There’s always hype around a new Pixel launch, but this year Google isn’t just refreshing its phones — it’s laying out a statement of intent. The Pixel 10 family arrives as a complete line-up, one that spans foldables, flagships, watches and earbuds, all tied together by Google’s latest AI ambitions.
Of course, the first question for most is cost. The Pixel 10 starts at $1,199, while the Pixel 10 Pro begins at $1,459, and the larger Pro XL comes in at $1,739. Sitting at the top of the range is the Pixel 10 Pro Fold at $2,399, Google’s priciest and most advanced device yet.
It’s evident — Pixel is no longer chasing affordability, but carving out its space in the premium category.
What those numbers buy goes beyond hardware. We’re talking brighter displays, more intelligent cameras, Gemini-powered AI, and a vision of how personal tech might work when every device is part of the same conversation.
Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold
At the centre is the Pixel 10 Pro Fold, the company’s most ambitious take on a foldable. Closed, it looks like a familiar flagship with a bright and compact 6.4-inch Actua display.
Open it up, and the phone becomes an 8-inch Super Actua Flex screen — a stage for binge-worthy entertainment, split-screen productivity, or Gemini-assisted workflows that make multitasking effortless. With the new Tensor G5 chip and 16 GB RAM at its core, it handles heavy lifting with ease.
Google’s redesigned hinge, engineered from spacecraft-grade materials, makes this foldable thinner, stronger, and more reliable than before. Water and dust resistance, fast charging, and a 24-hour battery round out a device that feels as practical as it is extraordinary.
Pixel 10s
For those who prefer their flagships in a more familiar form, the Pixel 10 line delivers variety without compromise. The standard Pixel 10 is sleek and durable, with a bright 6.3-inch Actua display and a versatile triple-camera system that pushes mobile photography forward.
The Pro and Pro XL models scale things up — brighter Super Actua displays, the most advanced Pixel cameras to date, and a bump to 16 GB RAM for professional-grade performance.
In short: three phones, each tailored, but all anchored by the Tensor G5 chip and the growing influence of Gemini.
Pixel Watch 4
The Pixel Watch 4 doesn’t try to outmuscle its rivals — it outthinks them. Its Actua 360 domed display is both bigger and brighter, with slimmer bezels that make room for more at-a-glance detail.
But beyond the hardware, the story lies in the software: Fitbit’s most advanced health and fitness tools, emergency satellite communications, and Gemini working seamlessly on your wrist. With up to 40 hours of battery life, faster charging, and a design built for repairability, the Pixel Watch 4 feels less like a wearable and more like a genuinely indispensable companion.
Pixel Buds 2a
Google rounds out its ecosystem with the Pixel Buds 2a — a reminder that good sound doesn’t need to cost a fortune. Inspired by the Pixel Buds Pro, they’re ultra-light, comfortable, and, for the first time in the A-Series, equipped with Active Noise Cancellation.
The Tensor A1 chip sharpens calls, boosts music, and stretches battery life to 27 hours with the case. Gemini is always on call, activated hands-free, while multipoint connectivity makes switching between devices effortless. With recycled materials and replaceable case batteries, even the sustainability pitch rings clear.