Samsung is already pulling the plug on the Galaxy Z TriFold, just about three months after its flashy debut, turning what was supposed to be a glimpse of the future into one of the fastest retreats in recent smartphone history. The $2,899 triple‑folding phone will stop selling first in South Korea, with US sales winding down as soon as Samsung clears remaining stock from shelves and its own experience stores.
On paper, the TriFold was peak Samsung: a phone that unfolded twice into a 10‑inch tablet, with a 6.5‑inch cover screen, minimized crease design, and a wild three‑cell 5,600mAh battery setup spread across the panels to power that huge canvas. It also packed serious hardware — Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy, 16GB RAM, up to 1TB storage, and a camera array headlined by a 200‑megapixel main sensor plus ultra‑wide and 3x telephoto — making it as much a “flex” device as a phone.
The problem is that this kind of flex comes with a price, literally and figuratively. At $2,899 in the US and around 3.59 million won in Korea, the TriFold sat firmly in tech‑trophy territory, never touching carrier shelves and selling only directly via Samsung in very limited quantities — reportedly just a few thousand units across Korea and the US. That positioning, combined with a niche use case, meant it was never really aimed at the average buyer; even early coverage framed it more as an engineering showcase than a serious mass‑market product.
There were also signs Samsung itself wasn’t fully convinced. The company kept distribution tight, skipped many markets, and its own site quietly shifted from promising restocks to simply listing the TriFold as “sold out,” even while a few units were still findable in select US Samsung Experience Stores. Reports and stress tests over the past months raised durability and complexity concerns around the dual‑hinge design and larger folding display, the exact kind of issues that become very expensive if something goes wrong at scale.
All of this makes the early discontinuation less of a shock and more of a strategic reset. Samsung gets the headlines and R&D learnings from shipping a triple‑fold to real customers, without committing to multi‑year support for a form factor that is still clearly experimental. Executives have already hinted that while a direct TriFold successor is undecided, some of its best ideas — like the wider tablet‑style aspect ratio and multitasking tricks — are likely to trickle down into future, more affordable Galaxy foldables that stand a better chance of surviving in the real world.
Related /
- Samsung’s tri-fold experiment is officially on sale in the US
- Samsung’s new Galaxy Z TriFold debuts as a tablet-sized phone with dual hinges
- Even at $2,500, Samsung is losing money on the Galaxy Z TriFold
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