One UI
One UI 8.5 Beta 4 goes live in the US, Asia and Europe, adding February 2026 patch, Direct Voicemail
Moments after the initial drop in Korea, Samsung has now expanded the One UI 8.5 Beta 4 to the Galaxy S25 series in the US, Germany, UK, and India. The latest firmware update adds February 2026 security patch and Direct Voicemail feature.
For Galaxy S25 users, One UI 8.5 Beta 4 feels like a turning point. The software is settling down, the security patch is current, and Direct Voicemail (via TarunVats) finally brings Samsung’s calling experience up to par with its biggest rivals.
February 2026 security patch
Build ZZAL brings the February 2026 security patch to the Galaxy S25, S25+, and S25 Ultra. That’s the February 5, 2026, security level, for those tracking patch currency. The download weighs in at approximately 1.5 gigabytes, via AndroidFlatform.
Direct Voicemail
Direct Voicemail is the headline feature, offering real-time transcription of incoming voicemails with the ability to jump into the call mid-message. Think of it as Samsung’s version of Pixel’s call screening, except it happens after you’ve already declined the call.
The caller leaves their message. You read it as text, live, on your screen. If it’s important enough, you pick up and interrupt them. If it’s another spam call, let it finish and delete it. The implementation feels polished from early reports.

Image translated from Korean to English using Google Translate
What’s encouraging is the execution speed. One UI 8.5 development has moved faster than previous point releases, and the beta quality has been surprisingly stable. That suggests Samsung’s internal development processes are maturing.
If you’re on the beta, update now. If you’re waiting for stable, you won’t be waiting much longer.
Related article:
BREAKING: Galaxy S25 users get One UI 8.5 Beta 4 with major fixes
One UI
One UI 9 Watch is coming in late July, but Vascular Load feature will stop in the US
Samsung is set to launch the One UI 9 Watch platform with the Galaxy Watch 9 and Watch Ultra 2 in late July 2026. The official release will remove a feature from the “Labs” tab on your device, affecting users in the US.
In a Samsung Health notice shared by @theonecid, Samsung made two important announcements. First, One UI 9 Watch will be available in late July; second, US users will no longer be able to use the Vascular Load feature.
Vascular Load stopping in the US
Samsung Health has always had Vascular Load as a Labs feature. Meaning it always remained an experiment, rather than general availability. The company is now discontinuing it, and the next major upgrade is the medium.
Once disabled, you won’t be able to access your Vascular Load data. However, there’s still time to gain access to your data and save it offline. Samsung has shared a step-by-step guide to secure your Vascular Load data.
- Samsung Health > More options > Settings > Download personal data.
New Blood Pressure trend feature
Samsung also announced the Galaxy Watch 9 and Watch Ultra 2 will bring a new Blood Pressure trend feature. The company has also shared details about how the feature will work and how users will benefit.
The Blood pressure trend feature will check your blood pressure periodically to show you a trend over time. It will also give you tips to help support healthy habits.
Like Blood Pressure calibration, the new trend feature may also require an initial setup.
You will need to use a blood pressure cuff to set up your Galaxy Watch before you start tracking your blood pressure trend.
Samsung has started teasing the upcoming foldables and smartwatches. After a series of cryptic teasers, a Samsung Members app ad accidentally revealed the official launch date of the upcoming phones and wearables.
One UI
Android 17-based One UI 9.0 testing on these 27 Samsung devices
Samsung is internally testing Android 17-based One UI 9.0 software for various Galaxy devices. This activity is running in parallel to the Open Beta Program. The public beta update is exclusively available for the Galaxy S26 series.
One UI 9.0 update will bring Android 17 to Samsung devices. The official debut is set for late July, while the rollout will take a few more weeks to start. Samsung will first prioritize new devices rather than sharing software advancements.
Samsung picked mid-May as the timeline to announce and start the One UI 9 Beta Program. As of the third week of June, the company has already rolled out three Beta builds to Galaxy S26 users in six countries around the world.
Open Beta Program
- Galaxy S26
- Galaxy S26+
- Galaxy S26 Ultra
Samsung will keep the Beta Program limited to its latest flagship devices. Meanwhile, the internal testing has already started for plenty of models. It includes phones from the S series, foldables from the Z series, and tablets from the Tab series.
