One UI 9 Beta Opens for Galaxy S26 With Android 17 Security Controls

Samsung has started the One UI 9 beta for the Galaxy S26 series, putting its Android 17-based software in public testing ahead of a wider launch later in 2026. The program is available in the U.S. and several other markets through the Samsung Members app, but Samsung has not yet published a full stable-release schedule or a definitive eligibility list beyond the current beta hardware.
Gizmochina reports that Samsung will unveil the finished release alongside new foldables at Galaxy Unpacked on July 22. Samsung has confirmed the London event, scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. EDT, but has not named the products it will launch there or committed to a September rollout for older phones.

Futuristic smartphone displays Android 17 controls, surrounded by security, accessibility, creativity, and science icons.What is confirmed​

Per Samsung’s May 12 announcement, One UI 9 is currently limited to the Galaxy S26, S26+ and S26 Ultra beta program in Germany, India, Korea, Poland, the U.K. and the U.S. The company says the complete One UI 9 experience will arrive on upcoming Galaxy flagship devices later this year.
That distinction matters for the sprawling supported-device list circulating in roundup coverage. Samsung has not confirmed that every listed Galaxy S, Z, A, M, F, Tab and XCover model will receive Android 17. Update-policy math can make a reasonable forecast, but carrier variations, regional SKUs and product-specific support terms still determine the final list.
Owners of devices not in the S26 family should therefore treat any claimed eligibility as provisional until Samsung issues model-by-model rollout notices.

The beta changes​

The early build is a practical refinement rather than a wholesale redesign. Samsung has confirmed separate layout and sizing controls for brightness, sound and media components in Quick Panel, potentially making the pull-down interface easier to tailor around frequently used controls.
Samsung Notes adds decorative tape elements and more pen-line styles. Contacts gains a direct link to Creative Studio for profile cards, although Samsung notes that Creative Studio requires its separate app, a network connection and a Samsung account; availability can also vary by country, language and device.
Accessibility changes include adjustable Mouse Key speed, a unified TalkBack package combining functions previously split between Samsung and Google, and Text Spotlight, which presents selected text in a larger floating view.
The largest operational change is an expanded suspicious-app protection mechanism. Samsung says security-policy updates can identify high-risk apps, warn the user, block installation or execution, and recommend removal. The wording is important: it is a policy-driven security layer, not a substitute for Android patches, Samsung’s monthly security updates, or enterprise mobile-device management controls.

What users and admins should do​

The beta is suitable for enthusiasts with a spare or non-critical S26 device, not fleet deployment. Back up first, expect app and carrier-specific issues, and avoid installing it on devices used for authentication, business travel or essential work.
For everyone else, wait for the stable release and Samsung’s final supported-device list; the only confirmed public test route today is Samsung Members on the Galaxy S26 series.

References​

  1. Primary source: Gizmochina
    Published: 2026-07-13T08:42:03+00:00
  2. Related coverage: techradar.com
  3. Related coverage: samsung.com
  4. Related coverage: image-us.samsung.com
 

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