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More Tips Have Surged to Help Stop Samsung Handsets Overheating

Bill Thompson
Last updated: November 11, 2025 11:06 pm
By Bill Thompson
Knowledge Base
9 Min Read
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Heat is to battery health and steady performance as hate is to love, and a lot of Samsung owners are feeling it. If your Galaxy is getting unusually warm while performing daily activities or charging, it’s not just you. The good news is there are usually manageable reasons why it’s happening, many of which you can address in minutes; an ounce of prevention can spare you days in the sand.

Why Samsung phones can get hot during everyday use and charging

Modern phones have to do a lot of heavy lifting: 5G radios, high-refresh displays, AI capabilities, and powerful cameras. That work transforms into heat, and the heat has an impact. Battery University says higher temperatures can induce premature chemical aging; operating continuously at 30°C decreases the life span by 6% per year, while operating at 45°C cuts it to just 2%. Best results occur when using phones in the temperature range of approximately 32°F to 95°F, user support documents from Samsung and Google suggest.

Table of Contents
  • Why Samsung phones can get hot during everyday use and charging
  • Immediate cool-down steps to reduce temperature safely
  • Hunt down background drainers and limit runaway apps
  • Charge cooler and safer with better habits and settings
  • Tame display and performance settings to cut heat output
  • Mind networks and camera use that raise device heat
  • Update, scan, and diagnose to keep thermal issues in check
  • Environmental smarts that work to avoid external heat
  • When to call it hardware: signs of a possible defect
A 16:9 aspect ratio image showing two smartphone screens side-by-side. The left screen shows the Settings menu with Display highlighted. The right screen shows the Display menu with Accidental touch protection highlighted and its toggle switch turned on. A blue arrow points from the left screen to the right.

Two frequent culprits stand out. For one thing, charging — particularly fast or wireless charging — generates additional heat. Standard Qi wireless efficiency is around 60–75%, according to the Wireless Power Consortium, which is why — of the remainder — so much becomes heat. Second, low signal strength compels the modem to increase transmit power — a well-known cellular engineering practice acknowledged by regulators such as the FCC — which increases thermal load when calling, tethering, or receiving 5G data bursts.

Immediate cool-down steps to reduce temperature safely

Terminate the job that caused the spike. Close the app in use, and clear recent apps. If you’re charging, unplug and lay the phone on a solid, ventilated surface. Take a thick case off to let heat out. Switch to Airplane mode for a minute or two until the radios stop, then enable connectivity as required. Don’t try any extreme remedies — no refrigerators or cold water runs; fast thermal shock can lead to condensation and do more harm.

Hunt down background drainers and limit runaway apps

Open Settings > Battery to check on apps that have gobbled up too much power since the last time you were at a 100 percent charge. The obvious ones include social media, messaging apps with camera features, and navigation apps. In Settings > Battery and device care > Battery > Background usage limits, turn on Put unused apps to sleep, and add any stubborn ones to Deep sleeping apps. To stop run-amok syncing, go to Settings > Connections > Data usage > Wi‑Fi or Mobile, choose an app, and then turn off Allow background data usage.

If the overheat comes on after installing or updating a specific app, test in Safe mode. Long-press Power off and then tap Safe mode. If the problem goes away, uninstall or roll back that app. Also check out Permission manager under Settings > Apps to temporarily revoke camera/microphone access on apps you think are remaining active when they shouldn’t.

Charge cooler and safer with better habits and settings

Use certified chargers and undamaged cables; a worn USB‑C cable can give off heat at the connector. Don’t play games or video call while it’s plugged in either. Super fast charging and fast wireless charging could be throttled if your device is getting hot, so turn them off in Settings > Battery and device care > Battery > More battery settings if the phone itself is regularly heating up, as standard fast charging may take longer but strikes a better balance. Wireless charging is less efficient overall, so whenever possible, opt for a wired connection to your phone and keep the device on an open surface, not under a pillow or in a bag while it charges.

Tame display and performance settings to cut heat output

Brightness is a heat lever. Turn off Adaptive brightness and pull it down in Quick Settings if your phone feels hot. In Settings > Display, toggle the refresh rate to Standard/60Hz and, on supported units, drop the resolution from WQHD+ down to FHD+. Go to Settings > Battery > More battery settings > Processing speed and select Optimized. These adjustments can cut surface temperature by several degrees during extended sessions.

A Samsung Galaxy S23 smartphone, shown from the front and back, set against a professional flat design background with soft patterns and gradients.

Mind networks and camera use that raise device heat

Weak signal equals more heat. If your phone gets hot in elevators, on basement levels, or in dense crowds, temporarily lock the device to LTE when not doing a lot of streaming (switch off 5G in Settings > Connections > Mobile networks), or use Airplane mode if you don’t need connectivity. Power down the mobile hotspot when not in use; it’s a sneaky radiator.

Camera workloads are heavy. If you shoot long 4K60 or 8K footage, make HDR video calls, and combine constant AR experiences all at once, they’re going to heat up. Also take breaks to let the phone rest between clips, and after using the Camera app, close it entirely. Reviewers consistently report that prolonged 4K recording can push skin temperatures into the low 40s °C; that is within usual thermal regulation, but still too hot to comfortably hold.

Update, scan, and diagnose to keep thermal issues in check

Get into a habit of updating system and apps — often you get thermal tuning and bug fixes in firmware. Run a malware scan with Google Play Protect and don’t sideload from unfamiliar sources; background cryptomining, for one, or ad fraud can covertly light up CPU cores. You can test your battery life, sensor operation, and charger quality by using the Diagnostics tools in Samsung Members or Device Care.

Environmental smarts that work to avoid external heat

Keep the phone away from direct sunlight and never leave it in a closed vehicle. Place it on the dashboard vent or next to a fan if it’s already hot. Metal plates or magnetic rings on the case can trap heat and hinder wireless charging; take them off during heavy use or while using a charger.

When to call it hardware: signs of a possible defect

If your device gets too hot when idle, restarts, or throttles harshly even after you’ve attempted the steps outlined in this article, it’s possible that your battery is faulty, or that thermal paste has gone bad and warped between either of the silicon dies and/or heat pipe/sink during heavy or normal use, creating a gap — which would allow hardened residue to get trapped inside — or at least impaired proper contact with the heat pipe/sink.

Back up your data, and contact the manufacturer or your carrier to arrange an inspection. It’s better to deal with a defective part now than it is to allow heat to silently decrease battery life by another 10–20% over the next few months.

Bill Thompson
ByBill Thompson
Bill Thompson is a veteran technology columnist and digital culture analyst with decades of experience reporting on the intersection of media, society, and the internet. His commentary has been featured across major publications and global broadcasters. Known for exploring the social impact of digital transformation, Bill writes with a focus on ethics, innovation, and the future of information.
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