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Thursday, May 21, 2026

Carl Pei’s Nothing Enters Kenya Officially with Mitsumi as Distributor

Nothing, the London-based consumer electronics brand founded by former OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei, has officially entered the Kenyan market. The launch was announced on Wednesday at the AI Everything Kenya x GITEX Kenya 2026 expo at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre, where the company confirmed Mitsumi Distribution as its in-country partner.

This is Nothing’s first formal entry into East Africa. Until now, Kenyan buyers could only get Nothing phones and audio products through grey-market importers and independent retailers like Avechi, Phone Place Kenya, Best Price and Price Point Electronics, all of which sourced stock from the UAE, India or Europe. Warranty support was patchy. Software activation worked, but local accountability wasn’t assured. That changes with an official distributor.

What is actually launching

The Kenyan rollout covers Nothing’s full ecosystem in one go. That means smartphones, true wireless earbuds, over-ear headphones, smartwatches and the CMF by Nothing sub-brand, which is Nothing’s more affordable lifestyle line.

On the smartphone side, the current lineup includes the Nothing Phone (3), which is the company’s first proper flagship, running a Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 chip, a 6.67-inch LTPO OLED display and a triple 50-megapixel rear camera. There is also the newer mid-range Phone (4a) and Phone (4a) Pro, both launched globally in March 2026. The 4a Pro is the more interesting of the two, with a 6.83-inch 1.5K AMOLED that pushes up to 5,000 nits peak brightness, a 50-megapixel periscope camera with 3.5x optical zoom, and an upgraded Glyph Matrix with 137 mini-LEDs on the back. The 2025 Phone (3a), 3a Pro and 3a Lite also remain in market.

The audio range covers the Headphone (1), Nothing’s first over-ear cans, co-engineered with British hi-fi company KEF; the cheaper Headphone (a) released alongside the Phone (4a) series; and the Ear (3) true wireless earbuds, plus the older Ear, Ear (a) and Ear (Open) models.

On the CMF side, the CMF Phone 2 ProCMF Watch 3 ProCMF Buds Pro 2 and CMF Headphone Pro are all part of the official portfolio.

Nothing did not publish an official Kenyan price list at the launch event. Existing grey-channel pricing has put the Phone (4a) around KES 52,000 to 62,000 and the Phone (4a) Pro between KES 64,500 and 80,000 depending on configuration and seller. Official Mitsumi-channel pricing should arrive once retail listings go live, and we expect those numbers to be close to current street prices given how the import market has already calibrated.

Why this matters

Kenya’s smartphone market is dominated by Samsung, Tecno, Infinix, Xiaomi and OPPO. The mid-range, where most buyers actually sit, is the most crowded part of the shelf. Nothing’s pitch is design and software: transparent backs, the Glyph LED interface for visible notifications, and Nothing OS, a cleaner Android skin that the brand updates fairly consistently.

Rishi Kishor Gupta, Nothing’s Regional Director for the Middle East and Africa, framed Kenya as a deliberate first move. “Kenya is one of the most important markets in East Africa: it has a young, dynamic population that embraces change and adopts new technology fast,” he said. “We are starting here and expanding across East Africa, Uganda, Rwanda, and beyond, with West Africa, including Nigeria, to follow.”

Mitsumi as a partner gives Nothing immediate reach into both formal electronics retail and the informal channels that move the bulk of phone volume in Kenya. The Dubai-headquartered distributor operates across 36 countries and works with more than 45 global brands, and Kenya is effectively its home ground operationally.

What buyers should actually expect

Three things are worth watching once shelves fill up.

First, warranty. Officially distributed stock should now carry a proper one-year manufacturer warranty serviced inside Kenya, rather than the seller-backed cover that has been standard with imported units. Buyers should ask retailers specifically whether they are getting Mitsumi-distributed stock.

Second, software updates. Nothing OS updates work on imported phones, but having an official market presence usually means cleaner support for regional features over time, including any future AI agent functionality. Carl Pei has been publicly arguing for months that the next phase of smartphones is built around AI agents rather than apps, and that direction will shape Nothing’s roadmap.

Third, pricing. Now that there is an official channel, expect the gap between Kenyan and international prices to tighten, but not disappear. Import duties, VAT and distributor margins still apply. We already covered how pricing distortions in Kenya can push imported tech well above its dollar equivalent, and Nothing devices will not be exempt.

For readers who have been watching the brand from a distance, we already explained how the Phone 3a and 3a Pro stack up against each other, and most of that thinking carries over to the newer 4a series. The honest takeaway: if you value clean software, a different-looking phone and a brand that updates its software, Nothing is now a genuine option in Kenya with proper support behind it. If you want the best camera or the most battery for the money, the established players still have the upper hand.

The full official price list and retail availability across Kenya will determine how serious this launch actually becomes. For background on the broader event where this was announced, GITEX’s expansion into Kenya is itself a significant moment for the local tech industry.

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