What’s more, some Galaxy A Series phones have also joined the party. The internal testing is expanding to unexpected models, including the budget ones. The pace is fast, and Samsung is gearing up for a faster rollout.
Internal Testing Stage
Galaxy S Series
- Galaxy S25
- Galaxy S25+
- Galaxy S25 Ultra
- Galaxy S24
- Galaxy S24+
- Galaxy S24 Ultra
- Galaxy S24 FE
- Galaxy S23
- Galaxy S23+
- Galaxy S23 Ultra
Galaxy Z Series
- Galaxy Z Fold 7
- Galaxy Z Flip 7
Galaxy A Series
- Galaxy A57
- Galaxy A17
- Galaxy A07
- Galaxy A56
- Galaxy A16
- Galaxy A55
- Galaxy A35
- Galaxy A25
- Galaxy A54
- Galaxy A34
- Galaxy A24
Galaxy Tab S Series
- Galaxy Tab S11
- Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra
- Galaxy Tab S10+
- Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra
The list is broad enough yet incomplete. Samsung will add even more Galaxy models to its internal software testing streak. Beta Program may open for more users, but it would only happen after the Summer Galaxy Unpacked event.
Updated on July 1, 2026.
One UI
One UI 9.0 improves accessibility with 6 new features
Samsung aims to improve the One UI 9.0 with new optimizations that target a smoother user interface and new accessibility features that are core to its experience. Targeting accessibility to strengthen support for all Galaxy smartphone users, aiding visibility, access, and optimizations.
Updates through One UI 8.5 already bring a range of accessibility features, but One UI 9.0 goes a step further, giving this segment its biggest overhaul in the past few years. That includes a couple of new options that target text, keyboard, mouse, gestures, talkback, and more.
Here’s everything you need to know about the new accessibility features in the latest update.
Text Spotlight
Text spotlight – You can expand and highlight text with a tap to make it easier to read. With its options, you can customize the size, colors, scrolling speed, and hover window. You can also add the new text spotlight shortcut for instant access.
Physical keyboard shortcut
You can now directly turn on or off accessibility features from your physical keyboard without touching your Galaxy device. It supports selection from talkback, to visibility, and key controls.
Control the mouse with the keyboard
This new addition will let you control the mouse with the keyboard. Besides movement, the keyboard will also support mouse clicks, click and hold, as well as scroll actions.
Replace swipe with a single tap
Samsung has restructured the menu for this feature and made it easy to find in the settings.
Talkback updates
Talkback has been a good companion for many users, and it’s getting new upgrades, including:
- Customizable braille display commands
- Dynamic web page browsing improvements
- Talkback gives keyboard hints while using the physical accessory
Select to speak
One major feature in this update comes with select to speak, which lets you tap specific items on your screen to hear them read or described aloud instead of reading everything. It’s like tap to highlight the text, but for voice readout.
Rollout
These new accessibility features are currently available with One UI 9.0 beta and will expand for all users with the stable release later this year.
One UI
Which Samsung phones will not get One UI 9.0 (Android 17)
Samsung One UI 9.0 is more of a refinement release rather than a massive transformation for Galaxy phones. The new software is available in the Beta Program, and the company is expected to officially reveal it at the July Unpacked.
The software update mechanism is a crucial document for smartphone owners. Samsung is one of the biggest examples, which is teaching its rival brands (not Apple and Google, of course) how transparent they should be.
As of June 2026, Samsung has two kinds of software strategies for all Galaxy devices:
- Seven years of updates – Flagship/premium Galaxy devices
- Six years of updates – All the remaining Galaxy devices
Samsung’s 7-year update strategy came into effect in 2024 and is applicable to Galaxy S24 and newer lineups. However, the previous software guarantees had mixed tiers for entry-level, budget, mid-range, and premium devices.
Take Galaxy S22 and S23, for example; the two lineups are eligible for four years of software updates, while the Galaxy S24 series is promised for seven years.
