Google’s gearing up to launch another Pixel, and this time, it’s the A-series that’s up next. Usually, the company drops an A-series handset in March, but multiple sources claim that the Pixel 10a could arrive a month earlier, in February 2026.
Renowned tipster Roland Quandt (via a post on BlueSky) suggests that the Pixel 10a could hit shelves by the middle of February 2026. It’s worth emphasizing here that the retail availability of smartphones usually follows an announcement early on.
Hence, Google could announce the next A-series handset in early February, and it might be available to purchase in the second or third week of the month. That’s good, but that’s not the usual launch timeline for an affordable Pixel, so what’s happening there?
Why Google keeps moving the Pixel A-series launch earlier
Last year, Google announced the Pixel 9a in the USA on March 19, 2025, but due to a last-minute delay, the handset only became available to purchase from April 10. A year before that, the pre-orders for the Pixel 8a began on May 7, and the general availability started on May 14, 2024.
You see? Google already moved the Pixel 9a’s launch forward by about 2 months, and now it is moving it up again, aiming to release the smartphone in February, and there could be a few plausible reasons behind this.
For one, Google wants to create a significant gap between the launch of its A-series smartphones and the flagship number-series models. Last year, Google debuted the Pixel 9a (128GB) at $499, while the Pixel 10 (128GB) launched at $799.
Now, if you look at the spec sheet, the Pixel 10 doesn’t offer many advantages over the Pixel 9a, limited to a slightly brighter screen, the Tensor G5 SoC (instead of the Tensor G4), and a telephoto camera in addition to the primary and ultrawide shooters.

For a regular buyer who just wants a no-nonsense Android smartphone with a clean user interface and long software updates, the Pixel 9a makes a lot more sense, primarily because it saves at least $300 (or more, if the phone is on sale by the time the flagship series arrives).
Hence, launching the Pixel 10a in February would give potential buyers enough time to purchase the phone at the launch price before the Pixel 11 drops in, possibly in August 2026 (that’s a six-month sales runway right there).
It could also be an attempt to place the Pixel 10a on the shelves before other brands release their midrange rivals. Either way, the Pixel 10a could be available in the market in about a month. Personally, I’m not that excited about the phone, primarily because it might not come with as many upgrades as I’d like.





