Samsung is preparing to unveil its next flagship lineup, the Galaxy S26 series, on February 25. Just before the official announcement, new benchmark results have revealed important details about the chipset strategy for the upcoming models.
Key Highlights
- Galaxy S26 Plus (Global) confirmed with Exynos 2600.
- US models expected to use Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy.
- Geekbench scores: 2,304 single-core, 9,015 multi-core.
- Exynos 2600: world’s first 2nm chip, 10-core, up to 3.80GHz.
- Galaxy S26 Ultra likely Snapdragon-only worldwide.
- India models may split: Exynos for S26/S26+, Snapdragon for Ultra.
Exynos 2600 Confirmed
The model number SM-S947B, listed on Geekbench, is believed to be the global version of the Galaxy S26 Plus. The benchmark confirms that it runs on Samsung’s new Exynos 2600 chip. This suggests that many international markets will receive the Exynos-powered version, while the US market will continue with Snapdragon.

Performance and Specs
The Geekbench 6.5 results show:
- Single-core score: 2,304
- Multi-core score: 9,015
- Memory: 12GB RAM
- Software: Android 16 with One UI 8.5
The Exynos 2600 is notable for being the world’s first 2nm chip. It features a 10-core CPU with speeds up to 3.80GHz, promising both high performance and improved power efficiency. However, real-world comparisons with Snapdragon will only be clear after reviews.
Chip Strategy Across Models
Reports suggest that the Galaxy S26 Ultra will exclusively use the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy worldwide. Meanwhile, the S26 and S26 Plus may rely on Exynos in most regions. This marks a shift from Samsung’s usual regional division, where Europe and Korea typically received Exynos and the US got Snapdragon.

Instead, Samsung may now differentiate chipsets by model tier rather than geography.
India Market Outlook
Three Galaxy S26 models are expected in India. If Samsung follows the new strategy, the S26 and S26 Plus could ship with Exynos 2600, while the S26 Ultra remains Snapdragon-only. This would be a major change, as Indies buyers have traditionally received Snapdragon-powered Galaxy devices.
Conclusion
With only days left until the official launch, Samsung’s chipset choices are drawing attention. The Exynos 2600 brings cutting-edge 2nm technology to the Galaxy S26 series, while the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 continues to power the Ultra model. Whether this new approach will satisfy global users remains to be seen, but it clearly shows Samsung’s ambition to push its own chip technology forward.
