Google surprised us all by announcing the Pixel 7 at I/O 2022 in May, but hasn’t officially shown anything about the phone since those initial renders. We’ll officially learn what Google has in store for its new flagship Pixel 7 Pro on October 6. But if you don’t want to wait, leakers have already revealed plenty about the two new Pixels.
Since May, we’ve seen several production units show up around the world, unboxing videos of the phone, and a ton of leaks of official specs and features. Although Google remotely wiped whichever Pixel 7s made it into the wild, we still learned plenty from these demo models about what to expect from the real thing.
On October 6 at 10am ET, Google will livestream its Pixel event showing off the Pixel 7, Pixel 7 Pro, and Pixel Watch. Preorders will open the same day, so you’ll want to be pre-informed about these devices before the event, including camera changes and the Tensor G2 chip.
Below, we’ve collected everything we know or suspect about the Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro, as well as what we hope Google improves with its newest phones.
Pixel 7: Release date and price
Google has announced that the Pixel 7 will launch on October 6 at 10am ET, and that preorders will open that day once the event ends. But we don’t officially know when the phones will ship or how much they’ll cost.
The Pixel 6 and Pixel 5 both shipped on the last Thursday of October, 10/28 and 10/29. It’s not a stretch to assume the Pixel 7 would arrive on Thursday, October 27, or some date around that. That’s just speculation, however; we only know it should be a couple of weeks after preorders open.
As for pricing, Android Police writer Artem Russakovskii leaked the US prices for both phones, claiming a source told him both phones would cost the same as the Pixel 6 and 6 Pro: $599 and $899, respectively. You can also expect a $100 / £100 upcharge for extra storage. These leaked Pixel 7 prices track with what we’ve seen of the phones, as they look pretty similar to last year’s models.
Curiously, we’ve heard rumors of a third Pixel 7 prototype, the G10, alongside the Pixel 7 (C10) and Pixel 7 Pro (P10). The third model reportedly has the same display quality and size as the Pro, but other hypothetical upgrades — possibly improved cameras.
If Google does develop a Pixel 7 “Ultra” device, it would ship at the same time, but could cost as much as $1,000, if not more. But we haven’t seen any further evidence of an “Ultra” phone, so it may not arrive until next year (if ever).
Pixel 7: Design
The Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro have thick, striking camera bars that have become Google’s signature look, given the Pixel 6a also added one. While we don’t have official dimensions, it appears the camera bar protrudes the same amount as before.
Whether you consider its return a good or bad thing will depend on your perspective. Our Pixel 6 Pro reviewer loved how it keeps the phone balanced and tilted up on a desk, while our Pixel 6 reviewer appreciated its striking look, but noted there’s “no denying that the bump will catch your fingers, table edges, and pocket hems.”
As for what’s different, the Pixel 6 and 6 Pro all had matte black bars that made the camera sensors blend in seamlessly and gave each phone — except the all-black models — a cool two-tone look. For Google’s upcoming Pixels, the bars have an aluminum silver or gold finish that accentuates the sensors, so it’s easy to tell apart the dual-camera Pixel 7 and triple-camera Pixel 7 Pro.
In terms of colors, the Pixel 7 ships in Obsidian, Snow, and Lemongrass (light green). The Pixel 7 Pro shares the same Obsidian and Snow options, but has a more muted gray-green option called Hazel.
We don’t have official sizing from Google, but the aforementioned DSCC leak claimed the Pixel 7 will shrink 0.1 inches to a 6.3-inch display, while the Pixel 7 Pro allegedly will stick to 6.7 inches. We expect the Pixel 7 to retain its flat display while the Pixel 7 Pro remains curved, though Google only showed off the phones’ backs in its official renders.
If you’re curious about how the Pixel 7 looks in real life, there have been several leaked units discovered in recent weeks. First, a prototype Pixel 7 appeared in an eBay listing. It had the Obsidian finish, steel camera housing, and a flat display with bezels that seem to match the Pixel 6 in size.
Next, the Pixel 7 Pro leaked, as first spotted by 9to5Google (opens in new tab); a Redditor (opens in new tab) claimed he had bought it online and used the phone for weeks without realizing it was the unreleased model. Google then remotely wiped it, but you can see the triple-rear cameras and a curved display showing the “Cloudripper” codename for Tensor G2 in the bootloader. It, too, has a very similar look to the Pixel 6 Pro in the front and back, seen in slides one and two.