Here is a tentative list of devices to be excluded from the official rollout:
Flagship phones ineligible for One UI 9
- Galaxy S22 Series: Galaxy S22, S22+, and S22 Ultra
- Galaxy Z Fold 4 and Z Flip 4
- Galaxy S21 FE 5G (Note: The standard S21 series will have already stopped at an earlier version like One UI 7).
Non-flagship devices
- Galaxy A73 5G
- Galaxy A53 5G
- Galaxy A33 5G
- Galaxy A14 (both LTE and 5G variants)
- Galaxy A06 LTE (The 5G variant may qualify, but the LTE build is capped).
- Galaxy A05 / A05s
- Galaxy M53 5G / F53 5G
- Galaxy M33 5G / F33 5G
- Galaxy M14 / F14
Note: This is not a confirmed list.
With Samsung maintaining two tiers for a few years now, things will settle when older lineups get ousted from the stream. Still, detecting which device is eligible and ineligible isn’t too tricky, thanks to Samsung’s commitments.
One UI
These Samsung Galaxy devices received One UI 8.5 official update
On May 6, 2026, Samsung announced the rollout of the One UI 8.5 stable update for Galaxy devices. The software remained in Beta testing phase for over five months. Well, the second wave of rollout was crazy enough, spreading blazingly fast.
The day Samsung began One UI 8.5 stable rollout, plenty of Galaxy devices received the update. The availability in Wave 1 was limited to South Korea. However, the Wave 2 rollout covered millions of Galaxy devices on May 11, 2026.
As part of One UI 8.5, Samsung is bringing select AI features from the Galaxy S26 series across the Galaxy ecosystem. The update focuses on enhancing communication and creative experiences on Galaxy mobile phones and tablets.
These devices have received the Stable update first – Wave 1
- Galaxy S25, S25 Plus and S25 Ultra
- Galaxy S25 Edge
- Galaxy S25 FE
- Galaxy Z TriFold
- Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Z Flip 7
- Galaxy Z Flip7 FE
Major expansion started on May 11
Samsung devices that have received the update on May 6 in South Korea have received the OTA in the Global markets. The second phase of rollout has also begun in South Korea, before hitting the worldwide market.
The first wave targets flagship models released in 2025, including the Galaxy S25 series, Z7 series foldables, and the TriFold phone. The second wave aimed at the Galaxy S24 series and the Z6 series foldables in South Korea.
In its Global press release, Samsung confirmed that the update is gradually starting to arrive on the Galaxy S25 series, S25 FE, S24 series, S24 FE, Z Fold7 and Z Flip7, Z Fold6 and Z Flip6, Galaxy Tab S11 series, and Tab S10 series.
These devices have received the Stable update – Wave 2
- Galaxy S24, S24+ and S24 Ultra
- Galaxy S24 FE
- Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Z Flip 6
- Galaxy Z Fold SE
Wave 3 of One UI 8.5 update expansion
- Galaxy S23, S23+ and S23 Ultra
- Galaxy S23 FE
- Galaxy Z Fold 5 and Z Flip 5
- Galaxy A56 and A36
- Galaxy Tab S11 and Tab S11 Ultra
5th wave of One UI 8.5 expansion
Galaxy A Series
- Galaxy A17 and A07
- Galaxy A56, A36, A26, A16, and A06
- Galaxy A55, A35, A25, and A15
- Galaxy A54, A34, and A24
Galaxy M Series
- Galaxy M07, M17 and M17e
- Galaxy M56, M36, M16, and M06
- Galaxy M55, M55s, M35, and M15
- Galaxy M54
Galaxy F Series
- Galaxy F17 and F70e
- Galaxy F56, F16, and F06
- Galaxy F55 and F15
- Galaxy F54 and F34
Galaxy Tab S/A/XCover/Active Series
- Galaxy Tab S9 series
- Galaxy Tab S9 FE series
- Galaxy Tab S10 series
- Galaxy Tab S10 Lite
- Galaxy Tab S6 Lite
- Galaxy XCover 7 and XCover 7 Pro
- Galaxy XCover 5 Pro
- Galaxy Tab A11 and A11+
- Galaxy Tab A9+
- Galaxy Tab Active 5 and P5o
Updated on June 17, 2026.
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