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Samsung Galaxy S26 Latest Leaks: What to Expect from Samsung’s Next Flagship

Samsung Galaxy S26 Latest Leaks: What to Expect from Samsung’s Next Flagship

The buzz around the Samsung Galaxy S26 latest leaks is growing rapidly as the tech world gears up for the next generation of Samsung’s flagship phone. While the official launch is still a few weeks away, various credible sources and leakers have begun unveiling exciting details. From design updates to camera enhancements and a potential shift in charging technology, here’s a breakdown of everything we know so far.

Man using Samsung phone

What We Know So Far: Samsung Galaxy S26 Leaks and Rumors

Nothing here is confirmed yet. Still, the current round of leaks feels more solid than usual. We’re seeing case images, clear renders, and repeated spec claims from different sources. That usually means Samsung’s plans are starting to lock in.

Here’s what the Samsung Galaxy S26 latest leaks are telling us so far:

Design and Build

Recent leaked images give us a decent look at the Galaxy S26 lineup, especially the Ultra. The overall shape stays familiar, but there are some small changes that could make a real difference day to day.

The Samsung S26 Ultra is shown with more rounded corners than last year. It looks less boxy and closer to the feel of earlier Note models, but softer in the hand. The front stays clean, with minimal changes to button placement or port layout.

Around the back, the Ultra may move away from the individual “floating” camera rings. Instead, leaked renders show a single, pill-shaped camera island that groups the main lenses together. This often points to internal camera changes rather than pure design choice.

There’s also a small but welcome detail for S Pen users. The stylus appears to have a rounded top, sitting flush with the phone’s corner rather than sticking out slightly. It’s subtle, but it suggests a cleaner finish overall.

Several leaked case images show built-in magnet markings, hinting at stronger support for magnetic accessories. While this doesn’t confirm full Qi2 support on its own, it suggests Samsung is taking magnet-based charging and mounts more seriously this year.

Display

One of the more interesting display rumours focuses on privacy rather than brightness or size.

Samsung has teased a Privacy Display layer that can limit viewing angles. In simple terms, it makes the screen harder to read from the side. The feature is said to be optional and customisable, so you could enable it only for certain apps or notifications. That could be useful if you often check messages or emails in public places.

As for the panels themselves, leaked specs suggest Samsung is sticking with a 1–120Hz adaptive refresh rate across the range. Peak brightness for the S26 and S26+ is tipped to remain at 2,600 nits.

Screen sizes may change slightly. The standard Galaxy S26 could grow to 6.3 inches, up from 6.2 inches. The S26+ is expected to stay at 6.7 inches.

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra is still tipped to use a 6.9-inch QHD display, but with a newer panel generation. That usually means better efficiency and consistency rather than a visible leap in sharpness.

Camera Leaks

Camera rumours are where things get a bit more mixed.

For the Galaxy S26 Ultra, the main setup looks familiar on paper. Leaks point to:

  • a 200MP main camera
  • a 50MP ultrawide
  • a 50MP 5x telephoto
  • a 3x telephoto
  • and a 12MP front camera

The confusing part is the 3x telephoto lens. One widely shared spec list suggests it could drop to a 10MP sensor with a smaller sensor size than last year. Even reliable leak roundups flag this as uncertain, so it’s best treated cautiously for now.

What feels more consistent is the design shift. The move to a grouped camera island often happens when Samsung changes lens spacing, stabilisation hardware, or internal stacking. So even if megapixel counts stay similar, image quality could still improve through optics and processing.

Processor and Performance

As expected, Samsung looks set to continue its split-chip strategy.

Leaks point to the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 in some regions, with the Exynos 2600 used elsewhere. The exact split isn’t confirmed yet, but this pattern is typical for Samsung flagships.

For buyers, the real question isn’t the chip name. It’s how well it handles heat, sustained performance, and battery drain. Early leaks don’t give clear answers there, but they do suggest the processor will be the biggest shared upgrade across all S26 models.

You can reasonably expect smoother gaming, faster photo processing, and better support for on-device AI features. How much of that you notice will depend on Samsung’s thermal tuning, especially if the phones get thinner.

Battery and Charging

Battery changes look modest, with one notable exception.

The standard Galaxy S26 is tipped to increase from 4,000mAh to 4,300mAh, while keeping 25W wired charging.

The Galaxy S26+ is expected to stay at 4,900mAh, with 45W charging unchanged.

The Galaxy S26 Ultra could see the biggest shift. Multiple reports point to 60W wired charging, up from 45W last year.

That said, leaked internal testing suggests charging times may not improve as much as the headline number suggests. The main benefit appears to be faster top-ups, rather than dramatically shorter full charges.

Battery capacity on the Ultra is still tipped at 5,000mAh, which suggests Samsung is focusing on charging behaviour and efficiency instead of increasing cell size.

