Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Evergreens

Does the Samsung Galaxy S25 have a 120Hz display?

Add as a preferred source on Google
Samsung Galaxy S25 Plus and Galaxy S25 Ultra.
Samsung Galaxy S25 (left), Galaxy S25 Plus, and Galaxy S25 Ultra Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Galaxy S25 is Samsung’s newest compact flagship. It sports a more refined design and focuses on enhancing the experience with better AI features. Now Galaxy AI has had time to mature, you get plenty of useful features on the device that are touted to make your day-to-day experience better. The new Samsung Galaxy S25, S25 Plus, and Galaxy S24 Ultra don’t feature game-changing hardware upgrades and one such spec on the sheet is its display. You get the same “Dynamic AMOLED 2X Display” panel as the Galaxy S24, S24 Plus, and S24 Ultra. Here’s what it means in terms of refresh rate and quality.

Does the Samsung Galaxy S25 range have a 120Hz screen?

The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra with the Galaxy AI screen.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Samsung Galaxy S25 features a 6.2-inch screen, while you get 6.7-inch and 6.9-inch displays on the bigger Galaxy S25 Plus and Galaxy S25 Ultra flagship phones. While screen sizes vary in size, all of them have a Dynamic AMOLED 2X Display with a “Super Smooth refresh rate.”

Recommended Videos

This is Samsung’s marketing term to denote a 120Hz dynamic refresh rate on its smartphones. The answer is, yes, the Galaxy S25 trio has a 120Hz screen. It can go from 1Hz to 120Hz depending on the content on the screen. For instance, it can go down to 1Hz on Always’on display to save battery, and up to 120Hz when scrolling and gaming for a smooth experience.

This 120Hz refresh rate means, at its fastest, the Galaxy S25 range has twice the refresh rate of traditional 60Hz displays on older smartphones. But what does that really mean, and should you actually care? You absolutely should, and here’s why.

How does the 120Hz refresh rate benefit the Galaxy S25 range?

A timer running on the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

In short, the refresh rate measures how many times the static image on a screen changes each second (how many frames it shows) in Hertz (Hz). As mentioned, having a screen that switches between 1Hz and 120Hz refresh rate based on the on-screen content means you get a more efficient setup, since it’ll be able to turn down the refresh rate when viewing static images, or reading webpages. If you switch over to a game, or scroll down the page, no problem, it’ll ratchet up the refresh rate to match. A lower refresh rate means a lower power drain, so the screen being able to swap dynamically means your battery will end up lasting longer.

What does a higher refresh rate do in practice? The 120Hz refresh rate on the Galaxy S25 series means you get smoother scrolling, transitions, animations, and enhanced responsiveness on all three phones. It also contributes to less tearing and stuttering when watching videos. Plus, if you play games on your smartphone, you’ll notice less motion blur, more precise controls, and more responsive gameplay with a higher refresh rate display.

The Galaxy S25 still costs the same $799 as the Galaxy S24. Despite minimal upgrades, it holds its ground at that price against the Googe Pixel 9.

Prakhar Khanna
Prakhar Khanna is an independent consumer tech journalist. He contributes to Digital Trends' Mobile section with features and…
If you were missing Hourly Activity and Naps in Google Health, a new update brings them back
These features went missing after the recent redesign, and users noticed immediately.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Ever since Google rebranded the Fitbit app as Google Health, the app has been a work in progress. Version 5.02 is here to fix things, with features that shouldn't have been removed in the first place.

The two that most users will notice immediately are Hourly Activity and Naps, both of which had quietly disappeared from the redesigned app (via 9to5Google). 

Read more
This free app gives your photos the Game Boy Camera’s iconic look, no cartridge needed
Flashback is available for free on Android and iOS, and it offers additional controls like exposure and grain adjustment that the original hardware never had.
Game Boy Camera cartridge on pink background

The blocky, low-res photo that once lived only on your Game Boy screen can now come straight out of your phone's camera. A new camera app called Flashback can recreate the Game Boy Camera's signature look without requiring the original hardware, The Verge reports.

Built around the GB Operator

Read more
This ordinary-looking pen can record meetings and generate AI transcripts
Flowtica's AI pen records conversations while you take handwritten notes
Flowtica Scribe AI recording Pen

Meeting transcription tools have become increasingly popular, but most require a phone, laptop, smart glasses, or a dedicated recorder. Flowtica is taking a different approach with the Scribe, a pen that can write on paper while simultaneously recording conversations and using AI to generate meeting notes and action items.

It looks like a pen, but it's really a meeting recorder

Read more