With yet another Pixel 7 Pro prototype leak (slides three and four), we got another glimpse at the camera housing and curved display. It’s a fair question how Google let so many units escape into the open, but now we know fully what to expect about its design.
Both the Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro show a glossy finish in these pictures. Google originally told Marques Brownlee the Pixel 7 line would have “soft-touch glass” but later recanted this claim and said it would use a glossy look instead. Older Pixels used the soft-touch look, and it’s a bit disappointing Google didn’t return to it.
Lol, someone already unboxed a real, retail ready Google Pixel 7 Pro 😅 I’m so looking forward to seeing something other than this black color. https://t.co/Bl8Lnn65yI pic.twitter.com/fIpZ0YBTmiSeptember 3, 2022
Finally, if you want to see the Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro in real-life video instead of ugly boot-screen photos, tech channel Gadgetfull BD leaked an unboxing video of the Pixel 7 Pro in all its glory.
Pixel 7: Specs
With Google teasing the Pixel 7 design, but giving us no proper details on the hardware inside it, we’ll turn to leakers to give us an idea of how the Pixel 7 will improve — or stay the same as before, as the case may be.
We know for certain the phone will have the Google Tensor G2 chip from the official Pixel 7 Google Store listing. Google says it will “bring even more helpful, personalized features to photos, videos, security, and speech recognition,” but we don’t know how it will match up against the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 Plus or Apple’s A16 Bionic chip in performance. And we can only hope it has a revamped modem that could help solve the Pixel 6’s connectivity issues.
A teardown of yet another leaked, remotely bricked Google Pixel 7 revealed Tensor G2 would use the same 2+2+4 core design as Google Tensor, with two performance cores, two mid-cores, and four Cortex-A55 low-power cores. The Pixel 6 also uses the A55 cores, but we can hope the Pixel 7 will make improvements over the Cortex-X1s and Cortex-A76s found in its predecessor.
Google will likely stick to the same base memory configurations as last year, with 8GB/128GB for the Pixel 7 and 12GB/128GB for the Pixel 7 Pro. So it’s Tensor G2 that’ll do the heavy lifting and make the next-gen Pixels stand out. Otherwise, we haven’t seen much evidence of drastic changes.
In terms of display quality, a recent Pixel 7 display leak suggested both models’ display resolutions will remain unchanged: 1080×2400 display with a 90Hz refresh rate for the Pixel 7, and a 1440×3120 LTPO display with a 120Hz refresh rate for the Pro. This was corroborated by DSCC CEO Ross Young, who said the Pixel 7 Pro should have the same 120Hz LTPO panel as last year.
But one of the aforementioned leaks revealed the Pixel 7 Pro would use a Samsung S6E3HC4 panel instead of a S6E3HC3 panel, which Esper Senior Technical Editor Mishaal Rahman claims will give the new phone a 200-nit increase in brightness over the Pixel 6 Pro, from 800 nits to 1,000 nits. That’ll be useful for Pixel owners who spend plenty of time outdoors.
Both displays will have in-display fingerprint sensors, which we can only hope will avoid the notorious fingerprint sensor problems on the Pixel 6.
For the Pixel 7 cameras, a recent specs sheet leak indicated the phone will have the same 50MP main and 12MP ultrawide as the Pixel 6, but the selfie camera should jump from 8MP to 10.8MP. That same leak claims the Pixel 7 Pro will improve to 5X optical zoom over 4X on the 6 Pro, as well as get the same selfie-cam improvement.
A recent Google Camera app code deep-dive from 9to5Google found that both the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro would be able to shoot 4K selfie videos — something only the 6 Pro could do in the last generation. That seems to confirm that both phones will get a front-camera upgrade.
We don’t have any leaked information on whether the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro will enlarge the batteries or offer faster wired or wireless charging, both of which would offer welcome improvements over last year’s models.
We do know from a recent Pixel 7 Pro FCC leak that both phones will ship with either mmWave or sub-6-only support, and that the 7 Pro will bring back Ultra Wideband support.
Pixel 7: Software
The Pixel 6 series dealt with a laundry list of frustrating bugs since launch, possibly due to Tensor being Google’s first stab at its own SoC. We’re hoping that the Pixel 7, armed with Tensor 2.0 and using much of the same hardware as its predecessor, will have a cleaner launch.
