Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Samsung Pay gains new loyalty features, Masterpass integration, and more

Add as a preferred source on Google

Samsung Pay, Samsung’s eponymous answer to mobile payments competition from the likes of Apple (Apple Pay) and Google (Android Pay), is gaining a veritable bevy of new features. In an announcement timed to coincide with the Money 20/20 conference in Las Vegas, Samsung took the wraps off a redesigned mobile payments app, support for new countries, online payments, and integration with new merchant partners.

First up: Samsung Pay is coming to three new countries. The Seoul, South Korea-based company announced that by the end of this year, the service will launch in Malaysia, Russia, and Thailand, an expansion that’ll bring the total number of supported countries to 10. It comes on the heels of an international rollout earlier this year to Spain, Singapore, Australia, Brazil, Canada, and the United Kingdom.

Recommended Videos

The company also announced a partnership with Mastercard that will see online retailers which accept Masterpass, the payment processor’s express checkout service, extend that support to Samsung Pay later this year. That includes “hundreds of thousands” of merchants in 33 countries, Samsung said.

The integration is holistic. When you go through an online checkout with Samsung Pay using an attached Mastercard debit or credit card, you won’t have to fill out form data — your saved shipping and billing details will automatically populate the relevant fields. Masterpass support extends to mobile phones and tablets in addition to desktops and laptops — the experience is consistent across devices. And it uses Masterpass’s tokenization to encrypt transactions, meaning payments made online send a token in lieu of a debit or credit card number, and authenticate with the fingerprint sensor built into Samsung’s mobile devices.

“When we introduced online payments in South Korea last year, the service was well received by the market. Online payments accounted for more than 25 percent of the 2 trillion won in processed transactions, demonstrating that consumers may be actively looking for solutions to make their online experiences faster, simpler, and secure,” Samsung Pay’s vice president, Thomas Ko, said in a statement. “By partnering with Masterpass in the U.S. and rolling out online payments globally, we will simplify the online transaction experience by eliminating the need for customers to fill out tedious online checkout forms, remember long passwords, or fumble for their wallets.”

That isn’t Samsung’s only current mobile payments bombshell. In November, Samsung Pay will gain a new in-app tab, Deals, that will provide a means of locating and redeeming discounts for nearby restaurants and stores. Also in November, Samsung Pay users will gain the ability to make in-app purchases with cards loaded to their account, initially with partners Velocity, Raise, Hello Vino, Wish, and Touch of Modern. Samsung is also partnering with Capital One and USAA to support over 500 banks and credit unions “representing over 85 percent of the U.S. debit card and credit card market.”

It’s all part of Samsung’s “Payment+” strategy, which aims to transition Samsung Pay from a payments platform to a one-stop mobile coupon, loyalty, and ticketing stop. Starting next month, Samsung Pay will gain the ability to store more than 4 million membership and loyalty cards from retailers like Safeway, CVS, Walgreens, Starbucks, Macy’s, and Sears. And it will rewards users with savings for sharing purchases on social media and meeting certain purchase thresholds.

“We decided that [Samsung Pay] will be more than just payments,” Ko told VentureBeat. “We wanted to be closer to the lifestyle of the user.”

Kyle Wiggers
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Apple made Liquid Glass adjustable, which says plenty about Liquid Glass
The new slider is useful, welcome, and mildly hilarious after a year of Apple acting like transparent everything was the obvious future.
Text, Document, Business Card

Apple’s big glassy software future now comes with a way to make it less glassy. In iOS 27, users can adjust the translucency of the Liquid Glass effect, while macOS Golden Gate adds its own Liquid Glass controls under System Settings.

Liquid Glass is still alive across Apple’s platforms, still shimmering through menus and panels, still doing the elegant UI trick Apple clearly likes. The big visual bet has already earned a dimmer switch. After a year of treating translucency like the obvious next step, WWDC’s most revealing design update may be the one that lets people dial it back.

Read more
Galaxy S25 users are finally getting some missing One UI 8.5 AI features
Prioritize Notifications, Summarize Notifications and File Summaries arrive on Galaxy S25, but Now Nudge is still missing
samsung-galaxy-s25

Last month, Samsung rolled out the One UI 8.5 update to the Galaxy S25 series, but users quickly noticed that several AI features available on the Galaxy S26 series were missing. The omissions sparked confusion and frustration, with many Galaxy S25 owners questioning what Samsung’s long-term software support actually covers.

Now, Samsung seems to be fixing part of the issue with the June 2026 update, which reportedly adds three of the missing Galaxy AI features to the Galaxy S25 series. The update has started rolling out in South Korea and includes the June 2026 Android security patch. The firmware has the build number S938NKSUACZF1.

Read more
One UI 9 will finally give Samsung phones a feature most Androids have had for years
The long-missing network speed indicator is finally showing up in One UI 9
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra smartphone in blue color.

Samsung is already a few weeks into testing One UI 9 with Galaxy S26 beta users, and a new feature spotted in the latest build feels long overdue. It is the network speed indicator, a simple status bar tool so common on other Android phones that it is surprising Galaxy phones have gone this long without it.

You can find this feature even on budget Android phones from brands like OnePlus, Oppo, and Xiaomi. It shows real-time upload and download activity in the status bar while the phone is connected to Wi-Fi or mobile data, giving users a quick way to check whether their connection is actually moving data.

Read more