Samsung has not said a word about the Galaxy Z Fold 8 yet, but at this point it barely needs to. Between a string of spec leaks, a batch of case renders that basically confirm the phone’s shape, and a teaser campaign that is already running, most of what matters about Samsung’s next foldable is on the table before the company has opened its mouth. The picture that has formed is a phone that gets meaningfully better in a few specific ways and stays stubbornly the same, or arguably worse, in one that a lot of buyers will notice immediately.
Here is everything the leaks point to so far, and why the gaps in this lineup might matter as much as the upgrades.
A launch event with a change of scenery
Samsung’s next Unpacked event is reportedly landing on July 22, and for the first time in years the company is skipping its usual rotation of San Francisco, New York, and Seoul in favor of London. Three foldables are expected to share the stage: the standard Galaxy Z Fold 8, a new Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide aimed at a tablet-style layout, and a Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra sitting at the top of the range. Pre-orders are expected to open the same day, with phones reaching buyers roughly two weeks later in early August.
Three foldables in one lineup is new territory even for Samsung, and it says something about how seriously the company is now taking the idea that “foldable” does not have to mean one shape or one price point.
The crease finally gets real attention
The single most requested fix for Samsung’s foldables has always been the crease running down the middle of the inner display, and this is the year Samsung Display appears to have actually done something about it. According to supply chain reporting, the panel heading into the Z Fold 8 uses a dual ultra-thin glass structure, with a layer of UTG placed on both the top and bottom of the panel instead of just the top. Samsung has also reworked the adhesive layer between the OLED panel and the glass to reduce stiffness, giving the screen more give when it folds, and the backplate reportedly uses laser-drilled micro perforations to spread stress more evenly across the hinge area.
Put together, Samsung Display’s own engineering notes point to roughly a 20 percent reduction in crease depth and visibility compared with the Z Fold 7. That is not the crease-free display foldable fans have been asking for since the original Galaxy Fold, but it is the largest single improvement to the screen since Samsung started shipping these phones, and it is the kind of change you would actually notice within the first five minutes of using the phone.
What the spec sheet is shaping up to look like
Individual leaks do not always agree on every number, but a consistent picture has emerged across enough sources to treat the following as close to confirmed:
- Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy, the same chip family powering the Galaxy S26 Ultra
- A 7.6-inch main foldable display and a 5.5-inch cover display, both QHD+ resolution at up to 120Hz
- A battery jump from the Z Fold 7’s 4,400mAh cell to roughly 5,000mAh, paired with 45W wired charging
- A body that is slightly thinner and about 5 grams lighter than last year’s model despite the bigger battery
- A 200MP main camera carried over from the Z Fold 7, now joined by an upgraded 50MP ultrawide sensor
The Z Fold 8 Wide variant tells a slightly different story on cameras. Rather than inheriting the standard model’s setup, leaks point to a dual 50MP system, a 50MP main sensor plus a 50MP ultrawide, with no dedicated telephoto lens at all. Both sensors reportedly support autofocus and 8K video at 30 frames per second, so image quality on paper should still be solid, but anyone who leaned on the Fold line’s zoom for travel photos or reading distant signage will feel that omission the moment they reach for it.
The feature that might be missing from all three phones
The most talked about gap in the leaks so far has nothing to do with cameras or batteries. It is Privacy Display, the screen mode Samsung introduced on the Galaxy S26 Ultra that sharply dims the picture when viewed from an angle, so the person sitting next to you cannot casually read your messages over your shoulder. It has quickly become one of the more genuinely useful additions Samsung has shipped in years, the kind of feature you stop noticing until you use a phone without it.
Leaker @UniverseIce, who has a solid track record on Samsung’s foldable roadmap, claims none of the three Z Fold 8 models will get Privacy Display this year, leaving it exclusive to the S26 Ultra for at least another product cycle. That is a strange call on paper. Foldables spend a lot of their time being used in public, on trains, in meetings, on flights, exactly the situations Privacy Display was built for. If the leak holds up, it will be one of the more debated omissions of this entire launch.
Case leaks quietly confirm the design
Beyond the spec sheets, a batch of leaked official cases from accessory maker Thinborne has effectively confirmed the shape of all three phones ahead of any official renders. The Z Fold 8 Ultra and the standard Z Flip 8 look close to their predecessors in outline, but the Galaxy Z Fold 8 itself reads as a slightly squatter, wider version of the Z Fold 7, consistent with the rumored move toward a more book-like aspect ratio. None of this is dramatic, but it lines up cleanly with everything else that has leaked, which is usually a good sign that the broader picture is accurate.
Pricing in a very different market than last year
On price, current estimates put the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra at roughly $1,999 for the 256GB model, climbing to around $2,279 for 512GB and somewhere between $2,699 and $2,799 at the top 1TB tier. The base configuration reportedly holds steady with last year’s Z Fold 7 pricing, but the higher storage tiers are creeping up, and that is not really about Samsung’s margins. Smartphone prices across the industry have been climbing all year, largely because AI data centers are soaking up the global supply of memory chips, and foldables carry more RAM and storage than a typical flagship, so they absorb more of that pressure per unit.
It is also worth remembering that Samsung is not approaching this launch blind. Earlier this year the company discontinued its $2,899 Galaxy Z TriFold barely three months after launch, a clear signal that even Samsung has limits on how much buyers will pay for a folding phone, no matter how impressive the engineering. A three-model Z Fold 8 lineup that spreads price and features across a wider range looks a lot like Samsung applying that lesson directly, giving shoppers a genuine mid-tier option instead of pushing everyone toward a single expensive flagship.
Should you wait for July 22?
If a foldable is already on your radar, yes, it is worth holding off two more weeks to see the real thing. The battery increase alone addresses the most common complaint about the Z Fold 7, the crease reduction is the biggest screen upgrade this line has had in years, and having three models at different price points means there should finally be a Z Fold aimed at buyers who found the Ultra tier too expensive without needing to drop down to a completely different phone.
The Privacy Display situation is the one asterisk worth sitting with before you commit. If that feature genuinely matters to how you use your phone in public, it is fair to ask whether this generation is the one to buy or whether it is worth waiting to see if Samsung adds it in a later software update, which has happened before with other flagship-exclusive features. Everything else about the Z Fold 8 leaks points to a phone that improves on its predecessor in the ways people have actually been asking for. Whether that is enough to offset the one thing it is reportedly leaving out is something we will only really know once Samsung takes the stage in London.

