Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra: Everything We Know So Far

Feb 7, 2026
14 min read
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Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra: Everything We Know So Far

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Updated February 7, 2026: Samsung has released three official teaser videos for the Galaxy S26 series, highlighting major camera upgrades including improved low-light Nightography and AI-powered zoom. Meanwhile, Evan Blass has leaked a 360-degree video of the S26 Ultra in its new hero color, Cobalt Violet, and an official marketing poster confirms the redesigned camera island and aluminum frame. Pre-orders open February 26 with general availability March 11.

If you've been eyeing Samsung's next big thing, you might want to mark your calendar for February 25, 2026. Reliable leaker Evan Blass has now "100%" confirmed this date, stating "you can take it to the bank."

The Galaxy S26 Ultra is set for a February 25 unveiling at Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked event in San Francisco, with retail availability expected around March 11.

This strategic four-week delay from Samsung's typical early-year launch schedule gives the company extra time to finalize what could be one of the most significant smartphone upgrades of 2026.

The shift to a February announcement, with retail availability expected shortly after, matches Samsung's historical patterns for earlier Galaxy S models like the S22 and S23 series. Consistent leaks from reliable sources like Ice Universe confirm this timeline adjustment appears strategic rather than problematic.

The company reportedly wants to ensure everything from chip production to AI feature integration is polished before the big reveal.

Samsung's Official Galaxy S26 Teaser Videos

Samsung has dropped three official teaser videos for the Galaxy S26 series, each showcasing a specific camera capability:

Closer demonstrates the phone's improved zoom, tracking a dog in a moving car from a distance. Groove captures a DJ performing in challenging low-light conditions, highlighting upgraded Nightography video recording. Glow shows a woman dancing with fireworks, with the AI camera capturing details without overexposing the scene.

These teasers confirm Samsung is making camera improvements a central selling point for the S26 series, with particular emphasis on AI-enhanced video zoom and low-light performance.

Galaxy S26 Ultra Release Date & Availability

Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked event is scheduled for February 25, 2026, in San Francisco, California. Evan Blass confirmed the February 25 launch date, calling it "100% correct."

According to reliable Samsung leaker Ice Universe, the Galaxy S26 series will be available for pre-order between February 26 and March 4, followed by a "pre-sale" period from March 5-10, with the phones going on general sale on March 11.

PhoneArena notes that since the Friday two weeks after February 25 falls on a 13th, the actual retail launch could shift to an adjacent day. Samsung reportedly wants to avoid releasing the phones on Friday March 13 because it's considered unlucky in the west, according to News1 Korea.

This is a noticeable shift from Samsung's recent pattern. The S24 Ultra launched on January 31, and the S25 Ultra hit shelves on February 7. The S26 Ultra's late-February announcement pushes everything back by about four weeks.

This delay isn't due to production problems but rather Samsung's decision to refine the lineup after cancelling the S26 Edge and finalizing the Exynos 2600 integration for the standard models.

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Galaxy S26 Ultra Specs at a Glance

Let's cut through the noise and lay out what you're actually getting with the S26 Ultra. Here's everything we know so far, based on the most reliable leaks and certifications:


Display6.9-inch Dynamic AMOLED, 120Hz LTPO, ~2,600 nits peak brightness, M14 OLED with Color-on-Encapsulation technology, Corning Gorilla Glass Armor 2 protection, Flex Magic Pixel AI privacy display
ProcessorQualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 (3nm, globally for Ultra model only)
Memory & Storage12GB RAM standard (16GB with 1TB variant in expanded markets), 256GB / 512GB / 1TB with UFS 4.1
Rear Cameras200MP main (ISOCELL HP2, f/1.4), 50MP ultrawide (Samsung JN3), 50MP 5x periscope telephoto (IMX854, f/2.9), 10MP 3x telephoto with laser autofocus
Front Camera12MP with autofocus and 85-degree field of view
Battery & Charging5,000mAh, 60W wired (Super Fast Charging 3.0), 25W wireless, full Qi2.2 with built-in magnets
Dimensions163.6 x 78.1 x 7.9mm, 214g (down from 8.2mm / 218g on S25 Ultra)
DesignArmor Aluminum 2.0 frame (replaces titanium), rounded corners, redesigned camera island, built-in S Pen with curved redesign
SoftwareAndroid 16, One UI 8.5, Galaxy AI 2.0, Bixby with Perplexity AI integration
ColorsCobalt Violet (hero color), Black Shadow, White Shadow, Galactial Blue (plus Samsung.com exclusives)
AdditionalIP68, ultrasonic fingerprint, stereo speakers, 5G, Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4

The big story here isn't any single spec. The jump to 60W charging paired with Qi2.2 magnetic accessories addresses long-standing complaints. The f/1.4 camera aperture should deliver genuinely better low-light shots. And the new 50MP ultrawide sensor is a massive upgrade from the S25 Ultra's 12MP ultrawide.

