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Samsung’s One UI 9 beta brings Android 17 to the Galaxy S26

If you are running a Galaxy S26, you can now enroll in Samsung’s One UI 9 beta and try Android 17‑based features months before the stable rollout hits other Galaxy phones.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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May 13, 2026, 9:00 AM EDT
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Minimal One UI 9 promotional graphic featuring the white “One UI 9” wordmark centered on a soft blue-to-green gradient background.
Image: Samsung
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Samsung’s One UI 9 beta is Samsung’s first big Android 17–based step beyond the Galaxy S26’s launch software, and it is clearly aimed at making the phones feel more personal, more creative, and a lot harder to compromise from a security standpoint. For Galaxy S26 owners, this is less of a minor skin refresh and more of an early look at where Samsung wants its entire software experience to go over the next year – with Galaxy AI waiting just around the corner for the stable release later in 2026.

When Samsung first shipped the Galaxy S26 series earlier this year, it arrived with One UI 8.5 on top of Android 16, bringing a tighter Galaxy AI integration and a slightly more polished interface. That update was already a big deal for existing owners, with Samsung rolling out 8.5 as a “bridge” release across the Galaxy ecosystem through early and mid-2026. Now, just a few months later, Samsung is already looking ahead: One UI 9 beta is rolling out to S26 users in select markets, and it is built on Android 17 – Google’s next-generation platform that itself focuses heavily on creators, smarter multitasking, and deeper privacy controls.

That timing matters because it tells you how Samsung sees the S26 series: not just as the “launch phone” for One UI 8.5, but as the first wave of devices to test-drive Samsung’s Android 17 interpretation before it ships on the next flagship later this year. The company is being explicit about that roadmap in its press materials, saying the “full experience” of One UI 9 – complete with more advanced Galaxy AI features – will debut with an upcoming flagship and then expand outward, just as One UI 8 did in 2025 and 8.5 is doing now.

So, what does One UI 9 beta actually change on your Galaxy S26 right now? Samsung is pitching it around four pillars: creativity, customization, accessibility, and security. On the creativity side, Samsung Notes gets some of the most visible upgrades, with new decorative tapes and a broader range of pen line styles that make digital note-taking and journaling feel more like working with a physical notebook full of stickers, highlighters, and different pens. It is the sort of tweak that may sound small in a spec sheet, but if you use Notes as your daily planner or sketch pad, these tools can quietly change how “fun” and expressive the app feels.

There is also a smart bit of cross-app integration: the Contacts app now links directly into Samsung’s Creative Studio, so you can design personalized profile cards without bouncing between multiple apps. That fits nicely with the broader Android 17 direction, where Google is pushing more creator-friendly workflows, from new editing tools to better media handling, and One UI 9 is essentially Samsung’s take on making those underlying capabilities feel cohesive in day-to-day use.

The other big touchpoint for everyday users is the Quick Panel – that slide-down shade you live in when you are changing brightness, tweaking volume, or managing media playback. In One UI 9 beta, Samsung gives you more control over the layout, letting brightness, sound, and the media player behave more like independent widgets with adjustable sizes rather than fixed-position residents of the shade. That pairs nicely with some of Android 17’s under-the-hood UI work, including more granular controls and improved system-wide animations, even if Samsung’s skin hides most of Google’s stock visual language.

This matters for the S26 series in particular because the phones already have fast 120Hz AMOLED panels and powerful chipsets – Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy on the Ultra and Exynos 2600 on the S26 and S26 Plus – so minor UI friction is often what you actually notice, not raw performance. Giving users the ability to tune the Quick Panel and reduce the number of swipes or taps for common actions is one of those quality-of-life changes that makes the phone feel “new” longer than a one-time benchmark bump does.

Accessibility is another area where One UI 9 beta feels more thoughtful than flashy. Samsung has added an adjustable Mouse Key speed, which makes cursor control smoother when you are using accessibility tools or external pointing devices. On top of that, Samsung is merging its own screen-reader features with Google’s into a combined TalkBack package, making it less confusing for users who previously had to juggle two overlapping sets of tools.

One clever addition is a feature called Text Spotlight. When you select text, it can pop that text up larger and clearer in a floating window, which is especially helpful for users with low vision or anyone who spends long stretches reading on a small display. In the context of Android 17, which already leans into customization and a more expressive Material 3-style interface, features like Text Spotlight are a sign that Samsung is trying to make accessibility feel like a first-class part of the UI instead of a buried settings menu.

Security, meanwhile, is where the Android 17 foundation and Samsung’s own security policies visibly converge. Google is using Android 17 to deepen privacy features across the board, from better intrusion logging and more robust Factory Reset Protection to network-level protections like Encrypted Client Hello to make it harder for observers to see what sites you are connecting to. One UI 9 beta builds on that with its own layer of defense against suspicious apps: when the system detects new high-risk apps, it now throws up explicit warnings, blocks installation or execution, and even recommends deletion, all delivered through Samsung’s security policy updates rather than waiting for a full firmware patch.

That last detail is important. Samsung’s security policy updates operate somewhat like a threat-intelligence feed: the company can update its internal list of risky apps and behaviors and push that out to devices independently of major OS updates. Combined with Android 17’s beefed-up logging and device-protection tools, it positions the Galaxy S26 and its siblings as more resilient against the sketchy apps and sideloaded APKs that still trip up many Android users – without forcing everyone to wait months for a big OTA just to fix one new vector.

Of course, all of this is still a beta. Samsung is limiting access to the One UI 9 program to Galaxy S26-series owners in a handful of markets at first: Germany, India, Korea, Poland, the UK, and the US. If you are in one of those regions, the way in is familiar: open the Samsung Members app, look for the One UI 9 beta banner, and enroll your device. Slots can be limited, and beta builds usually roll out in waves, so this still caters primarily to enthusiasts and early adopters rather than casual users who just want their phones to stay stable.

Samsung’s recent history suggests a fairly aggressive cadence once the beta program ramps up. With One UI 8 and 8.5, the company started on flagships, expanded to foldables and mid-range phones, and then moved out to tablets and rugged devices across the year, often outpacing many rivals on the Android side when it comes to update speed and longevity. The S26 series is already on that fast-track path, and getting One UI 9 beta this early underscores its role as Samsung’s software testbed – a device line where the newest OS and UI ideas land first before trickling across the Galaxy ecosystem.

That leaves the obvious question: if you own a Galaxy S26, should you install the One UI 9 beta? The honest answer depends on what kind of user you are. If your S26 is a mission-critical work device and you value stability above all else, beta software – especially major platform betas built on something as big as Android 17 – always carries some risk. There can be bugs, compatibility issues with banking or corporate apps, and the occasional battery drain that shows up out of nowhere between builds.

On the other hand, if you already like tinkering with your phone, you are comfortable backing up data, and you want to live on the leading edge of what the Galaxy software experience will look like later this year, One UI 9 beta on the S26 is where that future is being sketched out first. Between the more expressive Samsung Notes, the tighter integration with creative tools, the more flexible Quick Panel, and the layered accessibility and security upgrades, this feels less like a token “point-oh” bump and more like the start of Samsung’s Android 17 era – months before the next Galaxy flagship even hits store shelves.


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