Table of contents What is One UI 9? What is new in One UI 9 Which Samsung Galaxy phones will get One UI 9 When will your phone get the update How to join the One UI 9 Beta Samsung has officially launched the One UI 9 beta, built on Android 17, starting with the Galaxy S26 series. The beta went live on May 13, 2026, in six countries, and the stable rollout is widely expected to land in July alongside the Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Z Flip 8. Here is what is confirmed, what is still based on reports, and what you can realistically expect for your phone. What is One UI 9? One UI 9 is the next major version of Samsung’s Android software, coming after One UI 8.5. According to Samsung’s Global Newsroom announcement on May 12, 2026, One UI 9 is built on Android 17, Google’s new annual Android release. Here is what Samsung has officially confirmed: Version: One UI 9.0, based on Android 17 Beta announcement: May 12, 2026 First beta pushed to devices: May 13, 2026 Eligible beta device: Galaxy S26, S26+, and S26 Ultra only, for now Beta markets (Phase 1): United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and South Korea Beta markets (Phase 2, from May 26, 2026): India and Poland Stable release: Samsung says the “full experience” will debut on “upcoming Galaxy flagship devices later this year” Samsung has not officially confirmed a stable launch date. However, multiple credible reports from Korean outlets Seoul Economic Daily and Korea Economic TV, and backed by SamMobile and Tom’s Guide, point to a Galaxy Unpacked event on July 22, 2026, in London. That event is where the Z Fold 8 and Z Flip 8 are expected to debut, running a stable version of One UI 9. Treat the July 22 date and London venue as reported, not officially confirmed by Samsung at the time of writing. What is new in One UI 9 Samsung says the beta is built around four areas: creativity, customisation, accessibility, and security. The bigger AI features are being saved for the stable release, so what you are seeing in the beta right now is lighter than past major One UI launches. Confirmed by Samsung’s newsroom 1. User interface and customisation: Quick Panel redesign: Brightness, sound, and media player controls are now independently adjustable rather than grouped together. You also get more size options to rearrange the layout however you want. Samsung Notes: New creative tools have been added, including decorative tapes and a wider range of pen line styles. Contacts app: You can now access Creative Studio directly from Contacts to design personalised profile cards, without jumping between apps. This requires the Creative Studio app, a network connection, and a Samsung Account. 2. Accessibility: Mouse Key speed adjustment: For users who navigate using an on-screen cursor via keyboard. Combined TalkBack package: Merges screen reader features previously offered separately by Google and Samsung. Text Spotlight: A new feature that shows selected text larger and more clearly in a floating window, useful if you have difficulty reading small text. 3. Security: High-risk app blocking: When Samsung’s security policy updates flag a new high-risk app, One UI 9 warns you, blocks installation and execution, and recommends you delete it. Reported by credible secondaries SamMobile, TechRadar, and 9to5Google have documented smaller visual tweaks that are visible in the first beta build, even though Samsung did not list them in the official press release: Thicker display brightness and volume sliders. The lock-screen media player widget now has colourful waveform animations. The audio-output picker also reads ‘This Phone’ instead of ‘Media Output.’ Some media control buttons now appear circular. Parental Controls have been moved to a dedicated section in Settings, away from the Digital Wellbeing menu used in One UI 8.5. SamMobile notes that One UI 8.5 already brought a major visual overhaul, so One UI 9 reads more like a refinement in these early builds. More features are likely to appear as later beta builds drop. Android 17 features Samsung inherits Because One UI 9 runs on Android 17, your phone should also pick up the platform improvements Google has built in. These are based on Google’s Android Developers blog and Android Central reporting: Floating app bubbles: Long-press any app icon in the launcher to open it in a floating bubble that stays on top of whatever else you are doing. On foldables and tablets, a bubble bar lives inside the taskbar. System-level Contacts Picker: Apps can no longer demand full access to your entire address book. Android 17 introduces a system picker that gives apps temporary access only to the specific contacts you select. Adaptive screen sizing: Google now enforces stricter rules for screens 600 dp or larger, preventing developers from locking apps to a single orientation on tablets and foldables. SMS and OTP protection: One-time codes are no longer delivered freely to apps that do not legitimately need them. There is also a new local network permission called ACCESS_LOCAL_NETWORK. Cross-device Handoff API: Lets you resume app activity across linked Android devices. This feature is still in Beta 2 of Android 17. Samsung has not officially confirmed which Android 17 features will appear in One UI 9 exactly as Google designed them. OEM software often reimplements system features differently. Treat this list as expected, not guaranteed, until the stable build lands. What is still speculative A redesigned Quick Panel music player that adapts colour to album art. This comes from tipster Alfaturk via Sammy Fans and is not in Samsung’s press release. Improvements to Now Brief, the feature that sends notification reminders during the day. Android Authority, via Sammy Fans, reported this based on early beta observations, but Samsung has not confirmed it. The ‘advanced AI features’ Samsung teased for the stable build remain unspecified. Samsung separately confirmed that Gemini Intelligence will arrive on Galaxy devices this summer but provided no specifics. Which Samsung Galaxy phones will get One UI 9 Samsung has
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