Samsung Electronics rolled out its Galaxy Z TriFold on Monday, entering the multi-folding smartphone space with a $2,449 device. South Korean consumers can purchase the phone starting December 12.
The TriFold opens into a 10-inch display using two inward-folding hinges. When closed, the device measures 12.9mm thick, slightly bulkier than the 12.1mm Galaxy Z Fold6 and 8.9mm Galaxy Z Fold7. Samsung ships the phone with 16GB of memory and 512GB of storage in black only.
Three vertical panels let users run multiple apps side by side. The device includes Samsung’s largest battery in any foldable model, charging to 50% in 30 minutes. Desktop mode works without an external monitor.
Markets in China, Taiwan, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates will see releases before year-end. American customers wait until Q1 2026 for availability, though U.S. pricing remains unannounced.
Alex Lim, Samsung’s Korea Sales and Marketing head, said the TriFold serves customers specifically seeking foldable phones. The company views this as a niche product rather than a volume driver.
Counterpoint Research analyst Liz Lee calls the launch a limited-volume pilot program. Samsung tests durability, hinge mechanics, and software before broader commercialization. Real-world user feedback will shape future versions.
TM Roh, Samsung’s newly appointed co-CEO, described years of development behind the TriFold. The device balances portability with productivity features.
Samsung introduced its first foldable in 2019. The market stayed small, but Chinese manufacturers pushed in with competitive pricing and designs.
Huawei launched its second-generation trifold in September, measuring 12.8mm when folded. Huawei’s Z-shaped fold exposes screen portions when closed. Samsung’s inward fold protects the display completely.
Honor, spun from Huawei in 2020, expanded foldables into international markets this year. These Chinese brands challenge Samsung’s early lead in the category.
Apple’s expected 2026 foldable entry changes market dynamics. Samsung’s TriFold launch positions the company ahead of that competition.
The phone carries an IP48 rating for water resistance up to 1.5 meters for 30 minutes. Dust protection remains limited, matching other Samsung foldables.
Counterpoint Research forecasts foldables at under 2% of total smartphone sales in 2025. That share grows to nearly 3% by 2027. Growth rates should hit 14% in 2025, then accelerate to roughly 30% annually in 2026 and 2027 when Apple enters.
High prices and bulky builds may limit mainstream adoption. The TriFold’s $2,449 price reflects complex engineering for multi-fold displays.
Samsung’s Korean shares jumped over 90% year-to-date. Strong Q3 results came from chip sales, particularly high-bandwidth memory for AI applications. The company committed $310 billion to domestic AI investments.
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