Hero image for Samsung Galaxy S26 AI Review: Best Phone for AI Power Users?
By AI Tool Briefing Team

Samsung Galaxy S26 AI Review: Best Phone for AI Power Users?


The Galaxy S26 is being marketed as the world’s first “agentic AI phone.” That’s a bold claim. And for once, it’s not entirely wrong.

I’ve spent time with the pre-release materials and hands-on demo coverage from Samsung Unpacked (February 25, 2026), and the core pitch is real: Gemini can now open apps in a background virtual window and take actions on your behalf. Book the Uber. Build the DoorDash cart. Read the group chat and figure out the order.

This is not the same as asking ChatGPT to “help you plan dinner.” This is the phone doing the tapping for you.

Whether that’s worth $899—and the honest answer to whether this is actually good enough for daily AI power user workflows—is what this review covers.

Quick Verdict: Samsung Galaxy S26

AspectRating
Overall Score★★★★☆ (4.1/5)
Best ForAI power users in Google ecosystem, Android loyalists
Starting Price$899 (S26), $1,099 (S26+), $1,299 (S26 Ultra)
Agentic AIGood — genuinely works, limited app support at launch
Now Brief / Now NudgeVery Good — best proactive phone AI available
On-Device PerformanceExcellent — Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, 39% NPU boost
Multi-Agent SystemInteresting — Gemini + Perplexity + Bixby

Bottom line: The S26 delivers the most capable on-device AI of any phone today. The agentic features are real but narrow—only a handful of apps supported at launch. For AI-forward users already in the Android/Google ecosystem, it’s the clearest choice. If you’re on iPhone and not leaving, this won’t convert you.

Pre-order the Galaxy S26 on Samsung.com →


What Makes the S26 Different From Every Phone Before It

Every phone since 2023 has shipped with some flavor of “AI features.” The S26 is the first where the AI actually does things without you directing each step.

The technical term Samsung and Google use is “agentic.” If you’ve been reading about AI agents in the context of desktop tools like Claude Computer Use or OpenAI Operator, this is the mobile equivalent. Gemini opens apps in a virtual background window, navigates them, and waits for your confirmation before committing anything irreversible.

That last part is the critical guardrail. Gemini never finalizes a purchase or confirmation without your explicit tap. You stay in control at every meaningful decision point. It does the tedious navigation; you sign off.

The Galaxy S26 pairs this with two other systems: Perplexity (now baked into the device at the system level, with API access to Notes, Calendar, Gallery, and Reminders) and an upgraded Bixby (rebuilt on a new in-house LLM that finally understands natural language well enough to be useful).

Three AI engines, each with a distinct role, all on the same phone.


Agentic Gemini: What It Actually Does

The headline feature is Gemini’s ability to execute multi-step tasks inside third-party apps. Here’s the demo scenario from Unpacked:

A family group chat floods in with pizza requests. Gemini reads the thread, figures out each person’s order, opens DoorDash, builds the cart, and presents it to you for a final confirmation tap.

That’s not a chatbot. That’s an agent.

What’s supported at launch: DoorDash, GrubHub, Uber, Kroger, and Walmart. The rollout starts as a limited preview in the U.S. and South Korea.

What’s not supported yet: Most productivity apps, most communication platforms, anything outside that short launch list.

This is where I want to be honest with you: the app support gap is real. If you were hoping to have Gemini orchestrate your calendar, book conference rooms, process invoices, and send follow-up emails by March 11, that’s not this launch. The agentic features work brilliantly for the five or so apps supported. For the wider productivity workflows AI power users actually care about, you’re still using Gemini as a smart assistant, not a background executor.

Samsung and Google have said more apps are coming. The infrastructure is right. But at launch, the agentic capability is more proof-of-concept than comprehensive system.

Agentic TaskAvailable at Launch?
DoorDash / GrubHub orderingYes
Uber ride bookingYes
Kroger / Walmart shoppingYes
Calendar event creationPartial (via Bixby/native apps)
Email draftingVia Gemini chat, not autonomous action
Payment processingNo (requires your tap to confirm)
Third-party productivity appsNot yet

Now Brief and Now Nudge: The Features That’ll Actually Change Your Day

If the agentic AI is the headline, Now Brief and Now Nudge are the features I’d actually rely on.

Now Brief surfaces relevant information before you need it. Not push notifications you have to clear—proactive context that appears when it matters. Flight updates before you leave for the airport. Reservation reminders an hour before the booking. Schedule summaries when you pick up the phone on a meeting day.

This is what Siri promised for years and never delivered. On the S26, it works because Samsung’s access to native app data (Calendar, Samsung Notes, Reminders) is deeper and more reliable than any third-party integration could be.

