Google has officially locked in a date for its next big hardware event. According to Chrome Unboxed, media invites went out on July 7, confirming a Made by Google showcase on Wednesday, August 12, live from New York City. The event kicks off at 6:00 PM ET, which is a notable departure from the morning and early afternoon slots Google has historically used for these announcements.
That evening timeslot is not the only thing that stands out. The event is also about a week earlier than last year’s Pixel 10 launch, suggesting Google is pushing its hardware cycle forward again. The teaser animation included in the invites does not reveal much, but it does show a shiny gold metal frame and a familiar horizontal camera bar, along with the tagline “next generation of Pixel.”
For consumers who have been watching Google’s hardware lineup mature over the past few years, this event carries more weight than a typical annual refresh. Google has been investing heavily in its own silicon, its AI features, and its broader hardware ecosystem, and the August 12 event looks set to bring several of those threads together in one place.
The phone lineup alone is expected to be the most expansive Google has put out. Leaks point to four models this year:
- Pixel 11 (standard)
- Pixel 11 Pro
- Pixel 11 Pro XL
- Pixel 11 Pro Fold
Early rumors suggest slimmer bezels across the range, a solid black camera bar on the base model, and a slightly thinner profile on the Pro and Fold variants. None of that is confirmed yet, but the consistency of those leaks gives them some credibility.
Phones will not be the only hardware on stage. Google is expected to show off the Pixel Watch 5 series, likely again offered in two sizes, and there is a chance a refreshed pair of Pixel Buds Pro could also appear to round out the mobile lineup.
One of the more interesting design details circulating ahead of the event is a feature called “Pixel Glow,” a dynamic lighting indicator on the back of the device. This is not a completely new idea for Google. The same feature has already shown up on the new Googlebook and the latest Google Home Speaker, so bringing it to the flagship phone feels like a natural extension of where the company’s hardware design is heading.
Pricing is where things get a little more complicated. Multiple sources suggest rising component costs, partly driven by the demands of on-device AI processing, could push the starting price up this year. If that happens, Google may try to soften the blow by dropping the 128GB base storage option entirely and starting the Pixel 11 at 256GB instead. That would be a real improvement for buyers who have long felt that 128GB is simply not enough for a flagship phone in 2026.
There is just over a month to go before the event, so more details will almost certainly surface before Google takes the stage in New York. For now, August 12 is the date to mark on the calendar.