Global Snapdragon consistency for Ultra buyers also means no more "did I get the good version?" anxiety. These aren't just numbers on a spec sheet, they're practical improvements you'll actually notice in daily use.

What's Changing in Samsung's Flagship Lineup

First things first: the Galaxy S26 Edge is officially cancelled. Following disappointing sales of the Galaxy S25 Edge, Samsung has confirmed it's simplifying its lineup to just three models: the standard S26, S26 Plus, and the flagship S26 Ultra.

Thailand's NBTC certification has confirmed the Galaxy S26+ will use the model number previously assigned to the cancelled Edge.

This move away from the ultra-slim Edge design makes sense when you consider market trends. Consumers have consistently shown they prioritize battery life and camera quality over razor-thin profiles, especially at premium price points.

According to a report from 9to5Google, Samsung also scaled back several planned upgrades across the S26 and S26+ to keep costs in check, focusing its most meaningful improvements on the Ultra model.

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Image credit: Ice Universe

Design-wise, the S26 Ultra is moving toward rounder corners and a more comfortable in-hand feel, though the phone will maintain its signature flat edges. The camera setup is also getting a visual overhaul, with the camera bump thickness increasing from 2.4mm to 4.5mm for a more prominent camera island design that should give the phone a cleaner, more integrated look. Samsung is also doing away with the individual rings around each camera lens, which addresses previous user complaints about the design.

Galaxy S26 Ultra Colors: Cobalt Violet Takes Center Stage

Evan Blass has leaked both an official marketing poster and a 360-degree video of the Galaxy S26 Ultra, both showcasing the phone's new hero color: Cobalt Violet. The 10-second 360-degree clip reveals the phone from every angle, highlighting its flat display with ultra-thin bezels, centered punch-hole selfie camera, and the redesigned camera island.

Samsung has finalized four launch colors for the S26 Ultra: Cobalt Violet, Black Shadow, White Shadow, and Galactial Blue. The notable absence of "Titanium" in these color names confirms Samsung is switching from a titanium frame to aluminum for this generation.

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As with previous Ultra launches, expect Samsung to reserve its most interesting color variants for direct online purchases through Samsung.com, while carriers get the standard black, white, and blue options.

Aluminum Frame Returns: Samsung Ditches Titanium

Samsung is moving away from titanium for the Galaxy S26 Ultra frame, as evidenced by the leaked color names dropping the "Titanium" prefix. This mirrors Apple's similar move from titanium to aluminum on the iPhone 17 Pro.

The switch to Armor Aluminum 2.0 makes engineering sense. Aluminum offers approximately 20 times better thermal conductivity than titanium, which should help the S26 Ultra manage heat more effectively during demanding tasks like gaming or 4K video recording.

The phone measures 163.6 x 78.1 x 7.9mm and weighs around 214 grams, making it slightly thinner (down from 8.2mm) and lighter (down from 218g) than the S25 Ultra. The frame uses an aluminum alloy with a brushed metal finish. While some fans may miss the premium titanium branding, the improved thermal performance should translate to more consistent sustained performance without throttling.

Exynos 2600 vs Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5: Which Chip?

Contrary to earlier hopes for a unified global chipset, Samsung is bringing back the regional processor split, but with a significant twist. The Galaxy S26 Ultra will exclusively feature the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 globally, ensuring consistent flagship performance for Ultra buyers regardless of region.

This 3nm processor, built on Qualcomm's latest architecture, delivers significant improvements in both CPU performance and AI processing capabilities.

The standard S26 and S26 Plus will use a dual-chip strategy. Markets like the US, China, and Japan get the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, while Europe, South Korea, and select Asian markets receive Samsung's newly unveiled Exynos 2600, the world's first smartphone chip built on a 2nm manufacturing process.

