Samsung Galaxy Ring 2: Rumours & Features (2026)
What the Samsung Galaxy Ring 2 rumours actually say: an early-2027 launch, a bigger battery, a thinner build, and which claims are still speculation.

When will the Samsung Galaxy Ring 2 launch?
The current consensus from reporting is early 2027, not 2026. Outlets including 9to5Google and Android Central have reported that a 2026 sequel is unlikely, with an early-2027 reveal the more probable window. Part of the delay is attributed to the wider Samsung Galaxy Ring programme navigating the patent dispute between Oura and several ring makers. Treat any specific date as unconfirmed until Samsung says otherwise.
What we can reasonably expect (sourced rumours)
Longer battery life
Reports point to roughly 9-10 days, up from the current 7.
Thinner, lighter build
Reduced thickness and weight through better component placement, for more comfort.
Improved health sensing
Better skin-temperature readings, more accurate sleep analysis and stronger cardiovascular insights.
Similar pricing
Expected to start near the current model, around £399 in the UK.
What we cannot verify (treat as speculation)
Two of the more eye-catching claims are unconfirmed. The first is solid-state battery technology, sometimes called a dream battery, which would be a genuine leap but is far from proven for a device this small. The second is non-invasive blood-glucose tracking: Samsung is reportedly developing the technology, but reporting suggests it is not ready for the Galaxy Ring 2 launch window. Both are best treated as ambitions, not features, until demonstrated.
What would the Galaxy Ring 2 need to beat?
By early 2027 the bar will be high. The subscription-free RingConn Gen 3 already offers ten-to-twelve-day battery, sleep apnoea monitoring and vascular tracking, and the Oura Ring 5 leads on software. A Galaxy Ring 2 that lands at around £399 will need its battery and sensing upgrades to be real, not just iterative, to justify the premium over those rivals. For where the current field stands, see our best smart rings guide.
Should you wait for it or buy now?
If a launch is genuinely a year or more away, waiting makes little sense for most buyers. A capable ring bought now pays for itself in data and habit-building long before the Galaxy Ring 2 ships, and prices on current models typically soften as new ones approach. If you are firmly in the Samsung ecosystem and not in a hurry, it is reasonable to hold; everyone else is better served by a strong current pick.