Samsung’s One UI 9 promises smoother actions and cleaner design.
One UI 9 leaks are pointing to something Galaxy users have been asking for: less clutter, faster actions, and UI changes that actually make daily stuff easier.
We’re talking smarter photo edits, a cleaner “About phone” page, smoother Settings search, plus early tweaks to the Now Bar, widgets, and Gallery selections.
If these leaks hold up, Samsung might finally be listening to the software complaints people repeat every year.
Alright, here’s the context. One UI 9 isn’t expected to land as a stable release until around summer, likely tied to Samsung’s next foldables, and it’s based on Android 17.
But leaks are already giving us a pretty clear theme: simplify the interface, speed up common actions, and polish the parts of the OS you touch all the time.
And honestly, Samsung needs a win here, because the One UI 8.5 rollout has felt messy and slow for a lot of people. So these One UI 9 leaks? They’re getting attention fast.
First, the photo editor changes. According to SammyGuru, One UI 9 could add AI-powered editing suggestion “pills” that appear right above the input field.
The idea is simple: you open a photo, and instead of hunting through menus, the phone offers one-tap edits that match what’s in the picture.
So if it detects a portrait, maybe it suggests background blur or face lighting. If it’s a landscape, maybe it suggests enhancing sky, boosting color, or straightening. And the key here is speed.
A lot of Galaxy users like having powerful tools, but they don’t love digging for them. If Samsung puts the right edit in front of you at the right time, that’s a genuine quality-of-life upgrade.
Next up, the “About phone” page is apparently going on a diet. Right now, Samsung uses a big device image at the top, and it looks nice… but it wastes space.
The leak suggests that in One UI 9, that device image shrinks and moves to the top-left, and the important info gets pulled up next to it.
So you’d see your device name, model number, and serial number right there beside the icon, with details like IMEI and phone number listed below.
That might sound minor, but it’s one of those changes that screams: “Someone finally tried to make this page practical.”
Now let’s talk Settings search, because this is where “simple” really matters.
The leak suggests Samsung is updating the Settings app search bar animation so it expands and collapses with a smoother, more flexible motion, more like stock Android.
And yes, it’s just an animation. But it also signals something bigger: Samsung might be cleaning up the little rough edges that make One UI feel heavy sometimes.
When you’re searching Settings every day for stuff like Bluetooth, battery, notifications, or app permissions, those small interactions add up.
Now, beyond those core changes, there’s a separate set of leaks around One UI 9’s Now Bar, widgets, and Gallery.
For the Now Bar, the early look shows a darker, more black-themed pill. On the left, there’s a small circular thumbnail for the track that’s playing.
The track name sits toward the top center, and there’s a live wave-like animation running along the bottom.
Long-pressing it reportedly opens a panel where you can remove the toggle or jump straight into Now Bar settings.
And the animation itself is described as smooth, with a slight bulge outward and upward, plus a green accent during the interaction.
That’s the kind of polish people expect from a “major” update, not just a few new features stacked on top of old UI.
Widgets are also apparently shifting toward a more uniform look. Some Samsung widgets, like Now Brief, Weather, and Samsung Browser, are showing more squared-off corners with slight rounding.
Basically, Samsung may be moving toward a consistent system-wide widget style instead of everything looking slightly different.
There’s even talk that Samsung could add options to adjust corner styling with preset shapes.
If that happens, it’s small, but it’s also the kind of customization people love because it changes the vibe of the whole home screen without extra apps or launchers.
And in the Gallery app, there’s a new selection UI detail: when you select images, a rectangular box with a soft blur appears, and the selected items stack into it as a quick preview.
That’s clean, it’s modern, and it makes multi-select feel more organized.
Now, timing. A lot of people are watching this closely because Android 17 has been moving quickly.
Google dropped Android 17 Beta 1 back in February 2026, and by late March we already got Beta 2 and Beta 3. With Beta 3, Android 17 hit platform stability, and stable Android 17 is expected around June 2026.
So the obvious question is: where is Samsung?
Leaks suggest internal One UI 9 testing is already happening on the Galaxy S26 Ultra. And if Samsung wants to avoid another dragged-out cycle, a public beta in late May or early June would make sense.
And this is where frustration with One UI 8.5 really fuels the conversation. A lot of Galaxy users expected a smoother, faster rollout, and here we are in April 2026 and stable One UI 8.5 still isn’t everywhere.
If Samsung starts One UI 9 beta earlier, it does two things.
- One, it gets real users testing these features, reporting bugs, and helping Samsung polish the release.
- Two, it keeps the momentum alive, instead of everyone just focusing on delays.
For reference, Samsung has done this “months-ahead beta” thing before. One UI 7 beta on the S24 series started around December 2024 in select countries, and stable started landing around April 2025.
One UI 8 beta for the S25 series kicked off in May 2025, expanded to older devices later, and stable began rolling out around September 2025 for S25 phones. So an earlier One UI 9 beta wouldn’t be weird at all.
But quick reminder: all of this is still rumor territory. Leaks can change, features can get reworked, and some stuff might never ship.
Still, the direction is clear: faster actions, cleaner pages, smoother UI, and smarter editing tools.
Now I want your take. If you had a Galaxy S26 Ultra, would you join the One UI 9 beta immediately, or would you wait for the stable build? And which leak do you actually care about most:
the AI photo edit suggestions, the Settings search changes, or the Now Bar and widget redesign?
Drop your answer in the comments, and if you want more One UI 9 updates as the leaks keep coming, subscribe and turn on notifications.
If Samsung follows through, One UI 9 could be less about flashy features and more about fixing the everyday annoyances that make people complain in the first place.
As soon as we get stronger proof, beta timing, or more screenshots, I’ll cover it. Thanks for Reading, and I’ll see you in the next one.
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