Exynos 2600: Samsung's 2nm Gamble

Samsung officially unveiled the Exynos 2600 in December 2025, and the specs are genuinely impressive. Built using Samsung Foundry's cutting-edge 2nm Gate-All-Around (GAA) process, the chip features a unique 10-core CPU configuration.

It uses one prime core running at 3.8GHz, three high-performance cores at 3.25GHz, and six efficiency-focused cores at 2.75GHz based on Arm's latest v9.3 architecture.

Samsung claims up to 39% better CPU performance compared to the Exynos 2500, with a massive 113% jump in AI processing capabilities. The new Xclipse 960 GPU promises double the graphics performance of its predecessor.

The Exynos-powered models will primarily reach European and Korean markets.

Samsung's "Heat Path Block" technology relocates RAM to the side of the processor rather than stacking it on top, allowing direct copper heat sink contact. This addresses the thermal throttling issues that have plagued previous Exynos chips and could finally close the performance gap with Snapdragon variants.

Camera Upgrades That Actually Matter

The S26 Ultra's camera system gets a meaningful overhaul across all four rear lenses:

The 200MP main sensor (ISOCELL HP2) gains a wider f/1.4 aperture (up from f/1.7), which allows approximately 47% more light capture compared to previous models. This translates to noticeably better low-light performance and more natural background blur without software trickery.

The biggest surprise is the 50MP ultrawide camera (Samsung JN3), a massive jump from the S25 Ultra's 12MP ultrawide. This should deliver dramatically sharper and more detailed wide-angle shots.

The telephoto system is getting meaningful attention too. The 50MP periscope lens (IMX854) for 5x optical zoom is moving to f/2.9 (from f/3.4) for roughly 38% brighter shots. The 10MP 3x telephoto lens now features laser autofocus for faster and more accurate mid-range zoom shots. The selfie camera stays at 12MP but gets a wider 85-degree field of view (up from 80 degrees).

All cameras are expected to support 4K video recording at 60fps, with 8K at 30fps available on the main, ultrawide, and 5x telephoto lenses.

Ice Universe has confirmed a significant philosophy shift: the Galaxy S26 Ultra will embrace more realistic photography with reduced post-processing. Instead of high contrast and heavily saturated images, Samsung is prioritizing colors that accurately represent the real environment.

S Pen: Redesigned and Still Here

Despite widespread rumors about Samsung potentially ditching the S Pen, the stylus is confirmed to remain with the S26 Ultra, though this might be its final appearance.

The S Pen is getting a redesign to match the phone's new aesthetic, with a curved top edge replacing the flat, boxy profile of previous generations. This allows the stylus to sit flush with the S26 Ultra's rounded corners. Notably, the leaked official poster shows the S Pen in black regardless of the phone's color.

Samsung removed Bluetooth features like Air Gestures and remote camera controls with the Galaxy S25 Ultra, and those aren't coming back. The S Pen remains a capable writing tool with pressure sensitivity and hover functions, but the advanced wireless tricks are gone.

Industry observers suggest the S26 Ultra could be the last Galaxy Ultra to ship with a built-in S Pen slot, as the space it occupies could be used for larger batteries or additional components in future generations.

Charging Finally Catches Up

Samsung's charging speeds have felt stagnant compared to Chinese competitors for years, but the S26 Ultra might finally close that gap. The phone jumps from 45W to 60W wired charging, with certifications and Samsung's own leaked 60W charger images supporting this upgrade. Leaks suggest it can reach 75% battery in just 30 minutes. Samsung is branding this "Super Fast Charging 3.0."

Wireless charging is getting a major upgrade too. The S26 Ultra features full Qi2.2 support with built-in magnets, finally bringing proper MagSafe-like functionality to Samsung's flagship. The S26 Ultra's integrated magnetic ring means a whole ecosystem of magnetic accessories will work seamlessly with the phone.

Wireless charging speeds are jumping from 15W to 25W, making cable-free charging significantly more practical.

However, disappointing news for base model buyers: the standard Galaxy S26 will reportedly stick with 25W charging speeds despite earlier rumors of a 45W upgrade. The S26 Plus remains at 45W with a 4,900mAh battery.

