Samsung has finally put a price tag and a confirmed US release date on its boldest phone yet, and the Galaxy Z TriFold might just be the most talked-about gadget of early 2026.
After limited regional launches, Samsung has confirmed the TriFold will arrive in the United States on January 30, 2026, with a $2,899 price for the 16GB RAM, 512GB storage configuration. That makes it one of the most expensive phones you can buy, and it clearly leans into premium ambition over mass appeal.
Why the Galaxy Z TriFold is Samsung’s boldest bet yet
Samsung’s first tri-fold phone is packed with headline-grabbing hardware. The outer display is a 6.5-inch AMOLED panel with Full HD+ resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate, which can be used like a regular phone when folded.
When unfolded, the inner screen stretches to a massive 10 inches with a 2160 x 1584 resolution and the same 120Hz refresh rate, enabling serious multitasking, including running three portrait apps side by side without feeling cramped.

That screen relies on a unique hinge system paired with a shock-absorbing display layer, designed to reduce stress across the two folds and make the device feel less fragile. However, independent testing has already flagged early signs of hinge fatigue around 144,000 folds, which is far below Samsung’s 200,000-fold claim, raising real questions about longevity for a device that costs close to three grand.
The camera setup is flagship-grade, with a 200MP main sensor, a 12MP ultrawide, and a 10MP 3x zoom camera. You also get two 10MP selfie cameras, one on each display, both capable of 4K video. The Galaxy Z TriFold is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, with a 5,600mAh battery with 45W wired, 15W wireless, and 4.5W reverse wireless charging.

The Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold also has a clever PC-style productivity feature that lets the unfolded display act like a portable workstation, leaning into work use cases rather than pure flex appeal.
Add IP48 resistance, stereo speakers, One UI 8 out of the box, Samsung’s promise of seven years of OS and security updates, and the Galaxy Z TriFold feels ambitious to a fault. It is bold, expensive, and fascinating, but whether it becomes a daily driver or a collector’s device will depend on how well that hinge ages.






