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Galaxy S21 support is winding down, what it means for your security updates

Samsung’s update pages no longer show the Galaxy S21 on monthly or quarterly tracks, here’s how to stay safer and decide when to upgrade.

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A photo being viewed on the Galaxy S21 Ultra.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Samsung just changed the outlook for Galaxy S21 security updates. Its published security update pages no longer place the Galaxy S21, S21 Plus, or S21 Ultra on the monthly or quarterly tracks, which is a strong sign the phones are no longer in the standard patch cycle.

Nothing breaks overnight. But you should stop assuming a fresh patch is coming on a predictable schedule, especially if you use banking apps, store two factor codes, or sign into work accounts on your phone.

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The timing fits the S21’s original roadmap. The lineup launched in 2021 and has already received the four major Android OS upgrades it was promised, including Android 15 with One UI 7 in the first half of 2025. The report also notes the last regular security patch arrived late last year.

The S21 is off the standard track

The biggest shift is expectation. Phones on a monthly list get steady security maintenance. Phones on neither list move into a watch-and-wait phase, where fixes are more likely to land only when a serious issue forces the issue.

That can be easy to ignore because your S21 will feel the same day to day. Still, leaving the schedule usually means longer gaps between the quiet fixes that reduce exposure over time.

Why this matters for your daily use

For most owners, the downside is uncertainty. If you handle payments, store sensitive files, or rely on your phone for work logins, longer gaps between patches raise the stakes for basic account hygiene, good passwords, app updates, and careful permissions.

It also clears up a common assumption. Samsung’s newer seven-year update policy starts with the Galaxy S24 series, so it doesn’t extend the S21’s support window.

Your next move if you keep it

If you’re keeping your S21, make sure you’re on the latest update available today, then tighten the basics that limit damage from account takeovers. Use a strong screen lock, keep apps updated, and remove anything you don’t use anymore. Do it now.

If you’re thinking about upgrading, you don’t need to panic buy a new flagship. Match the move to your usage, check out the best Samsung phones out now. Heavy account and work access favors a newer phone with a predictable patch track. Lighter use buys you time if you stay disciplined and check Samsung’s update pages periodically.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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