Hardware

Galaxy A27 full specs and official renders leak with mixed upgrades

At a glance:

  • The Galaxy A27's complete specifications and alleged official product renders have surfaced, showing a redesigned body with a punch-hole selfie camera, Key Island button layout, and three color options: Light Pink, Blue, and Black.
  • Samsung is swapping the Exynos 1380 for a Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset while downgrading the ultrawide camera to 5MP and possibly dropping microSD card support.
  • The phone could launch in the second half of 2026, running One UI 8.5 on Android 16 with a 6.7-inch display, 50MP main sensor, and up to 8GB RAM.

What leaked and what it means

Leaked images from MyMobiles claim to be Samsung's own product renders for the Galaxy A27, the last mid-range handset in the 2026 lineup after the Galaxy A37 and A57 already debuted earlier this year. The pictures show a noticeably refreshed design: a punch-hole selfie camera replaces the previous notch, Samsung's signature Key Island button layout is present, and the body is available in Light Pink, Blue, and Black. Samsung appears to be steering away from the more vibrant colorways it offered on the Galaxy A26, betting that a muted palette will appeal to a wider buyer base.

The full specification sheet accompanying the renders confirms several hardware changes. The A27 will be powered by a Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 processor — a notable shift from the Exynos 1380 found in the A26. The move could deliver better efficiency and smoother performance while addressing the thermal issues that have plagued Exynos chipsets in previous Galaxy A generations. Display-wise, the phone sports a 6.7-inch Full HD panel; while the leak does not specify the panel type or refresh rate, a 120Hz AMOLED panel like the one used in the A26 is considered likely.

Camera changes: gains and losses

Camera specifications draw the most scrutiny. The Galaxy A27 is expected to keep the 50MP primary sensor from the A26, but the ultrawide-angle camera may be downgraded from 8MP to 5MP. A 2MP macro lens would round out the triple-camera array. On the front, the selfie camera drops from 13MP to 12MP, though earlier leaks suggest the new sensor will compensate with improved low-light performance and possible 4K 30fps video recording support.

The ultrawide downgrade is a step backward for a segment where Samsung has historically marketed camera versatility as a selling point. Combined with the possible removal of microSD card support, the A27 risks feeling like a cost-cutting exercise rather than an iterative improvement — at least on paper. Whether real-world image processing or the Snapdragon platform offsets these spec reductions will be key to consumer perception once hands-on reviews surface.

Battery, storage, and software

Most remaining specs stay in line with the A26. The Galaxy A27 will pack a 5,000mAh battery with 25W fast wired charging, up to 8GB of RAM, and up to 256GB of internal storage. The handset is expected to weigh roughly 200g, though the leak indicates it will be wider at 78.2mm and slightly thicker at 7.8mm, which could affect ergonomics.

Software is where Samsung is pushing forward. The A27 is rumored to ship with One UI 8.5 based on Android 16 out of the box — a generational jump that will give buyers the latest platform features and a longer update window. The combination of Android 16 and One UI 8.5 also signals Samsung's intent to keep the A27 relevant for several years despite its mid-range positioning.

When to expect the A27 and what to watch next

There is still no official launch date for the Galaxy A27, but the leak points to a release in the second half of 2026. That timeline would place it after the A37 and A57, completing Samsung's refreshed A-series slate for the year. Pricing and regional availability remain unknown, though the Galaxy A26 launched in the €250–300 range in Europe, so a similar bracket is plausible.

Consumers and reviewers should keep an eye on three things: the real-world thermal behavior of the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 in sustained workloads, whether the 5MP ultrawide produces acceptable shots compared to the A26's 8MP sensor, and whether Samsung confirms or denies the microSD removal. Any of those points could shift the A27 from a cautious buy to a skip.

Tags

  • Samsung Galaxy A27
  • Snapdragon 6 Gen 3
  • Galaxy A-series
  • One UI 8.5
  • Android 16
  • mid-range smartphones
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