Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Google confirms Pixel 11 launch event with a tease of its new flagship design

Pixel 11 goes official in the second week of August.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Lighting, Appliance, Ceiling Fan
Google

Google just made the Pixel 11 launch official. The Made by Google 2026 event is scheduled for August 12, 2026, a week earlier than last year. It kicks off at 6 PM ET in New York City, noticeably later than Google’s usual timing. 

Along with the date confirmation, Google dropped an invite image showing a gold metal frame, which could be our clearest look yet at the Pixel 11 Pro’s design: flat frame and premium finish. 

So what’s actually showing up on August 12?

Expect the full Pixel 11 lineup, including four models. I’m talking about the standard Pixel 11, Pixel 11 Pro, Pixel 11 Pro XL, and Pixel 11 Pro Fold. Alongside, we’re also expecting the Pixel Watch 5 in two sizes, along with new Pixel Buds Pro (though we haven’t heard any rumors about it). 

Recommended Videos

On the design front, the Pixel 11 Pro isn’t getting a dramatic overhaul. The leaked renders point toward the same flat metal frame and a protruding, pill-shaped camera module that stretches nearly the full width of the phone.

One new wrinkle is Pixel Glow, an RGB LED lighting feature that surfaced in leaks earlier this year. Although it doesn’t appear in the invite image, it could be hidden under the camera module’s black glass.

Is there a catch?

Yes, there appears to be one. A leak published hours before Google sent out invites pointed to significantly higher Pixel 11 prices in Europe. 

Google is reportedly dropping the baseline 128GB storage variant entirely, implying that the cheapest Pixel 11 configuration could start from 256GB and cost €100 more than last year’s equivalent.

Running those numbers means the entry-level Pixel 11 might cost €999 in Europe, while the Pixel 11 Pro could start at €1,199 and the Pixel 11 Pro XL at €1,399. US pricing hasn’t been confirmed, but the direction seems clear. It goes without saying, but August 12 is going to be a big day for Google. 

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Apple may be making the iPhone 18 Pro thicker for a serious camera upgrade
Thinness might be the tradeoff for a bigger battery and upgraded camera system on upcoming iPhones
iPhone 17 Pro Max

A few days ago, we got our first proper look at what appears to be the iPhone 18 Pro in leaked drop-test footage from a Tata Electronics facility. The video showed an unreleased Pro iPhone in a controlled testing setup, and one thing stood out immediately. The device looked noticeably thicker than the current iPhone 17 Pro.

Now, another leak is pointing in the same direction. According to Weibo leaker Fixed Focus Digital (via MacRumors), the iPhone 18 Pro models could be thicker than the current iPhone 17 Pro series. The leaker says Apple is sticking with an aluminum alloy frame, which was introduced on the iPhone 17 Pro, rather than returning to titanium.

Read more
Claude Cowork can now keep working even after you close your laptop
Anthropic just untethered Claude Cowork from your laptop, letting it work in the background across web and mobile.
Claude Cowork

Anthropic's Claude Cowork feature has been tied to your desktop since launch. That changes starting today, as the company is expanding Cowork to web and mobile. Max plan subscribers get beta access first over the coming days, and Anthropic says other plans will follow in the coming weeks.

If you haven't used Cowork before, the idea is simple. You give Claude a task, and it works through your files, inbox, calendar, and other connected tools until it's done. The problem was that shutting your laptop lid also shut down the task. Not anymore.

Read more
Apple might have found a clever way to give the iPhone Air 2 more battery
iphone-air

Apple's first iPhone Air made one thing abundantly clear: people love impossibly thin phones — right until they start worrying about battery life. That trade-off has followed almost every ultra-slim smartphone, and it looks like Apple doesn't want history repeating itself.

A little battery goes a long way

Read more