For a long time, buying a Nothing product in the U.S. meant playing the online waiting game. You had to rely on reviews, look at slick marketing renders, and pray the import bands lined up with your carrier. But as of today, that era is officially over.
Nothing just secured a massive footprint in over 500 Best Buy stores across the U.S., bringing the Phone (4a) Pro, Headphone (a), Phone (3), and Ear (3) directly to brick-and-mortar shelves.
This isn’t just another retail distribution deal; it’s a monumental milestone for the London-based tech brand. Here is why this move is an absolute game-changer.
Breaking the Digital Barrier
It’s one thing to build a cult following online with transparent plastics and glyph lighting, but it’s an entirely different beast to scale a hardware business. To truly compete in the U.S. market, which is notoriously dominated by an Apple and Samsung duopoly, you need physical presence.
Hardware is inherently tactile. People want to feel the chassis, test the weight, and see how that unique retro-futuristic aesthetic looks under real lighting before dropping hundreds of dollars. By anchoring themselves in Best Buy, Nothing is moving from a niche enthusiast brand to a legitimate, mainstream alternative.
The Foot-in-the-Door Strategy
What makes this partnerships so strategic is accessibility. Nothing’s revenue in the U.S. already skyrocketed by 175% in 2025 through digital channels alone. Dropping their lineup, especially the aggressively priced Phone (4a) Pro starting at $499.99 and the $79 Ear (a), into a major retail chain introduces them to millions of casual tech shoppers who have never even heard of Carl Pei.
It gives them immediate credibility. If you’re walking down the mobile aisle and see a Nothing phone standing side-by-side with mainstream flagships, it instantly validates the brand.
Nothing has spent years challenging the status quo with rebellious design. Now, with a massive U.S. retail foothold, they finally have the infrastructure to back up the hype.

