Woot cut Google's first foldable by 75% from its original $1,799, beating an earlier low of $479 and selling it unlocked.
The three-year-old device has a 5.8-inch outer screen, 7.6-inch OLED inner display, triple rear cameras and software support promised until May 2028.
The deal comes as Apple is rumoured to prepare a foldable iPhone priced around $2,000, highlighting a wide gap in entry costs for book-style foldables.
With Apple's $2,000 foldable looming, is Google's $449 deal a brilliant preemptive strike or a simple inventory dump?
Does Android 17's multitasking power justify buying a three-year-old foldable, even at a 75% discount?
Will a sub-$500 price for a premium foldable permanently alter what consumers are willing to pay in this category?