Google’s Pixel 11 series appears to have reached the Federal Communications Commission, with five previously unseen phone model numbers receiving certification on July 13, 2026.
The newly published FCC filings cover devices carrying the model numbers GPQQ7, GUJ0N, G7SWN, GBC0H, G4HCD, and GM45K. Although Google has not publicly attached retail names to the devices, the timing and number of filings strongly suggest that they belong to the upcoming Pixel 11 family.
The filings arrive only days after Google’s next foldable Pixel passed through the FCC separately. That makes it likely that today’s certifications cover the remaining conventional models in the lineup, expected to include the Pixel 11, Pixel 11 Pro and Pixel 11 Pro XL.
Six model numbers do not necessarily represent six separate phones. Google regularly submits multiple versions of the same Pixel device to account for regional and carrier differences, including separate variants with and without mmWave 5G support.
Which Pixel 11 model is each FCC filing?
Although the FCC documents do not reveal the phones’ retail names, the available evidence allows for an educated guess.
| Expected device | Likely FCC models |
|---|---|
| Google Pixel 11 | GPQQ7 and GUJ0N |
| Google Pixel 11 Pro | G7SWN and GM45K |
| Google Pixel 11 Pro XL | GBC0H and G4HCD |
GM45K was not one of the five newly published FCC listings. However, it appears alongside G7SWN in shared regulatory documentation, suggesting that the two model numbers may represent variants of the same underlying device.
Update: GM45K was added to the FCC website – 5:15pm CDT
G7SWN and GM45K are the strongest candidates for the standard Pixel 11 based on their more limited currently visible certification footprint compared with the other two apparent device families.
GPQQ7 and GUJ0N likely belong to the smaller Pixel 11 Pro. The two models share testing documentation, while GPQQ7 includes mmWave 5G and non-terrestrial network connectivity. GUJ0N appears to be its corresponding non-mmWave variant.
GBC0H and G4HCD are the best candidates for the Pixel 11 Pro XL. GBC0H has the most extensive independent wireless profile of the group, including mmWave 5G, Ultra Wideband and Thread support, while G4HCD appears to be its non-mmWave counterpart.
This mapping remains speculative, and the Pixel 11 Pro and Pixel 11 Pro XL model families could potentially be reversed.
GPQQ7 includes Bluetooth, NFC, Wi-Fi across the 2.4GHz, 5GHz and 6GHz bands, cellular connectivity, mmWave 5G and non-terrestrial network support. NTN connectivity is used for satellite communication features, which Google has continued expanding across recent Pixel generations.
GUJ0N appears to be a related version of GPQQ7 without the same mmWave frequency support. A shared antenna report carrying both model numbers provides further evidence that the two certifications cover variants of the same underlying phone.
GBC0H includes Bluetooth, NFC, 6GHz Wi-Fi, cellular connectivity, mmWave 5G and Ultra Wideband. Its documentation also includes testing related to Thread connectivity.
G4HCD appears to be the corresponding non-mmWave or international variant of GBC0H. Several documents filed under G4HCD reference the GBC0H model number, while both devices include Ultra Wideband support.
The remaining newly certified model, G7SWN, currently has a more limited set of FCC approvals covering NFC and Ultra Wideband. Its shared documentation with GM45K suggests that it belongs to a third device family, likely representing the standard Pixel 11.
Taken together, the filings appear to reveal three separate Pixel 11 hardware families rather than five individual phones. That lines up neatly with Google’s expected Pixel 11, Pixel 11 Pro and Pixel 11 Pro XL lineup.
Google has requested short-term confidentiality for external photos, internal photos and user manuals until January 4, 2027. Those documents could otherwise expose the phones’ designs and additional hardware details before their official announcement.
The FCC does not confirm the retail names of the devices, so the exact mapping between each model number and the Pixel 11 lineup remains uncertain. However, with Google’s upcoming foldable already receiving its own separate certifications, these filings strongly suggest that they cover the rest of the Pixel 11 series.
