When One Phone Grabs 70% of All Pre-Orders
The Galaxy S26 Ultra just set a record no Samsung phone has matched. Here’s what the numbers say — and what they don’t.
South Korea Pre-Order Numbers at a Glance
Samsung confirmed pre-order figures covering February 27 – March 5, 2026, in its home market. Data sourced from The Korea Herald and the Samsung Global Newsroom.
Pre-order Trends, Compared
How the Galaxy S26 launch stacks up against its predecessor — and how demand splits across models.
The World’s First Built-In Privacy Display
Toggle the switch to simulate how the Galaxy S26 Ultra’s Privacy Display works. Unlike a stick-on screen protector, this is hardware built directly into the panel using Flex Magic Pixel technology. Two sets of pixels fire light in different directions — one straight ahead for the user, one at an angle for normal viewing. Enable Privacy Display and that second set shuts off entirely.
According to Samsung’s official announcement, five years of R&D went into this feature. It works in portrait and landscape, can activate automatically for banking apps, PIN entry, and specific locations.
Galaxy S26 Ultra — Explore the Specs
Tap a category to explore what’s under the hood. Specs sourced from Samsung US.
Galaxy S26 Series — What It Costs
Samsung kept the Ultra’s starting price flat while raising the base and Plus models. All three ship March 11, 2026.
- 6.3-inch FHD+ Dynamic AMOLED 2X
- 12 GB RAM
- Galaxy AI suite
- IP68 rated
- 6.7-inch QHD+ Dynamic AMOLED 2X
- 12 GB RAM
- Galaxy AI suite
- ProScaler display enhancement
- 6.9-inch QHD+ Privacy Display
- 200 MP main camera, f/1.4
- S Pen included
- Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 in all markets
- 60W wired charging (up from 45W)
- Up to 1 TB storage
Why the Ultra held its price: Samsung faced a deepening global memory chip shortage heading into 2026. The company raised costs on the base and Plus models while keeping the Ultra at $1,299 — the same as the Galaxy S25 Ultra — to steer buyers toward the higher-margin premium option. The strategy worked. For more on how chip pricing is reshaping the tech market, see our coverage of the MacBook Neo and the RAM shortage driving PC price increases in 2026.
AI That Runs in the Background
Samsung positioned the S26 as its third-generation AI phone. The focus shifted from headline demos to features that run quietly during everyday tasks. TM Roh, Samsung’s CEO of the DX Division, said at Unpacked 2026: “We focused on making AI feel effortless, working quietly in the background so people can focus on what matters.”
Perplexity Integration
Real-time web search with citation-backed answers, available as a second AI agent alongside Galaxy AI and Gemini.
Photo Assist
Edit photos using natural language text prompts. Powered on-device by the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5’s NPU.
Call Screening
Identifies unknown callers before you pick up and summarises their intent — no answer required.
Now Brief & Now Nudge
Proactive reminders and context-aware shortcuts surfaced at the right moment without opening any app.
Privacy Alerts
Real-time notifications if apps with device admin privileges attempt to access sensitive data unnecessarily.
Gaming AI
Ray tracing and Vulkan optimisation deliver more realistic lighting. The redesigned Vapor Chamber prevents thermal throttle during extended sessions.
Where Samsung Stands in the Global Smartphone Race
The S26 launch arrives in a competitive environment. Numbers give context to what the pre-order figures mean beyond Samsung’s home market.
According to Counterpoint Research, global smartphone shipments grew 2% in 2025. Apple led the market at 20% share, with Samsung close behind at 19%. That narrow gap gives every flagship cycle extra significance for both companies.
Samsung set a shorter pre-order window for the S26 than it did for the S25 — seven days versus eleven — yet still broke the record. Im Sung-taek, Executive Vice President and Head of Samsung Electronics Korea, said at MWC 2026 in Barcelona: “Galaxy S26 series sales have increased approximately 15% compared to the previous model, with the Ultra model accounting for 70% of that figure. This may well be a Guinness [world record].”
The Korea figures are Samsung’s home market, where brand loyalty runs high. Early data from Europe indicates a slower start outside Korea, which makes the global rollout to roughly 120 countries beginning March 11 the real test of how broadly pre-order momentum translates.
More than 30% of Samsung.com pre-order buyers in South Korea signed up for the Galaxy AI Subscription Club, which offers a 50% base-price return guarantee after one year on the 512 GB model, bundled with Samsung Care+ and accidental damage coverage. The commercial structure reduced upgrade friction and is one documented reason the pre-order pace held up despite higher prices on the base and Plus models.
“We believe AI should be something people can depend on every day, designed to work consistently for everyone and without the need for expertise.”
— TM Roh, CEO & President, Device eXperience Division, Samsung Electronics (Galaxy Unpacked 2026)The Ultra’s dominance also removes doubt about Samsung’s production decision. Ahead of launch, the company had already prioritised Ultra production over the other two models — a calculated move that the pre-order split of 70/30 has now validated.
The question that remains open for investors and buyers alike: whether aggressive discounting that characterised previous Galaxy cycles will continue as component costs stay elevated. Samsung ran up to $440 off on select Galaxy S25 Ultra models during promotional sale events in early 2025. Whether comparable offers appear later in the S26 cycle depends on how memory chip prices move over the next few months. Samsung is rolling out across the US, UK, India, and approximately 120 countries from March 11 onwards. For related developments in how global chip dynamics are affecting other tech launches, see our reports on AI data centre expansions and the TCS–Google Cloud physical AI manufacturing push.
Keep Up With the Galaxy S26 Story
The global rollout began March 11. Follow the latest on Samsung’s official site and explore related tech coverage at GigaNectar.






