Fresh renders of Samsung’s Galaxy S26 lineup have surfaced, offering an early look at how the company may reshape its flagship designs in 2026. The images, posted by SmartPrix, show the Galaxy S26 Pro, S26 Edge, and S26 Ultra—and they suggest that camera bumps are making a comeback across the range.
The Galaxy S26 Edge, which leaked last week, appears once again with a design that diverges from Samsung’s usual camera layout. Instead of the floating lenses that defined the S25, it features two vertically stacked cameras inside a module that spans nearly the full width of the phone’s back. The look is strikingly similar to what rumors have pointed to for Apple’s upcoming iPhone 17 Air—suggesting both companies are converging on the same full-width bar design.

The Galaxy S26 Pro keeps the overall shape of its predecessor but shifts away from the minimalist floating camera rings. Instead, it now uses a dedicated rectangular bump to house its triple-camera setup, a visual change that instantly separates it from the S25 generation.
At the top of the range, the Galaxy S26 Ultra also adopts a camera housing, this time with three vertically aligned lenses inside the module. A fourth camera and a laser autofocus sensor sit outside the bump, echoing the layout Samsung introduced on the Galaxy Z Fold 7 earlier this year. The Ultra’s render also shows softer, rounded edges, a design tweak that lines up with earlier whispers of Samsung moving away from the angular build of past Ultras.
All three phones maintain flat edges, consistent with the Galaxy S25 series, and SmartPrix claims the Pro will measure 6.7mm thick, the Edge just 5.5mm, and the Ultra 7.8mm. If accurate, the Edge could be Samsung’s slimmest large-screen phone yet, though the trade-offs in battery capacity remain to be seen.
For now, the details beyond design seem recycled from older leaks, so the renders are more about aesthetics than firm specifications. Samsung is expected to unveil the Galaxy S26 series in January 2026, which means we’re still months away from an official announcement—but plenty more leaks are almost guaranteed in the meantime.