical across the two phones either. The Pro has a periscope-style 50MP 3x telephoto with a 70mm focal length equivalent. It is based on the Sony LYTIA 600 sensor with a 1/1.95″ size, sitting behind an f/2.55 lens. Understandably, the periscope is equipped with OIS.

As for the vanilla Nothing Phone (3a), it has a 2x “traditional flat-style” telephoto with a 50mm focal length equivalent and an f/2.0 lens. We know that it uses a Samsung-made 50MP sensor with a 1/2.74″ size. There is just EIS on board, no OIS.

The ultrawide cameras on both phones are identical. These use a Sony IMX 355 sensor (1/4″ size) with fixed focus behind an f/2.2 lens with a 120-degree field of view. Nothing too special.

Finally, we have the selfie cameras, which also differ across the two phones. The Phone (3a) Pro has a 50MP selfie with a 1/2.76″ Samsung sensor behind an f/2.2 lens. It is capable of 4K video capture. The regular Phone (3a), on the other hand, has a 32MP selfie with a Samsung-made 1/3.44″ sensor behind an f/2.2 lens.

Image quality

As mentioned, the main cameras on the two phones are quite similar but not identical. We would say that the Nothing Phone (3a) Pro has a slight edge over the vanilla, though, in good daylight conditions, we are splitting hairs really.


Nothing Phone (3a) 1x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 50, 1/640s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 1x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 50, 1/799s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 1x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 50, 1/399s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 1x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 202, 1/50s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) 1x main camera samples


Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 1x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 50, 1/399s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 1x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 50, 1/669s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 1x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 50, 1/234s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 1x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 254, 1/33s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 1x main camera samples

The Phone (3a) captures 2x zoom samples with its dedicated telephoto camera, while the (3a) Pro does the same by zooming in digitally from the main camera. You can definitely see the difference in quality, and the vanilla has the edge. Still, 2x zooms on the Pro look very good.


Nothing Phone (3a) 2x telephoto camera samples - f/2.0, ISO 133, 1/1168s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 2x telephoto camera samples - f/2.0, ISO 191, 1/1220s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 2x telephoto camera samples - f/2.0, ISO 50, 1/288s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 2x telephoto camera samples - f/2.0, ISO 1825, 1/100s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) 2x telephoto camera samples


Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 2x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 50, 1/399s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 2x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 50, 1/442s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 2x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 64, 1/271s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 2x main camera samples - f/1.9, ISO 1156, 1/50s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 2x main camera samples

At 3x, the tides shift and the Nothing Phone (3a) Pro has a clear edge in quality with its dedicated periscope telephoto camera. You can still do 3x zooms on the vanilla Phone (3a). The photos are just taken as digital zooms from the 2x telephoto.


Nothing Phone (3a) 3x telephoto camera samples - f/2.0, ISO 148, 1/1037s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 3x telephoto camera samples - f/2.0, ISO 50, 1/288s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 3x telephoto camera samples - f/2.0, ISO 398, 1/100s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) 3x telephoto camera samples


Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 3x telephoto camera samples - f/2.5, ISO 71, 1/575s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 3x telephoto camera samples - f/2.5, ISO 71, 1/534s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 3x telephoto camera samples - f/2.5, ISO 124, 1/50s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 3x telephoto camera samples


Nothing Phone (3a) 2x closeup sample - f/2.0, ISO 198, 1/2632s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 3x closeup sample - f/2.5, ISO 71, 1/950s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Phone (3a) Pro review

2x closeup Nothing Phone (3a) • 3x closeup Nothing Phone (3a) Pro

The two phones have identical 8MP ultrawide cameras. These are not particularly impressive in any way, but the results are still serviceable. We don’t think there is any discernible difference between the shots.


Nothing Phone (3a) 0.6x ultrawide camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/1508s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 0.6x ultrawide camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/490s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 0.6x ultrawide camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 576, 1/100s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) 0.6x ultrawide camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 174, 1/100s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) 0.6x ultrawide camera samples


Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 0.6x ultrawide camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/1553s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 0.6x ultrawide camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/483s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 0.6x ultrawide camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 602, 1/100s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 0.6x ultrawide camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 416, 1/100s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) Pro 0.6x ultrawide camera samples

While we wouldn’t say there is a major difference between the selfie cameras of the two phones, at least not in broad daylight, we think the 50MP snapper on the Pro has a slight edge.


