The Galaxy S26 Ultra is going to have a 12 MP front camera. This camera will be made by Sony. It is an update from the last model. The Galaxy S26 Ultra front camera has a 1/3.2-inch sensor size. It also has an f/2.2 aperture and 1.12 µm pixels. The field of view is about 85°.
A known tipster on X, Ice Universe posted about the front-camera specs. Other tech websites reported on this leak. They said the change is mostly in the sensor supplier, which’s now Sony and a slightly wider field of view.
The rest of the Galaxy S26 family rumors provide context for the phones imaging ambitions. The Ultra is expected to be Samsungs phone for camera and AI features.
When we talk about sensor size, pixels, aperture and field of view here is what they mean:
– Sensor size is the area of the light-gathering silicon. A larger sensor captures light and has better low-light performance.
– Pixel size is each pixels light-collecting area. Larger pixels reduce noise at a given ISO.
– Aperture is the amount of light that enters the camera. A lower f-number means an aperture, which lets in more light.
– Field of view is the angle of the scene that is captured. A wider field of view gives room in group selfies and vlog framing.
The leaked numbers point to a hardware update. This update is not a change in megapixels.
The Sony sensor matters because switching sensor suppliers can be meaningful. Sony sensors have supply and proven low-light and video performance. The image pipeline tuning can also be different with a sensor. This means that the color science, sharpening, skin tones and noise reduction behavior can be improved.
In use users will notice:
– Selfies in daylight will be sharp and detailed with natural skin tones.
– Low-light selfies will depend on Samsungs image stacking and multi-frame noise reduction.
– Portrait mode and bokeh will be produced by software.
– Video and vlogging will be helpful with a wider field of view.
Some people will be disappointed because there is no megapixel bump. The front camera remains similar while other parts of the phone may get upgrades.
Reviewers should test the camera by:
– Comparing real-world portraits.
– Testing low-light single-frame vs. Multi-frame processing.
– Testing video stability and exposure.
– Testing the field-of-view practical impact.
– Testing autofocus behavior.
Samsung might take an approach because the flagship camera platform prioritizes rear optics. The front camera historically gets headline upgrades. The supply chain and cost are also factors.
If you care about selfies you should wait for hands-on reviews and sample galleries. Look for comparisons with years Ultra in identical conditions. If you’re upgrading from a -year-old phone you will likely see improvements. If you’re upgrading from the S25 Ultra the changes may feel modest.

We should watch for the spec sheet at Samsungs Unpacked event. We should also look for hands-on and photo samples from trusted reviewers and labs. Teardowns or sensor confirmations will also be helpful.
In summary the Galaxy S26 Ultra will have a 12 MP front camera made by Sony. It is an update from the last model. The practical impact will be hardware change and possible perceptible gains, via sensor swap and software. It is a cautious evolution but we should wait for real-world tests to see whether Samsungs software delivers the promised improvements. The Galaxy S26 Ultra front camera is a step forward and we will have to wait and see how it performs in real life.





