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Samsung confirms a cool privacy screen upgrade for the Galaxy S26 series

Samsung's Galaxy S26 Privacy Display brings hardware-level privacy, using directional OLED pixels and One UI controls to keep sensitive content visible only to you.

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

Samsung has finally confirmed one of the most interesting and useful Galaxy S26’s new “Privacy Display” feature. We’ve been hearing about it for quite some time, as the initial rumors surfaced in the third quarter of 2025, but the company announced it earlier today with a newsroom post and a couple of videos.

“Samsung will soon unveil a new layer of privacy to shield your phone from shoulder surfing wherever you go,” writes the company. The “new layer of privacy” refers to a screen with variable visibility from different viewing angles.

What exactly is Samsung’s “Privacy Display”

Have you ever seen or used a privacy screen protector? They reduce the visibility of your screen when viewed from the sides. So, while you have a clear view of your phone’s screen, someone sitting next to you would either see nothing or a very dim version of it.

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Samsung has taken the same idea and integrated it deep within the screen’s hardware and One UI’s software.

On the hardware front, Samsung may have used the “Flex Magic Panel” (rumored for the Galaxy S26 Ultra), which uses directional OLED pixels that can change their emission pattern, to the extent that the screen is clearly visible to the person in front of it, but appears much darker from any other angle.

Remember, the technology works on the level of an individual pixel, as it plays a key role in the following software explanation. Samsung says the feature provides “multiple settings for adjusting visibility,” and that’s possible through its integration with One UI.

Based on how Samsung has described the feature, it should auto-activate for specific apps, or when you’re entering access details like passwords or PINs, or even for particular parts of the screen (such as notification pop-ups).

One UI should control Privacy Display at the pixel level

This is only possible when One UI recognizes the content on the screen, either through AI or by monitoring device activity, and applies a pixel-level adjustment to the required portion (the entire screen, password fields, notifications pop-ups, etc.).

We don’t have to wait to see the feature in action, as renowned tipster Ice Universe (via X) seems to have shared a picture of it in action. Notice how the notification pop-up isn’t visible when viewing the phone from the side.

Exclusive!

The privacy screen on the Samsung S26 Ultra goes far beyond a global privacy mode. It also supports partial, localized privacy control.

Here is how it works.

You can apply privacy protection to only a specific part of the screen, for example a message notification… pic.twitter.com/RWJPtR0qc8

— Ice Universe (@UniverseIce) January 28, 2026

However, the tipster also suggests that the feature may be available only on the Galaxy S26 Ultra. Since it looks like a hardware feature, it might not arrive on older Galaxy S models (including the Galaxy S25 or the Galaxy S24 series).

I’m interested in whether the “Privacy Display” affects the viewing angles of supported smartphones, and whether there’s an option to disable it entirely.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
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