Leaked CAD-based renders of the Galaxy S26 Pro have surfaced, giving us an early peak at Samsung’s next mainstream flagship and hinting at a design that’s about polish not reimagining. The renders, posted by Android Headlines in partnership with seasoned leaker OnLeaks, suggest small adjustments regarding ergonomics, camera placement and a small footprint.
Latest CAD files suggest same old silhouette
If you were hoping for a ground-up redesign, you’ve got to tamp down those hopes there. The S26 Pro looks like it follows the design introduced on the last few S-series models, with flat sides and a clean, front face, and more tastefully applied curves to keep handling comfortable. The most noticeable change is on the back: the camera array now has a more cohesive island, instead of the “floating lenses” design that has characterized the line for several generations.

That camera island allegedly shares some design flair from the most recent foldable leaks too, suggesting that Samsung wants to have a bit more consistency in the design of its higher-end phones. It’s slight, but it can impact case design as well as lens protection and the way the phone sits on the table.
Dimensions and display size
By renders, the Galaxy S26 Pro could be sporting 6.3-inch in the body that should be measuring approximately 149.3 x 71.4 x 6.96 mm and would grow to around 10.23 mm at the camera bump. That’d be a shallow increase over “base” S-series panels, again most likely to be achieved by cramming bezel rather than extending footprint.
Worth pointing out the thickness that we’re seeing doesn’t match up exactly with earlier murmurs, but this is a reminder of a common caveat with early CAD leaks – they’re usually for casemakers and can often be a reflection of pre-production tolerances. Still, OnLeaks has a good track record; last few times CAD-based leaks for Galaxy flagships did indeed end up lining up in size to retail hardware within a fraction of a millimeter and in key dimensions and port placement.
A camera island with DNA that folds
The slimming down of the camera island from three cameras to two might be more than a cosmetic one. An integrated module can streamline production, aid in more uniform positioning of lens cover rings, and may be more resistant to pocket lint and debris. It also allows Samsung to further customize sensor spacing and thermal paths under the glass.
The renders don’t affirm the sensor specs, but the industrial design accommodates a trio that’s become standard: a primary wide, an ultra-wide, and a telephoto. So if Samsung follows its recent lead, what we’ll get are incremental incremental upgrades to computational photography and HDR tuning, not wholesale hardware swaps. In the past, those algorithmic gains have translated into visible improvements in difficult lighting even when sensors have not changed much from one generation to the next.
What the slender figure could imply
S26 Pro will be thin if it has a 6.96mm body.” For context, these days S-series devices have generally sat in at the mid–7 mm range. Thinning pushes two issues: battery capacity and heat. The industry’s solution has more and more been high-density, stacked cell designs, and more efficient chipsets, all of which help maintain endurance without adding unnecessary heft to the frame.
If the dimensions check out, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see that Samsung is deploying better electronic efficiency, closer SoC-focused thermal management and maybe even more aggressively leveraging vapor chamber cooling.
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Summary
Samsung has a big “ball in the air”, with a 496 Mpixels camera system to pair with a 3D ToF camera
But more importantly, it held most of the aces in its hand, from the camera sensors, the LPDDR5 memory, the UFS3.0 internal storage, and all the semi-customized bits of the phone, and it uses the chips that underpin its success in the Smartphone business. That would also fit nicely with the company’s focus on sustained performance for camera processing and AI-enhanced features.
Lineup strategy: Pro, Edge & Ultra
Supply chain model numbers have led to a thought that Samsung will retire its “Plus” branding, instead folding “Pro” into the main line up with Edge and Ultra.
That would jive with bigger industry trends that rely on Pro/Ultra branding as shorthand for step-ups in camera tech, display quality and materials, for example.
For consumers, that shift might make it easier to parse the lineup: Pro is the neutral option, Edge is there for fans of curved-edge screens and — even though it’s frustratingly right in the middle of the stack — Ultra is for anyone who just wants the best camera system and the most battery. The accessory makers all win, too: When the segmentation is less complicated, so is SKU proliferation, which means they can line up cases and screen protectors earlier in the launch process.
Reality check and what to watch next
These came courtesy of sources with a decent track-record on the CAD-leaked front. Case makers have, historically, received early confidence in OnLeaks’ contacts, and the outlet reporting adds context around measurements and tiny design details. That said, pre-production designs can change, particularly when it comes to camera trim, bezels and thickness tolerances.
The next breadcrumbs to follow include regulator filings for batteries and radios from organizations like Safety Korea, the FCC and China’s 3C bodies, display supplier panel codes arriving in logistics databases and chipset indicators from early performance benchmark databases. Those tend to lock capacity, charging speed and connectivity features well in advance of when retail units are boxed.
For now, the takeaway is as evident as anything: the Galaxy S26 Pro seems poised to once again refine a winning recipe with a slimmer design, a tidier camera island and a slightly larger display, pointing at another year of evolution — thoughtful, measured, and, probably, utterly laser-focused on everyday usability.