Whenever a new storage standard is announced, it gets a lot of hype as if it will change everything about smartphones. UFS 5.0 is getting the same treatment. JEDEC, the group behind the UFS standard, has introduced UFS 5.0 and says it can reach speeds up to 10.8 GB/s, almost twice as fast as UFS 4.0. That sounds impressive, but for most people, it won’t make a noticeable difference.

According to JEDEC, UFS 5.0 is designed to handle the growing appetite for on-device AI processing. Sure, that makes sense if you’re training neural networks on your phone. But for 99% of users — those scrolling through TikTok, sending messages, and snapping photos — UFS 4.0 is already overkill. You’re not going to feel a real difference when opening Instagram or switching between apps, no matter how fast your phone’s flash storage is.

This jump is meant to power the AI era, allowing phones to juggle larger models directly on-device. That’s a good step for the industry, but it doesn’t mean your next phone will suddenly feel twice as fast. In fact, the biggest bottlenecks in mobile performance today come from the CPU, GPU, and software optimization, not storage speed. Unless you’re constantly moving multi-gigabyte files or loading massive 3D assets, those extra gigabytes per second don’t translate to anything tangible.

Adoption will be slow and mostly invisible

Then there’s the question of adoption. No smartphone maker has committed to using UFS 5.0 yet, and these standards usually take a while to show up in real products. Samsung will probably lead the way, just like it did with UFS 4.0, but even when it does, don’t expect a dramatic shift in your experience. Apple, for its part, doesn’t even use UFS and still manages to deliver some of the fastest-performing phones on the market with its custom NVMe storage.

So yes, UFS 5.0 is faster, smarter, and technically more advanced. But faster storage doesn’t automatically mean a faster phone, especially when the last generation was already blazing fast. For most people, it’s just another under-the-hood upgrade that’ll make for a great bullet point in marketing slides but won’t change much in daily use. When your next phone arrives boasting “UFS 5.0 speeds,” you’ll probably still be waiting on apps to load because of bloated software, not slow storage.