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NothingTech

Nothing’s sunny yellow Headphone (a) limited edition is now live for $199

The sunny yellow Headphone (a) finally joins Nothing’s lineup as a limited run option, pairing its eye catching finish with up to 135 hours of playback.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Apr 6, 2026, 1:23 PM EDT
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Bright yellow Nothing Headphone (a) ear cup resting in its transparent charging case beside a dark smartphone screen showing a minimalist audio recording interface with matching yellow accents on a clean white background.
Image: Nothing
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Nothing’s latest splash of color has finally arrived. The company’s limited-edition yellow Headphone (a) is now up for preorder at $199, giving fans of the brand a brighter, bolder way to buy into its already-hyped over-ear lineup.

Related /

  • Nothing Headphone (a) is here and it has the best battery in the lineup
  • Nothing’s new headphones cost less and sound better — here’s why
  • Everything Nothing announced on March 5: Headphone (a), Phone (4a), and Phone (4a) Pro

If you’ve been following Nothing’s audio story, Headphone (a) sits as the more approachable sibling to the flagship Headphone (1) – still very much in the “Nothing” design language, but tuned for people who care about price and practicality as much as aesthetics. The core shell keeps the brand’s transparent, industrial look, but with Headphone (a), Nothing has leaned harder into color, and the yellow version is the most expressive of the bunch. At launch, the company announced black, white, pink, and yellow, with yellow clearly marked as a limited run rather than a permanent part of the catalog.

Nothing Headphone (a) in white, yellow, black, and pink.
Image: Nothing

That limited tag is exactly why today matters. The yellow Headphone (a) isn’t just another color quietly added to the store; it’s being treated as a special drop with a narrower availability window and no clear commitment that it will be restocked once this batch sells through. Nothing’s own community posts spell it out: preorders for Headphone (a) started in early March, but the yellow pair is specifically opening up from April 6 as a limited edition, with the company’s US site currently listing it at $199 and pointing to an April 9 shipping date. For anyone who likes collecting Nothing’s more experimental hardware, this is the version that feels closest to “get it now or regret it later.”

Of course, a good paint job only goes so far if the hardware can’t keep up, and this is where Headphone (a) is quietly punching above its price. The headline spec is battery life that borders on ridiculous: up to 135 hours of listening with active noise cancellation switched off, and around 75–80 hours with ANC turned on, depending on the lab test you look at. To put that into context, that’s several days of mixed use before you even think about a charger, and significantly more than the 80-hour maximum of Nothing’s own Headphone (1), let alone the 30–40 hours that still count as “good” in most mid-range rivals. A quick top-up is also on the table: a few minutes on the cable can net several hours of playback, and a full charge takes roughly two hours.

Nothing is also leaning into a more tactile way of controlling your music. Instead of going all-in on touch gestures, the Headphone (a) keeps things physical: a roller, a paddle, and a dedicated button are built into the earcups. The roller handles volume with precise steps, the paddle flicks between tracks and modes, and the button can be mapped for functions like triggering ANC profiles or even acting as a camera shutter when paired with a supported phone. It’s a very “Nothing” move – playful, a little retro, and arguably more reliable than finicky touch surfaces, especially if you’re wearing gloves or on the move.

Under the hood, the yellow edition is the same Headphone (a) that launched in the other colors. You’re still getting 40mm drivers (Nothing cites titanium-coated drivers in some regional briefings) tuned for a deeper, punchier low end, backed by what the company calls AI-powered Dynamic Bass Enhancement to keep the sound tight instead of muddy. On the wireless side, there’s support for hi-res listening with LDAC, assuming your phone can output it, and the headphones plug in via USB-C or a 3.5mm jack if you want to go wired. Adaptive ANC with multiple presets aims to handle everything from office chatter to commute noise, while a three‑mic Environmental Noise Cancellation system works on keeping calls clear when you’re outdoors. An IP52 rating rounds things out, which is enough to shrug off sweat and light dust if you plan to use them on daily commutes or casual walks.

Where the yellow version really shifts the conversation is around identity. In black and white, Headphone (a) looks like a refined, slightly quirky take on the classic over-ear formula, with the clear panels acting as the visual hook. In yellow, that design suddenly becomes unmissable – it’s closer to a wearable statement piece than a safe everyday pick. Nothing’s own social tease for this drop leaned into that idea, posting a simple “I’m finally… yellow. Out today.” along with imagery that pushed the color as the headline feature, not just another swatch on a dropdown menu. If you’re the type who usually defaults to black because it “goes with everything,” this might be the rare colorway that tempts you to do the opposite.

For buyers trying to decide between Headphone (a) and a more premium set, it helps that the $199 tag is deliberately undercutting a lot of the big names without feeling like a compromise machine. Nothing’s own Headphone (1) launched at around $299, with a more intricate design but weaker battery life, and several mainstream rivals in the $200–250 bracket still fall well short of 100 hours. Early hands-on impressions from tech publications that have lived with Headphone (a) suggest the sound profile leans modern and fun rather than brutally neutral, which lines up with Nothing’s positioning of the product for a younger crowd that cares about bass, color and personality as much as spec sheets.

If you’re thinking about preordering, the main trade-off is timing versus availability. The yellow pair is up now for preorder at $199, with shipments kicking off around April 9 in markets where Nothing’s store supports it, while black, white and pink are already the “safe” choices that should remain in rotation for longer. What Nothing hasn’t spelled out is whether the yellow run will ever be repeated after this initial drop, and that uncertainty is what makes it feel more like a merch drop than just a fourth SKU. If you like the idea of a set of over-ears that can realistically last an entire workweek on a charge and stand out from the usual sea of monochrome, this limited yellow Headphone (a) preorder window is probably the moment to make that call, rather than waiting and hoping it quietly comes back later in the year.


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