A leak from well-known tipster Evan Blass (on X) reveals that the Pixel 10a has just passed certification for use on Verizon’s network signaling that the phone’s launch might be approaching in 2026.
The listing exposes a set of hardware specifications and the device’s codename “STA5” (aka “Stallion”). Alongside this, the description reportedly emphasizes that Pixel 10a promises to bring “Google AI … at great value” hinting that AI features may again be part of the selling point.
In short: the certification leak shifts Pixel 10a from rumor territory toward concrete hardware reality.
According to the Verizon document (as per the leak), here are the head-lining specs of the Pixel 10a:
- Display: 6.3-inch FHD+ plastic AMOLED (pOLED) panel, supporting refresh rates of 60 Hz and 120 Hz.
- Battery: 5,100 mAh capacity, a sizeable battery for a mid-range device.
- RAM & Storage: 8 GB RAM with 128 GB internal storage (no memory-card expansion, like other Pixels).
- Rear Cameras: A 48 MP primary sensor (f/1.7 aperture) + a 13 MP ultrawide lens (f/2.2).
- Front Camera: 13 MP (f/2.2) for selfies/video calls.
- Connectivity: Support for 5G and LTE Cat 19.
On paper, these specs closely mirror those of the previous mid-range model Google Pixel 9a raising questions about how much improvement the 10a really brings.
A Pixel 9a “Clone”?What This Leak Suggests (and What It Doesn’t)
The biggest takeaway: the Pixel 10a appears to be very similar maybe almost identical to the Pixel 9a, at least in core hardware. That has sparked disappointment among some corners of the Android-enthusiast community.
Why Some Are Underwhelmed
- No major upgrades: Display size, battery, storage these match last year’s model. If true, Pixel 10a may underperform expectations for a “next-gen” mid-ranger.
- Potential placeholders: It’s possible Verizon’s listing simply reused data from Pixel 9a sometimes carriers do that for internal certification, which means actual retail specs may differ.
- Mid-range positioning remains: Given the unchanged hardware baseline, Pixel 10a might retain Pixel 9a’s vibe affordable but unexciting. Some analysts say that’s fine, but others hoped for meaningful upgrades.
Why It Might Still Make Sense
- Battery and display remain solid: A 5,100 mAh cell is generous for a mid-range device good for users who prioritize endurance over bleeding-edge performance.
- Google AI & software support: The “Google-engineered” label and AI marketing suggest the 10a may lean on optimized software, camera algorithms, or AI-driven features which often matter more than raw hardware specs.
- Affordability trade-off: If the price stays close to Pixel 9a levels, the 10a could remain a strong bargain for users seeking clean Android + good battery and camera performance. Even with modest hardware upgrades, that formula works for many.
What This Means: Likely Launch & What to Watch For
With Verizon’s certification now public, Pixel 10a looks like a strong candidate for release in early-to-mid 2026 likely following Google’s usual naming cycle for “a-series” Pixels.
But important caveat key details remain unknown or unverified:
- We don’t yet know whether the chipset will be the previous generation’s Tensor G4 (as rumored), or if Google will use a newer chip (which could enable more AI / camera optimizations).
- There’s no confirmation of charging speed, screen brightness (some rumors hint at a 2000-nit panel but not confirmed), camera software features, or other potential enhancements.
- Software support, future price, availability in global markets (like Nigeria) remain uncertain.
Essentially: the leak gives a strong baseline but much remains tentative until Google officially unveils the phone.
The leak surrounding Pixel 10a gives a strong hint that Google is playing it safe with its next mid-range phone: similar hardware, big battery, decent cameras, and likely a familiar price point. It won’t be a crowd-shaker, but it may not need to be. For many users, the Pixel 10a may strike a balance: an affordable, dependable phone that prioritizes practicality over bleeding-edge specs.
If you’re in the market for a clean Android experience on a budget or mid-range phone it’s one to watch. If you were hoping for upgrades to performance, storage or camera hardware temper your expectations.



