What are shoppers really paying for in 2026? Samsung’s early Galaxy S26 numbers suggest the answer is not just raw power. In South Korea, the company logged 1.35 million preorders in seven days, topping the roughly 1.3 million posted by the Galaxy S25 line a year earlier.
Samsung also says the S26 series posted double-digit preorder growth overall, with worldwide sales beginning on March 11.
Galaxy S26 preorders beat the S25
That matters for more than bragging rights. Smartphone demand has cooled in plenty of places, and many people now hold on to devices longer to keep the monthly bill under control. But Samsung is still persuading buyers to move up the ladder, especially to the Ultra.
In Korea, the S26 Ultra made up 70% of preorders, and Samsung says it was chosen by more than 70% of preorder customers worldwide.
That is a strong signal that premium Android buyers still want the top model when the upgrades feel tangible enough.

Privacy Display helps push the Ultra
Why the rush? The clearest clue is privacy. The S26 Ultra introduces Samsung’s first built-in Privacy Display, a feature that narrows side viewing angles when activated so sensitive content is harder to read on a train, in a coffee shop, or during a meeting when someone is a little too close.
Samsung says users can trigger it for passwords, selected apps, or notification pop-ups. That may sound niche at first, but a phone now doubles as a bank branch, work terminal, and family photo album in your hand.
Faster charging and better low-light cameras
Samsung also gave high-end buyers the sort of upgrades they notice right away. The Ultra can reach up to 75% charge in around 30 minutes with a 60W adapter, according to Samsung, and the company says its wider camera apertures allow 47% more light into the 200MP wide camera and 37% more into the 5x telephoto than the S25 Ultra.
In practical terms, that should help in dim restaurants, late commutes, and the kind of indoor scenes where phone cameras usually start to wobble.
Samsung turns premium phones into a subscription business
Then there is the business angle. Samsung expanded its New Galaxy AI Subscription Club in Korea with residual value guarantees of up to 50 percent, Samsung Care+ coverage, and added fraud-related protections. Samsung’s newsroom also says more than 30 percent of Samsung.com preorder customers signed up.
That is telling. The company is not just selling a flagship phone. It is also selling a more manageable way to pay for it.
The press release was published on Samsung Global Newsroom.











