I spent weeks with the Google Pixel 9a and the Pixel 9 — you should buy this one

Google’s A-series lineup of Pixel phones tends to be controversial. It’s a mid-cycle release, which typically comes after the base-model Pixel is heavily discounted, leaving a ton of feature overlap. This year’s Google Pixel 9a is more of the same but with a twist. To find out whether the money spent on the midrange Pixel 9a is better than the flagship Pixel 9, I tested both side-by-side for almost two weeks.

For the first time in recent memory, the Pixel 9a has a completely different design than the base Pixel 9 — kind of. The general oval-shaped camera cutout is still present on the Pixel 9a, but the iconic Pixel 9 camera bar is gone. With this change, the Pixel 9a’s back is almost completely flat, but not all the way.

Starting with the good, it’s nice that the Pixel 9a doesn’t rock when it’s on a flat surface. Despite being thicker than the Pixel 9, it doesn’t feel gargantuan in the hand. The device measures just 154.7mm x 73.3mm x 8.9mm, which is only 0.4mm thicker than the standard Pixel 9. That extra space adds 400mAh of battery capacity, which sounds like a worthy tradeoff.

The Google Pixel 9a in Iris compared to the Pixel 9 in Peony.

(Image credit: Brady Snyder / Android Central)

It’s also nice that the nearly-flush camera lenses will help the back become completely flat when paired with even the thinnest cases. I have found that the exposed glass covering, without a camera bar to protect it, makes the Pixel 9a camera housing more susceptible to scratching or collecting dust.

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