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Samsung expands AirDrop support to Galaxy S26 with Quick Share

Samsung is introducing AirDrop compatibility through its Quick Share feature, starting with the Galaxy S26 series this week. The update begins rolling out on March 23 in South Korea and will spread to the US and other ke

Samsung is introducing AirDrop compatibility through its Quick Share feature, starting with the Galaxy S26 series this week. The update begins rolling out on March 23 in South Korea and will spread to the US and other key regions, including Europe, Hong Kong, Japan, and Latin America shortly after. This move follows Google’s initial debut of AirDrop support on its Pixel 10 devices, which recently expanded to Pixel 9 phones.

Unlike Google’s Pixel integration, Samsung requires users to manually enable AirDrop compatibility in the Quick Share settings under a new option called “Share with Apple devices.” Additionally, Galaxy users must ensure their device is discoverable to “Everyone” when exchanging files with iPhones. This extra step prevents the feature from being on by default, potentially reducing inadvertent data sharing.

Samsung’s announcement highlights its intent to broaden AirDrop support to more Galaxy devices through Quick Share, though no exact timeline has been provided. Meanwhile, other Android manufacturers like Oppo are poised to follow suit, aiming to add AirDrop integration to their own file-sharing tools by the end of March. This trend shows Android’s increasing efforts to improve interoperability with iOS ecosystems.

Samsung’s move is significant because it merges Apple’s simple peer-to-peer sharing convenience with Android’s expanding ecosystem reach, potentially making cross-platform file exchange smoother for a wider audience. However, the requirement to toggle settings manually contrasts with Apple’s typically seamless AirDrop experience, which could slow adoption among some users.

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By weaving AirDrop into Quick Share, Samsung is betting on bridging one of Apple’s key ecosystem advantages, aiming to win over customers who juggle multiple devices or collaborate across platforms. Whether this creates stronger loyalty or just a niche convenience remains a question as the rollout continues.

Ava Chen

AI Editor

Ava covers the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence, from foundational models and research labs to the real-world economics of intelligence. With a background in computational linguistics, she cuts through the hype to find out what actually works. She firmly believes that benchmarks are just marketing until reproduced in the wild.

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