Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Alan Martin

Samsung Galaxy S26 could return to Exynos over Snapdragon — here's what we know

Samsung galaxy s24 hands-ons.

For years, buyers of Samsung’s flagship phones have been subject to a geographical lottery. While the handsets outwardly look the same, the chipset powering them usually depends on the region of purchase, with the USA getting Qualcomm chips, and the rest of the world seeing models with Samsung’s own Exynos processors.

Next year’s Samsung Galaxy S25 family will reportedly be an exception, with all three models getting the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite, no matter where you buy. That’s good news for tech fans, generally — not just because you can be sure that any reviews you read will match the performance of the model you buy, but because historically Qualcomm chips have outperformed their Exynos equivalents.

But apparently this isn’t a change that’s going to last. On X, the leaker @Jukanlosreve has claimed that Samsung is planning to “‘significantly’ equip the Galaxy S26 with Exynos chips next year.” Of course, the leaker actually means the year after next, given we haven’t even seen the Galaxy S25 yet, but you get the point.

Such a change is kind of expected. After all, the main reason we’re expecting no Exynos-powered devices this year is because — according to Korean media — Samsung’s 3nm manufacturing process is producing a low yield of chips. Plus, we’ve already heard that the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 will be the first foldable to be powered by an Exynos, so the company evidently wasn’t Qualcomm only from now on.

Disappointing, but not the end of the world

(Image credit: Samsung)

Of course Samsung would prefer to use its own chips where possible: it keeps costs down, especially given the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite is reckoned to be 25-30% more expensive than its predecessor. The weak state of the Korean Won doesn’t help matters, either.

Nonetheless, tech enthusiasts may be disappointed. Historically, the Qualcomm versions of Galaxy phones have outperformed their Exynos equivalents, so it’s a shame that we may be going back to the un-level playing field as soon as 2026.

But there are two things to bear in mind. Firstly, while we’ve heard big claims before about Exynos hardware potentially bettering Qualcomm only to be wildly disappointed, it’s always possible that 2026 is the year when this will actually happen. Considering past form, it doesn’t seem likely, but hey: you never know.

But, secondly, it likely won’t make that much difference. While benchmarks make for excellent bragging rights, the actual real-world difference between flagship phone performance remains largely invisible for most users.

Unless you’re pushing the phone’s GPU with extremely intensive games, most people will likely find the experience of using an Exynos-flavored Samsung Galaxy S26 indistinguishable from a Qualcomm-packed one.

We’re still a long way from the launch of the Galaxy S26, of course, given Samsung needs to get the Galaxy S25 out the door first! We’re expecting it to launch in late January, featuring rounded corners, a larger display on the S25 and a rounded back panel on the S25 Ultra. Said deluxe model may also come with 50MP sensors on both the ultrawide and secondary telephoto lenses — a big upgrade on the 12MP and 10MP lenses on the S24 Ultra.

More from Tom's Guide

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.