Samsung is starting 2026 by quietly reworking the bottom of its device lineup: the Galaxy A17 5G and the Galaxy Tab A11+ are headed to U.S. stores in early January, with prices that make them hard to ignore — $199.99 for the A17 and $249.99 for the Tab A11+ — and specs that push features you used to only see in pricier phones and tablets down into the sub-$250 bracket.
What Samsung is selling here is simple and familiar: give people a taste of the Galaxy ecosystem without asking them to pay flagship money. The A17’s headline is the fact that it’s a nearly $200 phone with a 6.7-inch Super AMOLED display at 1080 × 2340 and a 90Hz refresh rate, a 5,000mAh battery with 25W charging, and a camera setup led by a 50MP OIS main sensor — specs that make it feel like a grown-up entry-level device rather than a stripped-down afterthought. The company is also promising durability (Gorilla Glass Victus, glass-fiber reinforced back and IP54 protection) and long-term software support: six generations of One UI and Android upgrades plus six years of security updates.

The Tab A11+ aims to pull the same trick on the tablet side: an 11-inch 90Hz panel, quad speakers with Dolby Atmos, and an internal configuration that starts at 8GB RAM / 256GB storage for the U.S. Wi-Fi model, with a microSD slot that accepts up to 2TB. Samsung positions the tablet as a household device — streaming, homework, casual productivity — and it ships with Android 16 and One UI 8, plus the usual Galaxy software perks such as Circle to Search and quick access to Gemini, which Samsung says bring more premium experiences to cheaper devices. The Tab A11+ will be available January 8 in Gray and Silver.

Those dates and price points are important because they tell you how Samsung plans to compete at the low end: carriers and retailers have a simpler pitch when they can point to straight, round numbers — $199.99 for a phone that supports sub-6GHz 5G and a 90Hz AMOLED, $249.99 for a solidly specced 11-inch tablet. Both devices will be carried by major U.S. carriers (AT&T, T-Mobile, Metro by T-Mobile, Verizon) and sold through Samsung’s own channels, which means they’ll show up in the usual promos and family-plan offers early in January.
If you’re sizing these up against alternatives, there are a few practical takeaways. First, the A17’s Exynos 1330 chipset plus 4GB / 128GB in the U.S. is conservative on paper, but Samsung’s software optimizations, the OLED display and the sizable battery make it a better everyday experience than many 60Hz, plastic-back budget phones. Second, the Tab A11+’s use of a mid-range MediaTek MT8775 (Dimensity-class) chip with a 7,040mAh battery and a quad-speaker setup gives it a clear edge over cheap generic Android tablets and makes it a plausible low-cost option for families who want a larger, more reliable screen than a phone — especially if you care about having more RAM and storage up front.
There are caveats, of course. On the phone side, 4GB of RAM is entry-level by 2026 standards and will limit heavy multitasking; the A17 is a starter phone, not a power user device. On the tablet side, the Tab A11+ uses an LCD rather than an OLED and tops out at a WUXGA 1920 × 1200 resolution, so it won’t match premium tablets for contrast or HDR. Still, in practice, those tradeoffs are the price of hitting those aggressively low retail tags — and Samsung’s decision to include strong software support and extra storage expandability makes the long-term ownership case stronger than it would be for a bargain bin device with one or two years of updates.
Historically, Samsung and carriers will bundle accessories or offer discounts during a device’s first quarter on sale; Samsung’s U.S. announcement already teases discounts on Galaxy Buds and Watch purchases for early buyers. If you want 5G on the tablet, there will be a cellular model offered via carriers. If you’re shopping for kids, older relatives, or as a secondary device for travel and media, these two launches give you a clear, wallet-friendly choice that won’t feel obsolete after a year — and that’s largely due to the extended update promises.
Samsung’s move is one part pricing strategy and one part brand engineering. By dragging higher-tier features like 90Hz displays, large batteries, and extended OS support into the sub-$250 range, the company is trying to make the “cheap” Galaxy device feel like a true entry point to the ecosystem rather than a one-year throwaway. For buyers who prioritize value and longevity over peak performance, the Galaxy A17 5G and Galaxy Tab A11+ are credible, well-rounded options that deserve a look when they arrive in early January.
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