The latest chatter around Samsung’s next flagship lineup has one standout detail for budget buyers. A new tip says Galaxy S26 45W charging is headed to the base model, a jump that would make quick top-ups noticeably easier.
The same post, shared by leaker on X, also claims the Galaxy S26+ sticks with 45W, while the Galaxy S26 Ultra reaches 60W. It even points to a February 25 Unpacked date, which helps explain why spec talk is heating up now.
Samsung hasn’t confirmed any of this. Key anchors are still missing, including battery size, how charging speed holds up over a full session, regional availability, and what charger and cable you’d need to reach peak speeds.
A clearer charging ladder
What makes this report sticky is how clean the tiering looks. Standard S26 and S26+ at 45W, Ultra at 60W, it’s an easy ladder to understand and an easy one for Samsung to market. For the S25 series, standard S25 has 25W while the S25+ and Ultra supports 45W.
For the entry phone, faster wired charging also fixes a common annoyance without asking you to change how you use the device. Plug in for a few minutes, get back on with your day.
But wattage is only the headline number. Without a confirmed battery capacity and charging curve, it’s impossible to know whether 45W stays high long enough to deliver a real time savings.
Why this matters day to day
If the base Galaxy S26 really lands at 45W, the win shows up in short charging windows. Ten minutes before a commute, a quick boost between errands, a top-up during lunch.
It also makes the standard S26 feel less like the compromise pick in Samsung’s lineup. Charging speed is a tangible spec you don’t need to explain, and it’s a practical reason to consider the cheaper model even if other upgrades are modest.
There’s one potential catch to watch. If Samsung requires a specific PPS adapter to hit 45W, some buyers may need to budget for an extra accessory.
The details worth waiting for
Between now and the rumored February 25 event, the next useful details are battery size, charger requirements, and whether the 45W claim applies across regions.
If you’re upgrading on a budget and charging time is a daily pain point, hold off until Samsung publishes the official charging and battery specs. A few weeks of patience could save you a year of annoyance.
