Until 2024,CMF, Nothing’s budget tech brand, has mostly been a curiosity, producing plastic-y, unique earbuds and other accessories primarily targeted at the regions Nothing’s current mid-range phones andwireless earbudsdon’t reach. However, theCMF Phone 1completely flips that around.
Nothing’s new budget phone brings customization and an eye-catching design to the budget smartphone space, in many ways reinventing what it means to be a “feature phone.” The Phone 1 is noFairphone 5in terms of repairability, but it does have the most personality of any phone I’ve held, and on top of that, it’s a solid Android device in its own right. Whether or not you’re taken with its gimmick, the CMF Phone 1 proves that the quality of Nothing’s first two phones weren’t a fluke.

CMF Phone 1
Nothing’s first budget, the CMF Phone 1, is a solid Android phone with a unique system for attaching and detaching accessories like a kickstand, lanyard, and wallet.
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Price, availability, and specs
The CMF Phone 1 was announced on July 12th, 2024, alongside a new pair of wireless earbuds and a smartwatch. The Phone 1 is interesting because it’s Nothing’s first budget smartphone at a starting price of $199 and a bit of a departure from what made its more premium Phone 1, Phone 2, and Phone 2(a) stand out. The Phone 1 is still design-forward (CMF stands for “colors, materials, and finish”), but where Nothing’s early products turned the technical details of how a phone works into a luxury through a translucent back, the CMF Phone 1 looks like you could have 3D printed some of its components and built it yourself.
That’s because Nothing has designed the device to be customizable, with a removable back and an “Accessory Point” with a circular cover you’re able to unscrew with your fingers. You can attach a variety of accessories to the back of the Phone 1, including a kickstand, lanyard, and wallet attachment, on top of changing its back cover from the default black, to a bright orange, light green, or navy blue.

Regardless of the accessories you choose, you’ll get a 6.67-inch AMOLED display with a smooth 120Hz refresh rate and 2,000 nits of peak brightness, a USB-C port, and an under-display fingerprint reader. Inside, the CMF Phone 1 has a MediaTek Dimensity 7300 5G chip, 8GB of RAM, and either 128GB or 256GB of storage for storing all of your apps and photos. The one wrinkle to the CMF Phone 1 is that if you live in the United States or outside the European and Asian markets Nothing targets, you’ll need to use the company’s beta program, which limits you to T-Mobile’s network if you want to use 5G and 4G, or AT&T and Verizon if you’re comfortable with only being able to use 4G. For the rest of the Phone 1’s specs, check out the table below.
What I liked about the CMF Phone 1
The CMF Phone 1’s battery life lasts all day and then some
One of the most important features of a budget phone is battery life. When you’re budget-conscious, how your phone works matters a lot more than how it looks, and how long the battery lasts determines whether you’ll be able to use it at all. Despite the CMF Phone 1’s price, Nothing doesn’t compromise on the battery.
The 5,000mAh battery in the Phone 1 gives you a lot of wiggle room before you have to worry about charging it. I was able to get nearly a week of standby time after a single charge of the Phone 1, and around three days with casual smartphone use. That can obviously fluctuate depending on what you’re trying to do on your phone, but if you’re primarily on Wi-Fi most of the day (like I was) and aren’t spending hours playing demanding games on your phone, you should have more battery life than you know what to do with.

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Nothing OS makes the right amount of tweaks
A good Android skin can make a cheap phone feel premium even when its hardware is decidedly low-end, and the CMF Phone 1 is an excellent example of the right way of doing this. Nothing OS, Nothing’s skin of Android, is just the right mix of stylized streamlining and genuinely new software. If the 2010s were characterized by heavy-handed Android skins like TouchWiz or HTC Sense that made your smartphone prettier but harder to use, Nothing OS strikes the right balance.
Nothing has created custom icons for the majority of popular apps you might want to keep on your home screen, thrown in some of its own custom widgets, and added new home screen customization options, like being able to enlarge an individual app icon dramatically. Nothing OS also defaults to dark mode, meaning any app that supports the feature will be easy on the eyes as soon as you boot up your Phone 1 for the first time.

Nothing OS 3.0 is currently in beta and should arrive alongside Android 15’s improvements in December 2024 on the CMF Phone 1.
Outside those basics, Nothing OS also includes new apps, like a Weather app in Nothing’s signature dot matrix style, Nothing X, which lets you manage the company’s Bluetooth accessories, and Recorder, which is Nothing’s answer to the Pixel Recorder app, just with a lot more style. If it’s important to you that your phone looks unique among the sea of Apple and Samsung phones, the CMF Phone 1 definitely stands out.

