Samsung unveiled the Galaxy S26 series in February 2026, introducing the three phones that fans have come to expect: the standard Galaxy S26, the Galaxy S26 Plus, and the Galaxy S26 Ultra. These three models are available for purchase in the U.S., Europe, and other international markets, but Samsung doesn’t sell perfectly identical models in all regions. As rumors suggested in the months leading to the Galaxy S26 reveal, American and European markets get access to two fundamentally different Galaxy S26 series, as Samsung has used two separate chips for some of the three handsets: Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip crafted specifically for the Galaxy S26 series (the one that gets the “for Galaxy” branding) and Samsung’s own Exynos 2600 chip. That’s the biggest difference between American and European Galaxy S26 phones.
Samsung has employed this dual-chip strategy for Galaxy S flagship phones several times before now. Since 2020, only the Galaxy S23 series and S25 series featured the same chip across markets (previous Qualcomm processors). But Samsung isn’t the only company to make different versions of flagship smartphones for different markets. For example, there are differences between American and European iPhone 17 models, as those sold in the U.S. come without physical SIM cards and feature slightly larger batteries. But, unlike Samsung, Apple also has to tweak the software experience in Europe to address local legislation. The Galaxy S26 software experience, which consists of Google’s Android with Samsung’s One UI software built on top, is virtually identical across markets.
Other minor Galaxy S26 differences include support for two physical SIM cards in the European models instead of one in American variants. On the flip side of that, American Galaxy S26 models have 5G mmWave support compared to 5G Sub6 for the European models.
Which Galaxy S26 phone uses the best chip?
The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip that many Android vendors will use in flagship devices is an 8-core system-on-a-chip (SoC) built on a 3-nanometer process. It features two 4.61 GHz Oryon Gen 3 Prime cores and six 3.63 GHz Oryon Gen 3 Performance cores. The “for Galaxy” version that powers American Galaxy S26 models is clocked even higher, with the Prime cores going up to 4.74 GHz. The Galaxy S26 Ultra is the only one of the three phones to feature the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 in all markets.
The American versions of the standard Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26 Plus use the same Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip as the Ultra. The European versions of these models come with the Exynos 2600 processor instead, a chip coming from Samsung’s own semiconductor division. The Exynos 2600 is built on a 2-nanometer process and features 10 cores instead of eight: one 3.8 GHz C1-Ultra core, three 3.25 GHz C1-Pro cores, and six 2.75 GHz C1-Pro cores. All Galaxy S26 and S26 Plus models come with 12 GB of RAM and 256 GB or 512 GB of storage, regardless of market. The Galaxy S26 Ultra is also available with 16 GB of memory and 1 TB of storage.
Geekbench 6 scores are available for all models, and they indicate the phones offer similar performance, regardless of chip choice. However, the American variants do slightly edge out their European counterparts:
- Galaxy S26 Ultra (America): 3,645 (single-core) and 10,841 (multi-core)
- Galaxy S26 Ultra (Europe): 3,402 (single-core) and 10,446 (multi-core)
- Galaxy S26 Plus (America): 3,631 (single-core) and 10,879 (multi-core)
- Galaxy S26 Plus (Europe): 3,155 (single-core) and 11,004 (multi-core)
- Galaxy S26 (America): 3,592 (single-core) and 10,814 (multi-core)
- Galaxy S26 (Europe): 3,023 (single-core) and 10,232 (multi-core)
What about battery life?
The Geekbench 6 scores show that the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip is slightly faster than the Exynos 2600. In real-life usage, these differences matter less. The Exynos 2600 chip will still offer fast performance for the usual tasks a smartphone user performs, like texting, scrolling social apps, using the camera, navigating, and surfing the web. The faster Qualcomm chip may excel in more intensive workloads, like extended gaming sessions and video processing. However, a buyer would have to use the American and European Galaxy S26 or Galaxy S26 Plus versions side by side under the same workload to observe any performance differences.
Buyers may also wonder about battery life differences. Samsung offers similar estimates for the Galaxy S26 phones across markets. The Galaxy S26, Galaxy S26 Plus, and Galaxy S26 Ultra get a 31-hour estimate (for video playback). The battery capacities are 4,300 mAh, 4,900 mAh, and 5,000 mAh, respectively. Independent reviewers that run identical battery life tests across devices offer different battery life estimates.
Tom’s Guide found that the Galaxy S26 Ultra can last 16 hours and 10 minutes in its 5G web browsing test with the screen brightness set at 150 nits. The Snapdragon Galaxy S26 Plus lasted for 13 hours and 13 minutes in the same test, while the Exynos model lasted for 11 hours and 28 minutes. Separately, Phone Arena has its own battery testing procedure that involves web browsing, video streaming, and gaming. Its results are relevant for comparing battery life for the Galaxy S26 Ultra (7 hours and 35 minutes) with battery life for the European Galaxy S26 Plus (7 hours and 22 minutes) and Galaxy S26 models (6 hours and 37 minutes). These results show that battery size rather than chip choice will impact battery life.