Nothing Phone (3a) selfie camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/483s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) selfie camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/245s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) selfie camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 91, 1/100s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) selfie camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/787s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) selfie camera samples


Nothing Phone (3a) Pro selfie camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/376s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro selfie camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/231s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro selfie camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 93, 1/100s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro selfie camera samples - f/2.2, ISO 50, 1/669s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) Pro selfie camera samples

Here are some low-light samples from both phones. While the ultrawide shots from the two are identical, we have to say that the main camera on the Pro has better contrast, colors and dynamic range.

Just like in good light, the dedicated 2x telephoto on the vanilla model has the edge in 2x shots, whereas the 3x periscope on the Pro obviously takes the better 3x shots. Night mode is automatic and works very well. Even when manually disabled, some night mode processing and stacking still take place.


Nothing Phone (3a): 0.6x - f/2.2, ISO 3477, 1/8s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a): 1x - f/1.9, ISO 7223, 1/33s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a): 2x - f/2.0, ISO 6217, 1/15s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a): 3x - f/2.0, ISO 6180, 1/15s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a): 0.6x • 1x • 2x • 3x


Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 0.6x - f/2.2, ISO 3505, 1/8s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 1x - f/1.9, ISO 5939, 1/14s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 2x - f/1.9, ISO 6515, 1/14s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 3x - f/2.5, ISO 4178, 1/9s - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 0.6x • 1x • 2x • 3x

Video quality

We would say that the Phone (3a) Pro has a slight edge in video capture over the vanilla model both in good and low lighting conditions.

Below we have a few framegrabs from the videos taken by the two phones at each focal length so it’s easier to compare to one another.


Nothing Phone (3a): 0.6x 1080p video framegrab - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a): 1x 4K video framegrab - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a): 2x 1080p video framegrab - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a): low light 4K video framegrab - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a): 0.6x • 1x • 2x • low light


Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 0.6x 1080p video framegrab - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 1x 4K video framegrab - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 3x 1080p video framegrab - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review
Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: low light 4K video framegrab - Nothing Phone (3a) vs. Nothing Phone (3a) Pro review

Nothing Phone (3a) Pro: 0.6x • 1x • 3x • low light

Verdict

The choice between the Nothing Phone (3a) and the Phone (3a) Pro is just as complicated as it is simple. For better or worse, Nothing has put out two incredibly similar devices on the market this time around.

Basically, the choice can come down to one of two things – price or the telephoto. If you want to save a few bucks and wouldn’t miss the 3x periscope, go for the vanilla. Otherwise, the 3x telephoto on the Pro definitely sweetens the hardware package a bit and does not disappoint in quality.


    Nothing Phone (3a)

    Get the Nothing Phone (3a) for:

  • The lower price tag.
  • The identical user experience.

    Nothing Phone (3a) Pro

    Get the Nothing Phone (3a) Pro for:

  • The slightly louder speakers.
  • The faster random read and write storage performance.
  • The better periscope telephoto and slightly better selfie and main cameras.
  • The eSIM support.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

iPhone 17 Pro case shows massive camera island

The iPhone 17 Pro series is expected to bring a redesigned camera island that’s rumored to span almost the entire width of the phone’s back. We’ve already seen renders and dummy units for all four iPhone 17 series models, and we now get our first look at cases for the iPhone 17 Pro.

Can childhood survive the smartphone?

BBC Jonathan Haidt’s book, The Anxious Generation, sparked a global reckoning about mobile phone usage among children when it came out last year. So, I checked in with him to find out if he still thinks childhood is at risk from too much screen time. Parents need help. I know from experience. It’s really hard

Motorola Edge 60 Fusion review

Introduction and specs The Motorola Edge 60 Fusion comes just in time – a year after its predecessor, the Edge 50 Fusion. The newer version arrives in the same slick design, but with a handful of upgrades on top. The chassis now boasts higher IP69 ingress protection and complies with the MIL-STD-810H standard for durability.

Here’s the OnePlus 13T in a surprising colorway

The OnePlus 13T has been leaking a lot lately, and the company itself has already teased it and confirmed its battery capacity and weight. This is going to be a smaller flagship device with no compromises in terms of longevity and performance, that’s for sure. Today a new leak says it will be offered in

West Virginia senators pass bill prohibiting cell phone use during class

The state Senate overwhelmingly passed a bill that would, under most circumstances, keep cell phones out of classrooms. Senators passed the bill on a 33-1 vote. The House of Delegates passed the bill on March 21. Senate Education Chairwoman Amy Nichole Grady, who is a fourth grade teacher, said she was skeptical of the policy

Google Pixel 10 rumors – 5 things we think we know and 3 we don’t

The Google Pixel 10 could give the Samsung Galaxy S25 a run for its money, with Google’s late-2025 flagship likely to offer high-end specs paired with cutting-edge AI features. While the Pixel 10 and its siblings – likely including the Pixel 10 Pro, the Pixel 10 Pro XL, and the Pixel 10 Pro Fold –

