Samsung is working on a new Galaxy Ring, and the most important upgrade may come from what happens after the ring collects health signals in the background.
Hon Pak, who leads Samsung’s digital health team, told Forbes that a next generation ring is in development. Samsung hasn’t announced the name, launch timing, price, regions, or specs, so Galaxy Ring 2 remains a useful shorthand rather than a confirmed product name.
The clearest direction is continuous monitoring. Samsung wants wearables that learn a person’s normal patterns over time, then flag changes early enough to push someone toward a checkup or a better daily habit.
How could the ring spot trouble
Samsung is already building health features around personal baselines. One upcoming Samsung Health tool uses seven nights of sleep data to establish a user’s norm, drawing from signals such as heart rate, respiratory rate, blood oxygen, and other overnight readings. After that, it can watch for changes large enough to deserve attention.

A smart ring fits that job neatly. It’s easier to keep on overnight than a watch for many people, and sleep is where Samsung is already looking for quieter health signals.
Samsung also plans a Heart Health Score that connects sleep, nutrition, activity, and stress with cardiovascular risk. The company hasn’t said which features the next ring will support on its own, so the safer read is that Galaxy Ring 2 will feed a wider Samsung Health system.
Why would AI carry the load
Pak framed the smart ring market as a software race, because today’s competing rings are working with broadly similar sensors. That puts pressure on Samsung Health to turn raw readings into guidance people trust.
Samsung can pull context from several places. A ring can capture passive signals, a Galaxy Watch can add richer measurements, and SmartThings can bring in habits around sleep, food, and routines at home.
The hard part is restraint. Health nudges can’t feel like another notification feed, or users will tune them out before the system earns confidence.

What happens after the hardware tease
Samsung’s next step appears to be AI coaching that adapts to the person using it. Pak described a future system that learns timing, tone, and motivation style, then nudges people toward better sleep or activity habits.
Compatibility is still open. Today’s Galaxy Ring is tied to Samsung’s Android world, but Pak hinted that upcoming news may address where the product line goes next.
For now, Galaxy Ring 2 is worth watching for one test above all, whether Samsung can turn passive health data into advice you’ll act on before the signals become easy to ignore.