Now Nudge works differently. As you’re typing—in any app, using the Samsung Keyboard toolbar—it suggests relevant actions and items based on context. If a friend mentions a restaurant, it surfaces the restaurant’s info. If someone asks for trip photos, it suggests the relevant Gallery album.

Think of Now Nudge as a persistent context layer that watches what you’re doing and offers help without interrupting the flow.

For people who process a lot of information on their phone—the kind of person who also uses AI scheduling tools and note-taking apps—this is genuinely useful. It reduces the friction of context-switching. Not by eliminating it, but by anticipating it.


The Three-Agent Architecture: Gemini, Perplexity, and Bixby

One underreported aspect of the S26 launch: this phone ships with three distinct AI systems, each with a different job.

Gemini handles background task automation. Long-press the power button, describe what you want, and it executes in a virtual window while you keep doing whatever you were doing.

Perplexity is the research and retrieval layer. It’s baked into the system level via Perplexity’s Sonar API, meaning it has direct access to native apps—Notes, Calendar, Gallery, Clock, Reminders. Ask it a question that requires pulling context from your phone’s data; this is how it answers.

Bixby manages device settings and system navigation. The new version, built on a more capable LLM, finally handles natural language the way it always claimed to. Say “my eyes hurt from the screen” and it opens brightness settings. That sounds trivial, but it’s the kind of fluid interaction that makes the phone feel less like a tool you operate and more like a tool that works with you.

You can assign different agents to the side button. Perplexity ships as the default wake-phrase agent (“Hey, Plex”), but the setup is configurable. If you’re already a Gemini Advanced subscriber, you can lean into that integration across the whole system.

This relates directly to how AI power users think about tools: you don’t use one AI for everything; you route tasks to the right agent. Samsung has essentially built that routing system into the hardware.


Hardware That Matters for AI Workloads

The S26 runs Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 across all three models. The Ultra gets the biggest gains: a 19% CPU improvement and a 39% NPU performance increase over last year.

That NPU number matters for on-device AI. The features that need to be fast—Now Nudge, call screening, notification summaries—run locally. No cloud round-trip, no latency waiting for a server. The AI feels responsive because the silicon actually supports it.

Storage: The 128GB option is gone. Base configuration is now 256GB across all models. Smart move given that AI-heavy apps and on-device models eat storage.

Battery: Samsung hasn’t published official numbers yet, but hands-on reports suggest the always-on AI features (particularly the proactive Now Brief background processing) have measurable battery impact. Expect real-world testing to clarify this when units ship March 11.


Where the S26 Falls Short

The agentic app list is too short at launch. For power users who hoped to automate productivity workflows—not just food ordering—the current third-party support is disappointing. DoorDash and Uber are useful. But what about Notion, Slack, Superhuman, Calendly? Not there yet.

The price jumped. The S26 costs $100 more than the S25 ($899 vs $799). The S26+ also went up $100 to $1,099. The Ultra stayed flat at $1,299. Samsung framed the price increase as reflecting the AI investment, but if the agentic features expand slowly, that value proposition needs to be proven over time.

It’s Google-ecosystem dependent for the best features. If you live in Google Workspace—Gmail, Calendar, Drive—the Gemini integration makes more sense. For Microsoft 365 users or anyone outside Google’s orbit, some of the proactive AI features will feel less integrated.

Gemini agentic is still a beta. Google explicitly labels this as an early preview and is actively collecting feedback. That’s an honest acknowledgment that you’re getting a promising V1, not a polished product.


Galaxy S26 vs. iPhone 16 Pro: The AI Comparison That Actually Matters

If you’re deciding between these two as an AI power user, here’s the honest breakdown:

AI CapabilityGalaxy S26iPhone 16 Pro
Agentic / background task executionYes (limited apps)No (Siri Shortcuts, not agentic)
On-device AI modelGemini + Perplexity + BixbyApple Intelligence (limited)
Proactive AI (Now Brief equivalent)YesWeak
Cross-app context awarenessYes (Perplexity Sonar)Limited
Third-party AI model accessGoogle Gemini, PerplexityChatGPT integration (not native)
Privacy / on-device processingStrongStrong
Ecosystem lock-inGoogle / AndroidApple

Apple has spent the last year promising AI features and delivering them slowly. The S26 is moving faster on the agentic side—even with the limited launch app list, it represents a genuine capability gap. If you’re already on Android and you care about AI workflows, the S26 is the obvious upgrade. If you’re on iPhone, this doesn’t have anything that would justify platform switching.