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Galaxy S26 Ultra Display & AI Features

The 6.9-inch display features ultra-thin 1.2mm bezels for an almost uninterrupted edge-to-edge viewing experience. The screen is protected by Corning Gorilla Glass Armor 2, the industry's first scratch-resistant, anti-reflective glass ceramic cover. Ice Universe claims the new display "eliminates tempered glass protectors" and replaces the need for anti-reflective films.

The AI-powered Privacy Display feature may not be exclusive to the Ultra model. All three phones in the Galaxy S26 series could feature Samsung Display's Flex Magic Pixel technology. This feature makes the screen less visible when viewed from side angles, with two intensity levels: a standard mode and a "Maximum privacy protection" mode for situations requiring absolute confidentiality. Users can configure it to activate automatically based on specific apps, notifications, or when away from home.

The display uses M14 OLED technology with Color-on-Encapsulation (CoE), which helps slim down the overall phone thickness while improving color accuracy. Peak brightness is expected to remain at 2,600 nits.

Samsung officially confirmed that One UI 8.5 (running on Android 16) will launch with the Galaxy S26 series. One UI 8.5 is bringing Storage Share, a feature that shows files from other Galaxy devices directly in the My Files app. Audio Broadcast uses Auracast to enable effortless communication with LE Audio-supported devices nearby.

Bixby Powered by Perplexity AI

Samsung is revamping its Bixby assistant with Perplexity AI integration, spotted in the One UI 8.5 beta. This partnership allows Bixby to handle basic device commands while Perplexity tackles more complex, research-intensive queries with cited sources and real-time web information.

The interface shows Bixby delivering responses with a Perplexity button at the end, providing links back to sources. The full integration is expected to debut with the Galaxy S26 series.

Battery: No Silicon-Carbon This Year

Despite earlier rumors of a 5,200mAh capacity, reliable sources now indicate the S26 Ultra sticks with 5,000mAh. Samsung is not adopting silicon-carbon battery technology this generation, unlike Chinese competitors offering 6,000-7,000mAh capacities.

Samsung is prioritizing power efficiency through the M14 OLED panel and software optimizations rather than raw capacity increases. Combined with the 60W charging upgrade and more efficient display, real-world battery life should still improve noticeably.

S26 Ultra RAM & Storage Options

The S26 Ultra will stick with 12GB of RAM as standard across most global markets, with a 16GB RAM variant paired with 1TB storage available in expanded markets. Leaker AhmedQwaider has confirmed the 16GB + 1TB variant will see broader availability this year, including the Middle East region. Storage options remain 256GB, 512GB, and 1TB, all using faster UFS 4.1 technology.

Pricing and Availability

The pricing picture for the Galaxy S26 series is more complicated than usual. The base Galaxy S26 Ultra (256GB) is expected to remain at $1,299 in the US, matching the S25 Ultra's launch price. However, higher storage tiers may see increases of around $100, and 9to5Google reports that Samsung's famous double-storage pre-order bonus (paying for 256GB and getting bumped to 512GB for free) is reportedly gone, a value worth $100-$200.

The standard Galaxy S26 starts at $799 and the S26 Plus at $999. Both the S26 and S26+ are expected to see price increases of $40-$100 depending on the market. In South Korea, prices across the lineup may rise $30-$60 due to currency fluctuations and rising RAM costs.

Samsung reportedly scaled back several planned upgrades across the standard S26 and S26+ models in an effort to contain costs, focusing its most meaningful improvements on the Ultra.

Should You Wait for the S26 Ultra or Buy the S25 Ultra Now?

If you're rocking a Galaxy S24 Ultra or newer, waiting for the S26 Ultra makes sense. You'll get meaningful upgrades in charging speed (60W wired, 25W wireless), camera optics (f/1.4 aperture, new 50MP ultrawide, improved telephoto), full Qi2.2 magnetic charging, Gorilla Glass Armor 2, Privacy Display, and enhanced AI capabilities. The thermal improvements from the aluminum frame alone could make a noticeable difference in sustained performance during demanding tasks.

But if your current phone is struggling or you're coming from an older model like the S22 Ultra or earlier, the Galaxy S25 Ultra remains an excellent choice that will likely see significant discounts once its successor arrives in March. You'll miss out on faster charging and magnetic accessories, but you'll get a proven flagship at a better price point.

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