Just as the Pixel 6 launched with Android 12, the Pixel 7 will sport Android 13 at launch. Google will, at the very least, offer three OS updates to Android 16 and five years of security updates through late 2027, both matching the Galaxy S22 series. If Google decides to match Samsung and offer four OS updates, the Pixel 7 would end up with Android 17 instead.
Overall, Android 13 has proven to be a rather boring update thus far, mostly optimizing changes and bugs introduced by Android 12 and adding a few useful tools like a new media player widget and notification improvements. But it’s possible the Pixel 7 will get Pixel-exclusive features that we’ve yet to see, just as the Pixel 6 series did.
Everything we want from the Pixel 7
Without a doubt, the Pixel 6 family is the most premium line of phones Google has ever created. Featuring a unique design — a feat that’s becoming more and more difficult to pull off these days — a blazing-fast in-house-developed processor, incredible cameras with meaningful new features, and a sorely-needed visual overhaul to Android, the Pixel 6 was almost everything we ever wanted from a Google-branded phone.
But it wasn’t perfect, especially if you’re one of the many customers who have been plagued by the constant barrage of bugs that seem to pop up at every turn. That’s no doubt the Pixel 6’s biggest flaw, but there are a few other things we can think of that would improve a Pixel 7 when it eventually debuts. Here’s what we think the Pixel 7 will need to reclaim the top spot in the list of best Android phones.
Stable as a rock
Right now, the Pixel 6 family feels a bit like it had its foundation built upon sand. The launch looked very strong and former AC writer Ara Wagoner and I gave it high marks, calling them the best flagship phones of the year. But the foundation washed away pretty quickly, and, by December, the inadequacies of Google’s own Pixel software began eroding away at the goodwill that was made at launch.
Since then, we’ve seen a significant number of bugs and problems plaguing users. Some users have been able to look past these issues because the camera is just so darn good, but we’d be remiss not to mention the bugs as the number one issue Google needs to fix in the Pixel 6, much less a proper successor the company expects consumers to spend money on later this year.
To say the least, the number of Pixel 6 bugs is higher than any flagship in recent memory. While most of these bugs are just irritating, some, like the recent bug that rejects some calls without ever notifying the Pixel owner, are huge problems. Previously, we saw issues where folks couldn’t connect to their home’s Wi-Fi network and, worse yet, some folks that couldn’t achieve connectivity to cell towers.
Needless to say, Google is going to need to do better next time around unless it enjoys the ire of users it’s trying to keep on its platform.
Better fingerprint sensor
Initially, one of the only issues I had with the Pixel 6 hardware was the fingerprint sensor. Alone, it was a nuisance and only worked for me half of the time. When compared to almost any other smartphone with the same fingerprint sensor method, the Pixel 6 felt generations behind. That’s something that absolutely needs to be fixed with the Pixel 7.
Now, to be fair, Google has improved the fingerprint sensor quite a bit since launch via software updates. Whether this is because they made it less secure in order to make it quicker or if they actually fixed something is anyone’s best guess, but the end result is a daily experience that’s much more tolerable.
Recently, we saw the reappearance of face unlock in the Pixel 6’s settings which could help alleviate some of the frustration of the fingerprint sensor for folks who don’t mind a less secure biometric authentication method. For anyone looking to buy a Pixel 7 when it eventually debuts, however, Google should just use a better fingerprint sensor like the one found in the Galaxy S21 or S22 series, or any of the sensors OnePlus has used in its phones for years.
More customizability
With the Pixel 6, it was clear Google had finally come up with a design language that it could really get behind. For the first time since Android introduced Material Design nearly a decade ago, Android had a clear and unique design that felt fresh and modern. In many ways, it felt like Android had finally gotten its soul back after years of acting like iOS UX design was the only way to go.
Not everybody liked it but there’s no denying it’s stylish and unique looking — again, like the phone’s hardware design, this is difficult to do these days without feeling unintuitive. With the Pixel 7, I’d love to see Google embrace its unique design further by offering even more customization to users. Folks who want more than four quick toggles should be able to cram a few more in there. Likewise, I’d love to see Google offer more quality of life features like those that can be found in Samsung’s One UI.
