Updated Dec. 6 with more details of release date and pricing, panel thicknesses and comparisons to other thin and folding phones.
The next Samsung smartphone has been revealed. The Galaxy Z TriFold is a folding phone with two hinges so its internal screen opens out to be the size of a 10-inch tablet. Here’s when it will arrive and how much it’ll cost, plus details of why it’s different from other rival folding and super-thin phones. Oh, and whether TriFold is the right name.

Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold
SamsungSamsung Galaxy Z TriFold Release Date: Friday, Dec. 12
That’s the date that the new phone will go on sale. But there’s a catch: it’s in South Korea only, where it will be available to view from Dec. 9 in 20 stores.
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It will be available more widely, but no date has yet been attached. “Samsung Electronics will launch the ‘Galaxy Z Trifold’ in Korea on the 12th and then launch it sequentially to global markets such as China, Taiwan, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States,” Samsung said in a newsroom post.
No exact date yet, then, though I’d be astonished if it was before 2026. A report from Bloomberg comments that it will ship in very limited volume.
Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold open
Samsung
And a more recent update from Tom’s Guide claimed that while no actual date has been set, there is at least a clue. “As for the U.S., Samsung says it’ll be coming sometime in Q1 2026,” it reported.
“Given that January or February could also see the next Galaxy Unpacked event for the Galaxy S26 series, it’ll be interesting to see if Samsung will wait to release the TriFold later in Q1, just to make room in between releases,” it went on.
Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold Price
“ ‘Galaxy Z Trifold’ is released as a single model of ‘Crafted Black’ color in 512GB storage with 16GB memory, and the price is 3,594,000 won,” Samsung said, which is around $2,450.
That’s not cheap, but there’s a lot in the box, it seems. “The ‘Galaxy Z Trifold’ package includes ‘Carbon Shield Case’, ’45W Fast Charger’, and ‘Data Cable’ as basic components,” Samsung added.
It’s worth adding that the U.S. price is not expected to be an exact translation of the Korean price and there have been rumors that the price could be as high as $2,999. We’ll see. I suspect Samsung will pick a price that’s high, to confirm this is a premium product, but not impossible.
As to what else to expect from the phone, there are neat details in the Bloomberg report. “At its thinnest point, the TriFold measures 3.9 millimeters (0.15 inch). Inside, it contains a 5,600 milliamp-hour battery, marking the largest capacity that Samsung has used in a folding phone so far. The battery provides as much as 17 hours of consecutive video playback with the TriFold display fully open,” it reads. You can also read details about the phone on Prakhar Khanna’s post here on Forbes.
The phone will close by folding left and right parts in to the middle — so not a Z shape at all. Mind you, two folds doesn’t sound like “trifold” to me either. I fear it’s too late for sensible minds to get hold of this and rename phones with two folds as Bifold, but the name is irksome, to say the least, or am I just being pedantic?
Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold
Samsung
“In a brief hands-on session, the TriFold was intuitive to use. If the user begins to fold it incorrectly — by closing the right side before the left, for instance — the phone quickly warns them with on-screen notifications and physical vibrations,” Bloomberg comments.
More than that, we know that the Galaxy Z TriFold will have three cameras, matching the Galaxy Z Fold7, meaning the new phone will include a 200MP main camera.
And it will be the first major competition to Huawei’s Mate XT — which does fold in the shape of a Z so perhaps has a better claim to the name, or am I being pedantic again? Huawei’s phone is fractionally thinner when folded, measuring 12.8mm against Samsung’s 12.9mm.
But Samsung’s phone pulls off an interesting trick. Although it’s thicker than the Z Fold7 (which only folds once, not twice) which is 8.9mm when folded, it’s only a little thicker than last year’s Z Fold6 which was 12.1mm when closed. To add an extra fold but less than a millimeter of thickness in total is noteworthy.
It seems that the Z Trifold will also lack something the Z Fold6 had, which is compatibility with the S Pen stylus. The Z Fold7 doesn’t support the S Pen either, so this may not be a surprise.
The three panels on the TriFold (so, should that be called TriPanel? Okay, I’ll get off the pedantic tip now) are all different thicknesses. The thinnest is 3.9mm thick, the central one is 4.2mm and the third is 4mm.
The thinnest has a physical SIM card slot, which is interesting because the iPhone Air does not, and it’s thicker. Reports suggest the predicted iPhone Fold will not find room for a SIM card tray either.
Samsung has also said that the fold is robust and that the phone undergoes a lot of testing, specifically “a 200,000-cycle multi-folding test, equivalent to folding the device approximately 100 times a day for five years.”.