Can a $1,000 Nothing Phone (3) really compete with Apple, Google, and Samsung?

What once felt like the underdog disruptor is now flaunting a four-figure price tag. Nothing’s upcoming Phone 3 is expected to launch at $1,000, a steep climb from the Phone 2’s $599 entry point. Carl Pei announced it himself during the Android Show: I/O Edition, casually dropping an £800 GBP price point like it was business as usual. Except it isn’t. That price puts the Phone 3 right up there with the iPhone 16 and Galaxy S25, and for a brand that built its name on affordability, that’s a bold leap.

But it’s not a surprise if you’ve followed Pei’s playbook before. OnePlus started with the “flagship killer” mantra, delivering premium features at half the cost. Fast forward a few years, and OnePlus phones are priced right alongside the brands they once aimed to undercut. The Nothing trajectory is playing out in eerily similar fashion. Start cheap, gain fans, scale up, get expensive. Pei knows the game. He’s played it before.

Designer: Konstantin Milenin

To be fair, tariffs and import duties could inflate US pricing, especially with the £800 GBP tag translating to something higher than a clean 1-to-1 conversion. But inflation and logistics aside, this is a strategic pivot. Nothing wants to be seen as premium now. The “true flagship smartphone” label used during the announcement wasn’t an accident. It’s a declaration of intent.

Spec-wise, we’re short on official details, but the rumor mill’s working overtime. If the Phone 3 wants to compete at a $1,000 level, it better show up with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 or the newer Elite variant, minimum. The Phone 2 settled for the older Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, so a serious upgrade is overdue. On the camera front, Nothing has some catching up to do. Most of its phones have stuck with dual 50MP sensors, and while serviceable, the results haven’t wowed. For a thousand bucks, users will expect at least a telephoto lens, refined image processing, and low-light performance that doesn’t need a second shot.

The price (one can speculate) also factors in the new AI push from Nothing. Pei teased that NothingOS 3.0 will deliver AI that feels built-in rather than bolted on. Whatever that means, we’re likely talking some flavor of deep Gemini integration or proprietary AI tweaks beyond just Nothing’s Essential Space (which the company hinted would only be free for the first year). The iPhone and Galaxy ecosystems thrive because of software polish, something Nothing has also mastered in a short timespan.

A summer release is all but confirmed, with whispers pointing to Q3. If past patterns hold, a July reveal seems likely. That leaves a narrow window for Nothing to keep the hype alive while avoiding feature fatigue.

The move to flagship pricing won’t sit well with everyone, especially early adopters who joined the ride for budget brilliance. But as Nothing grows, the pivot feels inevitable. Pei isn’t trying to build a cult product anymore. He’s aiming for market share in a premium lane crowded with veterans. Whether the Phone 3 earns that spot comes down to execution. Charging flagship prices means delivering a flagship experience. The margin for error? Practically zero.