Samsung’s foldable lineup is getting a shake-up, and the leaks now paint a fairly complete picture of the headline device: the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra (model SM-F976). This is the real successor to last year’s Z Fold 7 — Samsung has reportedly reworked its naming scheme, so the plain “Fold8” slot goes to a different, wider model while the Ultra carries the torch for the true flagship.
Nothing here is official yet. The specs below come from FCC filings, supply-chain sources and corroborated reports, with the unveiling set for July 22, 2026 and availability expected in early August. Pre-orders are tipped to open the same day as the reveal.
Start with the camera, because that’s where the biggest jump happens. The Fold 8 Ultra is said to pack a 200MP main sensor, a 50MP ultrawide — a substantial leap from the 12MP unit on the Fold 7 — and a 10MP telephoto with 3× optical zoom. That’s the kind of imaging stack you’d expect from a slab flagship, now crammed into a device that folds in half.
Under the hood, expect the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy paired with up to 16 GB of RAM. Battery capacity grows to 5,000mAh (up from 4,400mAh on the Fold 7), with 45W wired charging to top it back up faster.
The folding display also gets attention where it matters most. Samsung is reportedly using a dual-layer UTG with a laser-drilled metal support plate, a structural tweak that should cut crease visibility by roughly 20% compared to the Z Fold 7. Anyone who has stared at the fold line on a previous-gen device will appreciate that one.
Pricing — and these are leaked estimates, so treat them accordingly — reportedly looks like this:
- 256GB: US$1,999
- 512GB: US$2,279
- 1TB: US$2,699–US$2,799
That keeps the Fold 8 Ultra firmly in ultra-premium territory, which fits the new name. The bigger question is whether the 200MP sensor, beefier battery and refined hinge add up to enough of a generational leap to justify the climb. We’ll know for sure once Samsung takes the stage on July 22 — until then, the leaks are doing a convincing job of building the hype.