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The CMF Phone 1’s modularity is refreshing, and a lot of fun
An obvious draw of the CMF Phone is design, and the phone has the DIY, engineer-y look it does because it’s meant to be taken apart – not in a way that makes it necessarily more repairable or longer-lasting, but a lot more compatible with the accessories and customizations you would normally have to make at the point of purchase. I was optimistic about what the CMF Phone 1’s modularity would offer before I got to use it, and actually getting my hands on the phone hasn’t changed that. It’s unbelievably cool that Nothing lets you do this.
It’s worth noting that it’s much easier to attach accessories to the Accessory Point than change the back cover of the CMF Phone 1. Besides removing the SIM card slot, four back screws, and the Accessory Point cover, you have to use a concerning amount of force to pry off the back cover – so much force that it hurt my fingers. On the one hand, this speaks tothe sturdy construction of the CMF Phone 1. On the other, it immediately discouraged me from thinking that customizing the CMF Phone 1 was something I’d do regularly. Overall, though, I think the benefits of accessories outweigh the difficulty of customization – I was most taken with the magnetic wallet attachment – and the CMF Phone 1 has a feature basically no other smartphones currently have.
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What I didn’t like about the CMF Phone 1
Low light photography is a real mixed bag
You don’t pay less than $500 for a smartphone and expect an amazing camera experience, and that holds true for the CMF Phone 1. While the device makes for an acceptable daytime shooter, at night, things are a lot more hit or miss. My biggest criticism is the tremendous loss of detail you get when you try to take any kind of photo at night or in the dark without a direct light source. The Phone 1’s effort to salvage photos dramatically smooths faces and ditches fine lines in order to make sure that people are recognizably people.
You’ll also be hard-pressed to capture any kind of motion that’s recognizably motion without some kind of blur. Taking photos of a concert in a room only lit by stage lights and whatever streetlights were seeping in from outside, I didn’t feel like anything I captured was ready to be shared online.
That’s not to say that Nothing doesn’t pack in software features to attempt to make up for the camera’s shortcomings (there’s a Portrait mode for added bokeh, and an Expert mode that gives you more control over settings, for example), they just can’t make up for the CMF Phone 1’s single 50-megapixel sensor. If you’re confused by the back of the Phone 1, which appears to have two lenses, that seems partially intentional. Only one of those cutouts is a camera; the other is a sensor for taking better portrait photos. I wasn’t able to tell if it made a difference while I tested the camera.
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Don’t expect miracles from a budget smartphone chip
While the MediaTek chip inside the CMF Phone 1 is good enough for most day-to-day smartphone use (Slack, Gmail, Messages, Chrome, and Pocket for reading), it’s less than ideal if you want to use your phone to play games. Diablo Immortal runs on the Phone 1, but not at all with the same smoothness or fidelity that it does on the iPhone 16, Pixel 9, or Samsung Galaxy S24.
…It’s less than ideal if you want to use your phone to play games.
This isn’t a major problem in the grand scheme of things, but it could have long-term impacts if you plan on holding on to the CMF Phone 1 for longer than a few years. If you can already notice a difference in performance when you first start using your phone, there’s no telling how much it will slow down by the time you’re ready to upgrade it.
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Should you buy the CMF Phone 1?
It’s hard to go wrong if it’s available on your carrier
The term “feature phone” was a way of differentiating phones that went beyond the texting and calling features that defined early cellphones. A feature phone might have access to email, or an MP3 player, or have a built-in radio. They did more, and were more expensive, but didn’t reach the full-blown premium computer prices of modern smartphones. The CMF Phone 1’s “feature” is its accessory system and ability to be customized more than the average phone, and they’re worth paying for in my book. And the good thing is, even if you never attach a kickstand to the Phone 1, you’ll probably still be happy with how it works as a normal smartphone.
The CMF Phone 1 isn’t the only affordable smartphone that Nothing offers. Pocket-lint has reviewed theNothing Phone 2a Plus,Nothing Phone 2a, andNothing Phone 2, and come away tremendously happy with what the hardware maker is putting out. For other budget and mid-range phone options, bothSamsungandOnePlushave excellent models to consider, too.