The Samsung Galaxy S26 is the smallest and lightest phone in Samsung's current flagship range, one of the few compact flagships still on sale. At 167g and 149.6mm tall it undercuts the Galaxy S26+ by 23g while keeping the same cameras, chipset options and seven-upgrade software commitment.
Galaxy S26: Display
The 6.3-inch Dynamic LTPO AMOLED 2X panel runs at 120Hz and measured 1,383 nits of maximum brightness in GSMArena's lab test, which should hold up outdoors. The quoted 2,600-nit peak applies to HDR content only, and Gorilla Glass Victus 2 covers both faces.
Resolution is the compromise: 1080 x 2340 here against the QHD+ panel on the Galaxy S26+, so buyers stepping down from a sharper screen may notice the difference.
Galaxy S26: Camera
The triple rear camera is identical to the Galaxy S26+: a 50MP main sensor with OIS, a 10MP telephoto with 3x optical zoom and OIS, and a 12MP ultrawide, with a 12MP selfie camera and 8K video. Compact size costs nothing in photographic capability within the pair.
Zoom is the limit: the 10MP 3x telephoto is a long way short of the Galaxy S26 Ultra's 50MP 5x periscope, so this is not the Samsung for long-range shooters.
Galaxy S26: Battery
The 4,300mAh battery returned an active use score of 15:20 hours in GSMArena's lab, a respectable result for a phone this small, with 15W wireless charging alongside.
Wired charging is the weakest in the range at 25W, quoted at 55% in 30 minutes, where the Galaxy S26+ manages 45W and 69% in the same time. Frequent fast-top-up users should factor that in.
Galaxy S26: Size, Weight and Build
At 149.6 x 71.7 x 7.2mm and 167g with an Armor aluminium 2 frame and IP68 rating, this is the current flagship for one-handed use, and it comes in six colours including Cobalt Violet and Pink Gold.
The compact body is also the trade-off: it is the reason the battery, charging speed and screen resolution all sit below the larger models in the range.
Galaxy S26: Performance
The chipset depends on region: US and Chinese units run the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, while UK units and most other markets use Samsung's Exynos 2600. Both come with 12GB of RAM, ship on Android 16 with One UI 8.5, and carry a commitment to up to seven major Android upgrades that has only just begun.
UK buyers cannot choose the Snapdragon version, so benchmark coverage of US units will not fully reflect the phone sold here.
Galaxy S26: Who Should Buy
Buy the Galaxy S26 if you want a genuinely small flagship with a long update window and are willing to accept slower charging and a lower-resolution screen to get it; it suits buyers on ageing compact handsets with nowhere else to go in this size class. If screen size matters more than pocketability, the Galaxy S26+ fixes both of those compromises for the same core hardware. Buyers weighing monthly cost against upfront price will find current network deals in the table above.