Samsung adds Health integration into SmartThings, support for more devices

Samsung has introduced a major update to its SmartThings platform – Samsung Health is now integrated and more device types are supported with the adoption of the Matter 1.4 protocol. If you have a Galaxy Watch (Watch4 or later) or a Galaxy Ring, it will keep track of when you fall asleep and when you

Motorola Edge 60 Fusion is now on sale in India

The Motorola Edge 60 Fusion, unveiled last week, is now on sale in India through Motorola’s official Indian website, Flipkart, and leading retail stores, including Reliance Digital. The Motorola Edge 60 Fusion comes in Pantone Slipstream, Pantone Amazonite, and Pantone Zephyr colors with two memory options – 8GB/256GB and 12GB/256GB, priced at INR22,999 ($265/€240) and

Xiaomi releases Android 16 Developer Preview for two phones

Android 16 is coming faster than usual and it has already reached the Platform Stability milestone with Beta 3. Xiaomi is boarding the train early with the release of its Android 16 Developer Preview Program for two phones. The Xiaomi 15 and Xiaomi 14T Pro are the chosen test subjects. The former launched with Android

Realme Narzo 80x and 80 Pro debut

Realme unveiled its latest Narzo series phones in India with the Narzo 80x and 80 Pro. Both feature 120Hz displays, MediaTek Dimensity series chipsets and 6,000 mAh batteries. Realme Narzo 80 Pro Realme Narzo 80 Pro features a 6.7-inch curved AMOLED display with FHD+ resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. The panel is rated at

Oppo K13’s India launch teased ahead of its global debut

Oppo has announced that it sold over 2 million units of the Oppo K12x in India. The K12x was launched in India last July, and Oppo will introduce the Oppo K13 soon. Oppo K12x Oppo hasn’t revealed the launch date or specs of the K13 yet, but the teaser we received says the K13 is

vivo X200 Ultra is getting a photography kit

The teaser campaign for the vivo X200 Ultra is in full swing as we await its official launch in China on April 21. We already have a solid glimpse of what the phone will look like and most of its key specs but vivo has now shared another key detail – the phone will get

Samsung Galaxy Ring is now available in one more country

The Samsung Galaxy Ring, unveiled last year, was recently launched in New Zealand and South Africa. Today, the South Korean brand’s first smart ring made its debut in one more country – Malaysia. The Samsung Galaxy Ring comes in Titanium Black, Titanium Silver, and Titanium Gold colors in Malaysia, and it has nine size options:

Motorola Edge 60 Stylus price and renders leak

Yesterday we first heard that Motorola is working on the Edge 60 Stylus to bring a stylus-endowed smartphone to its flagship line, and today its pricing has been leaked by the same source, along with the renders you can see below. The Edge 60 Stylus definitely integrates very well into the overall design language of

Apple Vision Pro 2 reportedly coming this year, components already in production

Apple’s Vision Pro is a flop, sales-wise, there’s no beating around the bush about that. The company is now working on an incremental upgrade to the device, and this will allegedly come by the end of this year. Ahead of its launch, key components for it, including panels, housings, and circuitry, have entered mass production

Google Pixel 10 series pricing leaks, Pixel 10 Pro Fold to be cheaper

Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold, most likely due to launch this August, will allegedly be cheaper than its predecessor, according to a new rumor. The device will go for $1,600, which is $200 less than what the Pixel 9 Pro Fold launched at. Then, in 2027, the Pixel 12 Pro Fold will go for $1,500.

Oklahoma lawmakers debate bills to ban cellphones in schools

LOOKED INTO BOTH OF THEM FOR YOU TODAY. CONVERSATIONS IN THE CAPITOL SEEM CLEAR. OKLAHOMA STUDENTS WILL LIKELY BE BANNED FROM HAVING CELL PHONES IN THE CLASSROOM. INSIDE THE SENATE’S EDUCATION COMMITTEE TUESDAY, THE TALKS ON OKLAHOMA STUDENTS AND THEIR PHONES PICKED BACK UP. HOW MANY MORE KIDS HAVE BEEN BULLIED? HOW MANY MORE INAPPROPRIATE

It’s the end of the road for Samsung’s Galaxy S20 family

Samsung may now be offering seven years of updates for its latest flagships (even eight for Enterprise models), but that hasn’t always been the case. The Galaxy S20 series has now reached the end of the road – none of the devices will receive any more software updates from now on. We’re talking about the

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x