Pricing Breakdown

ModelStoragePrice
Galaxy S26256GB$899
Galaxy S26+256GB$1,099
Galaxy S26 Ultra256GB / 512GB$1,299+

Pre-orders opened February 25. General availability starts March 11, 2026. Samsung is offering trade-in credits up to $900. Amazon reportedly has discounts of 10-24% across models.

For AI power users: the standard S26 at $899 gets you all the same agentic AI and Galaxy AI features as the Ultra. The Ultra upgrades the display (6.9-inch QHD+), camera system (S Pen included), and adds a new Privacy Display. If the camera and screen are important to your workflow, the Ultra justifies the premium. For AI capabilities alone, the base S26 is sufficient.


Who Should Buy the Galaxy S26

Buy it if:

  • You’re an Android user due for an upgrade
  • You use Google Workspace daily and want tighter AI integration
  • You want the most capable proactive phone AI available (Now Brief, Now Nudge)
  • You do a lot of food ordering or ride booking and want it automated
  • You’re experimenting with AI agent workflows and want to see where phone AI is going

Skip it (for now) if:

  • You’re on iPhone and not planning to switch—iOS ecosystem advantages outweigh this
  • You need agentic AI across productivity apps, not just delivery services
  • The $899 price point is a stretch—the S25 just got cheaper and it’s a solid phone
  • You want a settled, fully baked product rather than a well-funded beta

How to Get Started

  1. Pre-order through Samsung.com to lock in trade-in value before March 4 cutoff. Samsung is offering aggressive trade-in credits.
  2. Choose your AI agent setup. During setup, you can assign Gemini or Perplexity to the side button. Gemini is the better choice if you’re a Google One or Gemini Advanced subscriber.
  3. Configure Now Brief. Go to Settings → Advanced features → Now Brief. Enable calendar and app data access for the most useful proactive suggestions.
  4. Try the agentic features on supported apps first. Start with Uber or DoorDash—they’re the most polished at launch and give you a real sense of what the system can do.
  5. Watch the app support list. Samsung and Google have committed to expanding third-party app support. Check for updates in Google’s Gemini blog and Samsung’s Galaxy AI updates page.

If you’re thinking about this in the context of broader AI automation workflows, our guide on AI automation tools covers how to integrate phone AI with your desktop stack.


The Bottom Line

The Galaxy S26 is the best AI phone available today. That’s real, not hype.

But “best” comes with context. The agentic features that make it genuinely interesting are narrow at launch—five or six apps, a beta label, a promise of expansion. Now Brief and Now Nudge work well today. The three-agent architecture is genuinely smart. The hardware is fast enough to support all of it without throttling.

What Samsung has built is the correct vision of where phone AI is going. The question is whether the agentic app ecosystem fills in fast enough to justify the price premium over an S25 or an S24 that works perfectly well.

For committed Android users who want to stay at the leading edge of what AI can do on a phone: yes, upgrade. For everyone else, check back in six months when the agent integrations have matured.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Galaxy S26 actually the first agentic AI phone?

Samsung and Google are marketing it that way, and it’s a fair claim. While other phones have had AI assistants, none have shipped Gemini-powered background app automation at this scale. The agentic features are real—the app support is just limited at launch.

Can Gemini make purchases without my permission on the S26?

No. This is an explicit design decision by Google. Gemini will build a cart, fill out a form, or request a ride, but it stops and waits for your manual confirmation before any transaction goes through. You remain in control at every financial decision point.

Does the S26 work with iMessage or iOS apps?

No. The Galaxy S26 is an Android phone. Apple’s iMessage is not available on Android. Cross-platform messaging works via RCS or SMS.

What’s the difference between Gemini, Perplexity, and Bixby on the S26?

Roughly: Gemini handles background task automation in third-party apps, Perplexity handles system-level search and retrieval with access to your native apps, and Bixby handles device settings and system navigation. You can configure which agent is the default.

How does the Now Brief feature compare to what Apple offers?

Now Brief is meaningfully better than Apple Intelligence’s proactive features at this point. It has deeper access to native Samsung app data and surfaces genuinely useful reminders and context at the right time. Apple’s equivalent features have been rolling out slowly and inconsistently.

Is the $100 price increase justified?

Debatable. The AI investment is real, but the agentic features that justify it are limited at launch. If those expand significantly in the first few months, yes. If the supported app list stays short, the value case weakens. The trade-in discounts make it more palatable.

When does the S26 ship?

General availability starts March 11, 2026. Pre-orders are open now through March 4.


Last updated: February 26, 2026. Pricing and feature details verified against Samsung’s official press release and Google’s Gemini agentic AI announcement.