A third-party company manufacturing protective cases inadvertently became the primary source of information about Samsung's upcoming mid-range flagship. SammyGuru published renders of the Galaxy S26 FE obtained from just such an accessories listing — a standard leaking practice that this time revealed more than usual.
Design: A Flagship Copy or Something New?
At first glance — an almost exact copy of the standard Galaxy S26: flat body, thin bezels, centered front camera cutout. But details matter more than first impressions. Three main cameras are positioned vertically in separate modules in the upper left corner, with the flash placed outside the main block — an arrangement reminiscent of the budget Galaxy A series rather than previous FE models.
As Notebookcheck notes, this marks a departure from the design scheme of the Galaxy S23 FE / S24 FE / S25 FE, where three lenses protruded as a single unit. In fact, Samsung is blurring the visible line between Fan Edition and mid-budget A-series — at least visually.
"The smartphone follows Samsung's 2026 design language: raised rear camera platform, straight side edges, openly minimalist lines"
iGeekPhone about Galaxy S26 FE
A separate detail in the renders — a case with a magnetic ring. This is the first hint that the S26 FE may support a magnetic accessory ecosystem similar to MagSafe, which Samsung is promoting in its flagships.
Under the Hood: Exynos Where Snapdragon Was Expected
Alongside the design leak, the device appeared in the Geekbench database under model number SM-S741U. According to SamMobile, it runs on a chip with the index S5E9955 — this is Exynos 2500, the same one found in the Galaxy Z Flip 7. RAM — 8 GB, operating system — Android 17 with One UI 9.
- Geekbench 6, single-thread test: 2,426 points
- Geekbench 6, multi-thread test: 8,004 points
- For comparison: Galaxy S26 on Snapdragon 8 Elite shows noticeably higher results
The choice of Exynos instead of Snapdragon is not a technical detail. It's a deliberate positioning decision: the FE gets a "sufficiently powerful" chip, but not the top one. PhoneArena expects an announcement in September-October 2026 with a starting price under $650 in the US — with possible increase due to rising memory chip costs.
FE as a Concept Under Pressure
Fan Edition was positioned from the start as "a flagship for those not ready to pay full price." But if the design approaches the A-series level, while the chipset lags behind the main lineup on Snapdragon — the question of exactly what the buyer is paying for becomes increasingly pressing.
If Samsung does not announce a competitive starting price by October — lower than $599 — there is a real risk that the S26 FE will end up in an awkward niche between being too expensive for budget buyers and too weak for those considering used flagships.