Samsung’s cheapest big-screen Android tablet is finally coming to the U.S. — and for once, “cheap” doesn’t mean painfully compromised. The Galaxy Tab A11+ will go on sale January 8, 2026, with the Wi-Fi model starting at $249.99 for the 8GB RAM / 256GB storage configuration, and a 5G variant headed to carriers for folks who want mobile data.
On paper, it’s an interesting trade-off: Samsung keeps the price anchored to bargain territory but layers on some features you usually only see higher up the lineup. The Tab A11+ uses an 11-inch 1920×1200 TFT LCD with a 16:10 aspect ratio and a 90Hz refresh rate, which — in everyday use — makes scrolling and video feel far smoother than the 60Hz panels you normally get at this price. The chassis is the familiar minimalist Galaxy look, with a metal frame and a portable footprint that still gives you a roomy screen for shows, homework, or a little light drawing.
Inside there’s a MediaTek Dimensity 7300 system-on-chip built on a 4nm process, paired with up to 8GB of memory and 256GB of onboard storage (plus microSD expansion). That combination should handle routine multitasking, streaming, cloud-based productivity and even casual gaming without the lag that plagues many economy tablets — the Dimensity 7300 is a competent mid-range chip with four Cortex-A78 performance cores and four Cortex-A55 efficiency cores. Battery capacity sits at 7,040mAh with 25W wired charging, a sweet spot that promises comfortable all-day life under typical mixed use.
Samsung leaned into audio and everyday practicality: quad speakers tuned for Dolby Atmos and, notably, a 3.5mm headphone jack remain on the Tab A11+. That makes the tablet especially sensible for households where wired headphones still rule the roost (kids, travel, older earbuds), and it helps the device punch above its price when you want a decent streaming setup without an external speaker.
Cameras are modest but serviceable — an 8MP rear shooter and a 5MP front camera that can record 1080p — aimed at video calls, document scans, and the occasional snap rather than photography fans. Connectivity on the Wi-Fi model includes dual-band Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 5.3, while the 5G SKU adds cellular bands and full GPS support for navigation and location services. The Tab A11+ also supports Samsung DeX, which can flip the tablet into a laptop-ish, multi-window environment when paired with a keyboard or external display — a practical touch that nudges the A11+ from “entertainment slate” toward “secondary productivity device.”
Where the Tab A11+ really tries to differentiate itself is in software. It ships with Android 16 and One UI 8 out of the box — newer than many bargain competitors — and Samsung is touting a long run of updates. The company has committed to extended security and OS support for several mid-range devices, and the A11+ ships with promises that help it feel future-friendly rather than disposable. On top of that, Samsung’s push of AI features — Circle to Search and tight integration with Gemini (accessible via the power button) — brings a little of the flagship Galaxy AI experience down to the entry tier, making quick lookups, summaries and drafting tasks easier without needing a higher-end device.
That mix of hardware, software and promised longevity is what makes the Tab A11+ noteworthy: for families who need a communal streaming tablet, students who want a cheap but capable device for notes and web apps, or users who’ve been burned by short-lived “cheap” tablets in the past, Samsung’s A11+ positions itself as the anti-throwaway pick. DeX support and 8GB of RAM at this price mean it can serve as a credible secondary machine for document editing and email, especially when paired with a keyboard case and cloud apps.
That said, there are sensible caveats. It’s still a TFT LCD rather than OLED, so blacks and contrast won’t match Samsung’s premium Tab S line or an iPad with a superior panel. Performance will be plenty for most users, but power users who demand heavy photo or video editing, or those who want the smoothest possible gaming experience, will find the Tab S series or higher-end tablets a better fit. And while seven years of updates is an eye-catching number, buyers should check the fine print on whether that covers full OS upgrades or only security patches in later years — manufacturers sometimes split coverage between major OS updates and extended security support.
Put another way: the Tab A11+ is not trying to topple iPads or flagship Android slates. It’s trying to redefine what “cheap” can mean in 2026 — a sensible, long-lived tablet that doesn’t force buyers into painful compromises on screen smoothness, audio, or software longevity. For $249.99, that’s a compelling value proposition if you want a spacious, well-supported Android tablet for media, schoolwork, and light productivity.
If you’re shopping, consider how you’ll use the device day to day: pick the Wi-Fi model if it will live mostly at home on the couch, or the 5G version if you truly need untethered connectivity on the go. Also, budget for a keyboard case or decent microSD card if you plan to use it as a productivity device or to store a lot of media — the hardware is there to be useful, but accessories will determine how close the Tab A11+ gets to a small laptop replacement.
Samsung’s Galaxy Tab A11+ is a welcome reminder that entry-level hardware can still be thoughtfully engineered. It’s cheap by design, not by compromise — and for many buyers, that’s exactly the point.
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