Google’s next flagship phones face higher tags and bigger entry storage. A fresh leak details exactly how much more buyers in Europe will pay for the Pixel 11 lineup. And the changes reflect broader pressures hitting the entire smartphone business.
The information comes from a Dealabs report citing Mystic Leaks on Telegram. Android Authority broke down the numbers hours ago. European pricing climbs roughly €100 across models. The standard Pixel 11 starts at €999 for 256GB. That matches what previous 256GB variants cost. Yet it marks a clear shift. No more 128GB option exists.
But the real shocker lands on premium tiers. The Pixel 11 Pro begins at €1,199 for 256GB. The Pro XL jumps to €1,399. Even the Pro Fold opens at €1,999. These figures sit noticeably above last year’s equivalents. 9to5Google confirmed the same details today. It tied the increases partly to memory costs. The so-called RAMageddon stems from surging demand for components used in AI features. Google itself contributes to that demand through its own artificial intelligence work.
Colors follow distinct palettes per model. The base Pixel 11 arrives in Light Sterling, a gray tone. Midnight Haze brings a deep black. Fuchsia adds pink energy while Moss delivers green. Pro and Pro XL models lean into Light Fog, Midnight Haze, Dune and Pine. The foldable sticks to Midnight Haze and Pine. One-terabyte versions limit to Midnight Haze only. These names echo earlier wallpaper leaks that hinted at muted, nature-inspired finishes.
Timing looks locked in. The full family debuts around August 11. Sales begin August 20. That schedule holds steady from recent years. PhoneArena had projected a mid-August announcement back in June. The new leak sharpens those dates.
Storage decisions mirror moves by Apple and Samsung. Both dropped 128GB bases on recent flagships. Google now follows. The change gives every buyer more room from day one. Yet it raises the floor price. A PhoneArena update from late June still listed $799 for a 128GB Pixel 11 in the U.S. European data suggests that baseline may not survive.
Earlier reports painted a mixed picture on other specs. Some leaks pointed to 8GB RAM on the base model. Others held at 12GB. Pro versions could reach 16GB. The Tensor G6 chip remains central. It promises efficiency gains on a 2-nanometer process. Yet graphics performance draws skepticism. Gamers may notice limits compared with Snapdragon or Apple silicon rivals.
Camera work focuses on consistency. A new 50-megapixel main sensor appears in leaks. Video features expand AI tools. The Pixel Glow concept, possibly an RGB light bar on the camera visor, could notify users when the phone sits face down. Google teased something similar at I/O without naming the product.
Display panels adopt advanced materials for better efficiency and outdoor visibility. Battery sizes hover near 5,000 milliamp-hours on the standard model. Charging stays at 30 watts wired with Qi2 support. Design barely budges. The camera bar turns fully black. Bezels slim slightly. Dimensions stay almost identical to the Pixel 10.
Software arrives with Android 17. Gemini intelligence features multiply. Custom widgets, improved dictation and anti-distraction tools headline the package. Security gets a boost from the Titan M3 chip. The modem switches to MediaTek for better efficiency and dual-SIM capabilities.
Industry watchers question whether the price bumps will stick in America. U.S. pricing often lands lower than direct euro conversion. Trade-in deals from Google, Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile typically soften the blow. Carriers frequently offer the base model near free with qualifying plans. Still, the European leak signals intent. Memory prices climbed for everyone. AI features require more of that memory.
Google kept quiet on all specifics. No official confirmation exists. Leaks carry the usual caveats. Yet the volume of consistent reports from multiple outlets builds confidence. Mystic Leaks supplied many prior Pixel details that proved accurate. Dealabs often surfaces retailer data early.
Buyers who waited for the Pixel 11 now face a tougher calculation. The phone offers steady camera excellence, clean software and useful AI tricks. Hardware upgrades feel incremental. Tensor chips historically trail competitors in raw power. The G6 aims to close that gap while running cooler.
Pro models target users who want larger screens and telephoto lenses. The XL variant especially draws attention for its size. Fold buyers already accept premium pricing. The new €1,999 starting point pushes the envelope further.
Competition looms large. Samsung’s Galaxy S26 series raised prices in some markets. Apple’s iPhone 17 held steady. Google must balance its AI ambitions against buyer sensitivity. Higher memory costs from its own data centers add irony. The company helps drive component demand that now lifts its phone prices.
Analysts expect Google to maintain strong trade-in values. Pixel owners upgrading receive generous credits. That strategy helped the Pixel 10 succeed despite modest hardware leaps. The Pixel 11 follows a similar script. Software and photography carry the load.
More details will surface in coming weeks. Renders already circulated. Full specifications should solidify before the August event. For now the message reads clear. Entry-level Pixels grow more expensive. Storage floors rise. Color choices turn sophisticated and subdued. The AI era extracts its toll on flagship pricing.
Consumers weighing a purchase have time. August still sits weeks away. Carrier promotions may blunt the sticker shock. Yet the leak removes any illusion of another year at $799 for 128GB. The Pixel 11 enters the market on new financial ground.


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