While Android handsets are made by a huge range of manufacturers, for some, there are only two players in town: Google and Samsung. The former because it’s also the company behind the OS, making it a great showcase of the platform’s abilities, and the latter because it consistently produces some of the best phones around and leads in terms of market share.

Both the Samsung Galaxy S26 and Pixel 10 have already continued this tradition, with the former landing at the start of this year. But which of these Android flagships is the right one for you? Here, we’ll try to establish which is the best Android phone for your needs based on what we’ve experienced from both phones.

Galaxy S25 proved faster than the Pixel 10 in our tests, and Google’s chip has been absolutely decimated by the new Snapdragon 8 Elite 5 for Galaxy chipset that powers North American versions of the Galaxy S26.

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Pixel 10 (Tensor G5)

Samsung Galaxy S26 (Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy)

Geekbench single core

2,345

3,531

Geekbench multicore

6,581

10,7778

3DMark Wild Life Extreme Unlimited (score/fps)

3425 / 20.46 fps

7059 / 42.27 fps

It’s the same story with graphics testing, with the Snapdragon chip destroying the Tensor G5 in the 3DMark Wild Life Extreme Unlimited test. In fact, both the score and frame rate are more than double that of what the Pixel 10 managed to achieve.

Benchmarking tests don’t tell us everything about performance, but it’s still clear that Google is being left behind compared to phones running on Qualcomm’s chips.

It’s worth noting that the Galaxy S26 runs on an Exynos 2600 chip outside North America. We haven’t tested a phone with the Samsung-made chips, but we’re pretty confident the results will be significantly better than what the Pixel 10 produced.

Winner: Galaxy S26

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra. The base model doesn’t have quite as impressive a battery pack, with a 4,300 mAh battery compared to the Pixel 10’s 4,970 mAh.

As a result, the Galaxy S26 has shorter battery life. Samsung’s phone lasted an average of 11 hours 28 minutes, which is nearly 2 hours shorter endurance than the Pixel 10.

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Average Battery Life (Hrs:Mins)

Charging % in 15 minutes

Charging % in 30 minutes

Pixel 10

13:21

26%

52%

Galaxy S26

11:28

29%

57%

On the plus side, the Galaxy S26 phone recharges slightly faster, no doubt aided by that slightly smaller battery pack. Using a 45W charger, the Galaxy S26 regained 29% charge in 15 minutes and 57% in half an hour. The Pixel 10 managed a respective 26% and 52% in the same time.

It’s worth noting that the Galaxy S26 officially supports up to 25W charging speeds while the Pixel 10 is rated for 30W. Both support 15W Qi2 wireless charging, though only the Pixel 10 has the magnets built into the phone. As a result of that, the Pixel 10 doesn’t support reverse wireless charging anymore, while the Galaxy S26 does (at 4.5W speeds).

Winner: Pixel 10

Pixel 10’s Magic Cue and Samsung’s Now Nudge. But for the most part, if one phone offers one thing, you can be sure that an equivalent will be arriving on the other very soon — assuming it hasn’t already. The addition of Call Screening on Galaxy S26 is an excellent example of this.

Still, if you want to get really pedantic about things, Samsung might just offer a little bit more. From Bixby’s agentic abilities to Perplexity integration and early access to upgraded Google features like Circle to Search, it might just have the edge in the AI department. But with everything always changing, that probably won’t be the case for long.

The same is true when discussing the rest of the software. Both phones run on Android 16, and despite the visual differences, there isn’t a whole lot of difference in how they operate. Both Google and Samsung offer the same seven years of software updates, covering Android and security patches.

Which makes deciding between them incredibly difficult, with the flip side being that you’re getting a solid software experience no matter what happens. Though I’ll admit, it is nice for Pixel owners to always know they’re getting the latest Android updates right away, and not having to contend with Samsung’s inconsistent release schedule.

Winner: Draw

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