If you’re planning around faster charging (especially if the S26 Ultra really does hit 60W), a dependable multi-port charger can make life easier at home and in hotels.

The Anker Charger (100W, 3 Ports, Smart Display) is built for that “one socket, everything charged” routine: it’s a 100W GaN wall charger with two USB-C ports and one USB-A, plus a real-time display so you can see what’s happening at a glance.

Anker Charger 100W 3 Ports Smart Display

For travel days or long commutes, a high-output power bank is more relevant than ever—especially if you’re topping up often rather than doing one full charge.

The Anker Prime Power Bank (26K, 300W) is very much the “carry power for everything” option: 26,250mAh capacity, 300W total output across ports, and up to 140W from a single port for devices that can use it. It’s also 99.75Wh (TSA-friendly), which matters if you fly.

Galaxy S26 vs. Galaxy S25: What’s New?

So, how does the Galaxy S26 compare to its predecessor? Right now, the leaks make the S26 look like a tidy upgrade, not a redesign. The biggest changes are small, but they hit areas you’ll actually notice:

Area

Galaxy S25

Galaxy S26 (Leaked)

Base model size

6.2-inch display

6.3-inch display

Base model battery

4,000mAh

4,300mAh

Ultra charging speed

45W wired charging

60W wired charging

Ultra design

Sharper corners, separate camera rings

Softer corners, grouped camera island

Display privacy feature

Standard OLED display

Optional “Privacy Display” layer

Processor approach

Snapdragon worldwide

Snapdragon / Exynos split (rumoured)

Base storage

128GB

256GB (leaked)

Expected Launch Date of Samsung Galaxy S26

The strongest Samsung S26 release date rumour right now is Wednesday, 25 February 2026 for the Unpacked launch. That lines up with a leaked Unpacked invite shared by tipster Evan Blass, and several outlets are repeating the same date.

After that, the most repeated timeline looks like this:

  • Pre-orders:26 February to 4 March 2026
  • “Pre-sale” window:5 March to 10 March 2026
  • Open sales:11 March 2026 

What about the UK? Samsung often keeps the UK close to the first wave, but the leaks are mostly framed around South Korea (and sometimes Europe). The safest takeaway is: late February reveal, early-to-mid March availability, unless Samsung shifts regions around this year.

Pricing Expectations for the Galaxy S26

Pricing is still one of the least settled parts of the Galaxy S26 story, but the leaks give a useful range to work with.

For context, the Galaxy S25 launched in the UK at £799 for the standard model, £999 for the Plus, and £1,249 for the Ultra. Some early reports suggest Samsung may try to keep those headline prices steady for the S26 lineup, especially in key markets like the UK.

Other leaks point to the opposite: a small increase driven by rising component costs, particularly memory. If that happens, the jump is expected to be modest rather than dramatic—more the kind of change you’d notice over a two-year contract than an upfront shock.

One detail worth watching is launch incentives. Several rumours suggest Samsung may scale back its usual generous pre-order deals, such as free storage upgrades. If base storage does increase to 256GB, that could be how Samsung balances value without cutting prices outright.

Conclusion

The Samsung Galaxy S26 latest leaks suggest a familiar but more refined flagship rather than a dramatic overhaul. You’re likely looking at small design tweaks, a possible battery bump on the base model, faster charging on the Ultra, and a few quality-of-life upgrades that add up over time. If you already own a recent Galaxy S phone, the changes may not feel urgent. But if you’re planning an upgrade this year, the S26 is shaping up to be a sensible, well-rounded option worth waiting for.

FAQs

When is the Samsung Galaxy S26 expected to be released?

Most leaks now point to a Galaxy Unpacked reveal on 25 February 2026, with the phones landing in shops a couple of weeks later, likely early to mid-March 2026 (after pre-orders). Samsung hasn’t confirmed this publicly yet, so treat the date as an informed “best guess”.

What new features can we expect on the Galaxy S26?

Rumours suggest a fairly typical flagship refresh: a newer Snapdragon/Exynos chipset (by region), camera and battery tweaks, Qi2 magnetic wireless charging support, and heavier AI features. Two standout upgrades getting attention are a new “privacy display” feature designed to reduce shoulder-surfing, and satellite communication for emergency-style messaging/calling in some markets.

Will the Galaxy S26 support 5G?

Yes, everything points to full 5G support. Recent certification coverage tied to FCC filings indicates the Samsung Galaxy S26 family supports modern cellular standards including 5G NR, alongside older networks for backwards compatibility, useful for roaming and coverage gaps.

How much will the Samsung Galaxy S26 cost?

Latest UK-focused forecast expects a starting price around £799 for Galaxy S26 (256GB), roughly £999 for S26+ (256GB), and about £1,249 for S26 Ultra (256GB). Final prices can shift with storage tiers, launch promos, and any late hardware changes.

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