Mark your calendars: Qualcomm has locked in September 22-24, 2026 for this year’s Snapdragon Summit, returning once again to Maui, Hawaii. It’s the company’s flagship event, and all signs point to it being the launchpad for the silicon that will define next year’s premium Android phones.
The headline acts are expected to be the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 and its beefier sibling, the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 Pro. Both are tipped to arrive on a 2nm manufacturing process — a meaningful node jump that typically translates into better efficiency and higher sustained performance. In a market where flagship chips increasingly live or die on thermals and battery life, that shift matters.
Qualcomm hasn’t been sitting quietly waiting for September, though. Earlier this month it pulled the wraps off the Snapdragon Reality Elite Platform, unveiled on June 17, 2026 at Augmented World Expo. Billed as the company’s next-generation XR platform for spatial computing, it’s built to drive both high-performance all-in-one video-see-through (VST) headsets and lightweight tethered optical-see-through (OST) glasses.
The numbers are where it gets interesting. Reality Elite packs up to 48 TOPS of AI processing — enough headroom for the increasingly hungry on-device AI models that XR experiences now lean on. Compared with the Snapdragon XR2+ Gen 2, Qualcomm claims:
- up to 30% higher CPU performance
- up to 60% higher GPU performance
- up to 160% higher NPU performance
On the visual side, the platform supports 4.4K per eye at 90 FPS, the kind of resolution-and-framerate combination that keeps mixed-reality imagery sharp without the stutter that breaks immersion. That said, this is a platform aimed squarely at device makers rather than shoppers — there’s no consumer pricing, because you won’t buy the chip itself.
What ties these two stories together is the rhythm of Qualcomm’s year. The XR push in June and the mobile blockbusters teased for September show a company spreading its bets across the form factors it expects to matter — phones first, but headsets and smart glasses climbing fast behind them.
If history is any guide, the Maui summit will set the tone for the entire Android flagship calendar that follows. The first handsets running the 8 Elite Gen 6 family typically appear within weeks of the announcement, as Qualcomm’s launch partners race to be first out of the gate. For now, the spec sheets remain officially under wraps, but the date is set — and the move to 2nm gives this generation a genuine reason to pay attention.