Samsung‘s next flip-style foldable is shaping up as a careful update, which isn’t great news for anyone hoping the company would finally tackle one of the line’s most obvious weak spots. The latest leak points to the Galaxy Z Flip 8 sticking with 25W wired charging, a familiar limit that risks making the phone feel too safe in daily use.
That tradeoff has followed the Flip series for years. Samsung has sold the appeal of a compact foldable design well, but buyers have often had to accept a few practical compromises in return, and battery convenience has stayed near the top of that list.
If this rumor holds, Samsung will need the rest of the package to feel strong enough to offset that decision. Right now, that case doesn’t look especially convincing.
Why the upgrade feels limited
The problem isn’t just that 25W charging sounds modest on paper. It’s that the number suggests Samsung may be comfortable leaving a premium foldable with the same top-up ceiling when faster charging has become a more visible part of the buying decision.
That would be easier to excuse if the phone were expected to deliver big gains elsewhere. Instead, the broader rumor picture points to a restrained refresh, with talk of selective internal changes and no major camera leap to help balance the story.
Is that enough to upgrade
Samsung can get away with small updates when the overall experience still feels meaningfully better. The issue here is that the rumored improvements don’t yet add up to a clear reason for existing Flip owners to care.

That shifts attention back to the parts people notice every day, especially battery life and charging speed. If those details stay mostly the same, the upcoming foldable starts to look more like a polished continuation than a must-have upgrade.
Should you hold off
There’s still time for the full picture to improve before Samsung makes anything official. But as things stand, the battery story looks stuck in a pattern that feels harder to defend with each new generation.
For buyers, the takeaway is pretty simple. Watch the final battery size and charging details closely, because those specs may do more than any design tweak or chip change to decide whether this phone is worth the wait.