After all, if Google is going to advertise its phones as being as unique as its users, doesn’t it make sense to give them more choices beyond changing the color palette? Google made huge strides with customization in Android 12 and, even if it’s a stretch, I’d love to see the Pixel 7’s debut of Android 13 as a wholly customizable affair.
Wider wireless charging compatibility
Just about anyone who owns a Pixel 6 that has tried to use the wireless charging feature has probably realized just how finicky the phone is about wireless charging. You can put the Pixel 6 on any wireless charger and usually watch it register the charger’s presence but, more often than not, the phone will reject the charger and simply refuse to juice up at all.
I’ve got several different brands of wireless chargers at home, all of which have wide compatibility with most modern smartphones. That, of course, excludes the Pixel 6, which will only charge on one or two types of wireless chargers that I have. It’s annoying and I know I’m not alone in this request since I’ve seen it crop up regularly since the phone’s release. The Pixel 7 needs to work with more wireless chargers, just as Google’s competitors do.
Ditch the curved screen
This one might be more of a preference thing, but I’m still going to make the request. While the Pixel 6 shipped with an entirely flat display, the Pixel 6 Pro stuck with the waterfall display that marked the look of a premium Android phone for so many years. Yes, a display with curved edges looks nice but, in reality, it’s a pain in the butt to deal with.
First off, finding a decent tempered glass screen protector is more difficult than it should be. While a 3-pack of them costs roughly $10 for the flat Pixel 6, a similar quality curved glass protector for the Pixel 6 Pro is at least three times the price and you’ll get one less protector in the box. If you don’t want to shell out $50 for something like a White Dome screen protector, you’ll likely be stuck with an inferior quality product that’ll make those curves ugly instead of beautiful.
I know the curved edges look nice and are a boon for gesture control but, unfortunately, the reality of the situation is that curved displays make phone care more difficult. It’s time to flatten that curve all the way across the line for any Pixel 7 model that makes a debut this year.
Less grain in the frame
The Pixel 6’s camera quality is nearly unmatched — especially if you’re a parent — but its low light video quality can sometimes leave a bit to be desired. Namely, very low light video captured from the Pixel 6 tends to be quite grainy looking when compared to the competition. In some cases, this creates a more detailed video but, otherwise, the Pixel 6’s low light video doesn’t look as good as what you can get from a Samsung phone like the Galaxy S22.
Likewise, zooming in and out while taking video isn’t as smooth as you’ll find on a Samsung phone or an iPhone. More specifically, when you cross over the threshold where the Pixel 6 changes between the camera lenses on back — that’s below 1x on either model or above 4x on the Pixel 6 Pro — there’s a very noticeable stutter that occurs.
Some of this stutter is at least partly unavoidable since each camera lens is in a different physical position and each has a different focal length, but software magic can go a long way to creating a more cohesive experience. If Samsung can do it then the master of amazing AI processing — that’s Google, if you were wondering — can certainly achieve similar results.
Zoom zoom
The Pixel 6 Pro delivered the first periscope lens on a Pixel phone and I’d love to see this concept taken even further on the Pixel 7. While the Galaxy S22 Ultra can zoom in up to 100x away with its camera, the Pixel 6 Pro stops at 20x. You can certainly digitally crop the photo to help “enlarge” the subject in the image but it’s just not the same as capturing it right from the viewfinder.
Outside of being simpler for the user, zooming in through the camera’s viewfinder yields superior quality results because of a combination of hardware and software tricks. Google will use the results of handshake to capture slight variations in detail in distant objects and combine those images into one, creating a more detailed end result.
Google came up with this concept way back in the Pixel 3 days and it helped the phone meet — or even surpass — the quality of photos taken from other phones at the time, even though those phones had an optical zoom lens. Google already does this with the Pixel 6 Pro’s periscope 4x lens and I can’t imagine how good the detail could be with a lens that sees even further.
A better Google
The Pixel 7 has every chance to be named the best value flagship phone of 2022. So far, everything is telling us that the Pixel 7 will simply be a refined version of the Pixel 6 instead of a revolutionary design change like we saw last year. That’s great since Google already made all the most important changes and just needs to smooth out some bumps in the experience.
It also means you can probably buy a Pixel 6 or Pixel 6 Pro now, if you’re in the market for a phone. The Pixel 7 will make some useful tweaks and a performance boost, but not enough drastic changes that you should deprive yourself of a new phone for months.