One of the most useful Galaxy S26 Ultra features may not remain exclusive to the Ultra model for long. A new leak claims that Samsung is preparing to bring its Privacy Display technology to the entire Galaxy S27 lineup.
Recent rumors have revealed that Samsung is working on four Galaxy S27 series models, which include the standard Galaxy S27, the Galaxy S27+, the new Galaxy S27 Pro, and the Galaxy S27 Ultra. According to The Elec, all four of these will get Samsung Display’s Flex Magic Pixel technology as a standard feature.
Considering how barebones the updates felt during my time with the Galaxy S26, this could make the next-gen S series phones a lot more attractive.
The Ultra feature is going mainstream

Flex Magic Pixel is Samsung’s hardware-based privacy display technology. In normal mode, the screen behaves like a regular smartphone display with a wide viewing angle. Turn on privacy mode, and the display limits side visibility so the person directly in front can still read the screen, while people looking from the left or right have a much harder time seeing what is there.
This is a great alternative to the privacy screen guard options that usually involve clunky screen protectors. Those can make displays dimmer, grainier, or generally worse to use. Samsung’s approach is built into the OLED panel itself.
The Galaxy S26 Ultra was the first from Samsung to roll out with this feature, and if the leak is accurate, the Galaxy S27 family would bring it to people who do not want to buy the biggest and most expensive model just to get better screen privacy.
How this could really change the Galaxy S lineup

Samsung has spent years using the Ultra model as the place where the best hardware lives first. That strategy makes sense for upselling, but it also leaves regular Galaxy S buyers feeling shortchanged when genuinely useful features stay locked away. Privacy Display is different from a niche camera mode or a stylus integration. It helps with everyday use. Not only is it a handy feature, but it also helps Samsung devices stand out from the rest of the flagship smartphones.
Samsung has not confirmed the Galaxy S27 lineup or the privacy display rollout, so this should be treated as an early report. The Elec also notes that privacy display tech still has technical hurdles, especially around resolution, brightness, and power consumption. So for now, take this news with a pinch of salt.