Key Takeaways
- The Samsung Galaxy S25 series have been certified for launch in the USA by the FCC.
- The three models are the Galaxy S25, Galaxy S25+, and Galaxy S25 Ultra, which also comes with an S-Pen.
- The vanilla Galaxy S25 won’t have ultrawide-band and will have slower wireless charging than its predecessor, the Galaxy S24.
It looks like the Samsung Galaxy S25 launch is around the corner. Samsung has bagged all the necessary certifications from the FCC for the entire Galaxy S25 line.
No Thanks, Keep Reading
Related
Samsung Galaxy S25: News, leaks, rumored price, and release window
The Galaxy S25 trio is coming early next year — here’s what we know
The Galaxy S25, S25+, and the S25 Ultra have been spotted on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) website (via 911 Mobiles). This can only mean their launch is imminent. There have been enough leaks over the past few months to indicate the devices are ready for launch, and this is the final proof.
What we know about the Galaxy S25 series
Source: 911 Mobiles
We know there are three Galaxy S25 devices coming. Thanks to these FCC filings, we now know their model numbers.
Samsung Galaxy S25: SM-931U
Samsung Galaxy S25+: SM-936U
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra: SM-938U
All three devices come with support for 5G, dual-band WiFi, Bluetooth, GNSS, and NFC connectivity. It looks like the Galaxy S25+ and Galaxy S25 Ultra will get ultrawide-band (UWB), but the Galaxy S25 will not.
The filings also show the Galaxy S25 will stick with the same 25W charging adapter we got with the Galaxy S24. Meanwhile, the two bigger brothers will get 45W wired fast charging and will have the same adapter, listed as model number EP-T2510. The Galaxy S25 Ultra will come with an S-Pen produced by Wacom.
It gets worse for the entry-model Galaxy S25. It will only support 9W wireless charging, which is a downgrade from the Galaxy S24 and its 15W wireless charging. That’s awfully slow. The Galaxy S25+ and S25 Ultra will likely get much faster wireless charging speeds, although there’s no mention of it in these FCC certifications.
The other rumors
Other than that, we know this new Galaxy series will have flat screens and thin bezels, and a Pixel-esque shape with rounded corners. Fans of the boxy Ultra series, and its Galaxy Note predecessor, may be disappointed. We also heard that these devices will ship with a new Samsung gaming mode, designed to push system resources to gaming needs when you enter it. We’ve seen this on other devices, notably the Redmagic and ROG gaming phones.
The launch of these devices will most likely happen in January. As usual, we’ll have all the details when we get them.