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Samsung Galaxy A37 and A57 leak again with 5,000mAh batteries, 45W charging, and six years of Android updates

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Samsung Galaxy A37 and A57 leak again with 5,000mAh batteries, 45W charging, and six years of Android updates

Samsung Galaxy A37 and A57 leak again with 5,000mAh batteries, 45W charging, and six years of Android updates

Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy A37 and Galaxy A57 have surfaced again ahead of their expected March 25 debut, and this latest leak fills in both pricing and a pretty solid chunk of the spec sheet. According to details highlighted by IT Home from a GSMArena report, the two phones were shown again in Vietnam after earlier promo material had already leaked elsewhere in the region.

The leak says both models start with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage. In Vietnam, the Galaxy A37 is reportedly set to start at 10.99 million VND, while the Galaxy A57 could begin at 12.49 million VND. For context, that would put both new phones above the launch pricing of the previous A36 and A56 generation in the same market.

Design-wise, Samsung is said to be slimming both phones down compared with their 2025 predecessors, although the rear camera housing now adds a more stepped camera bump. The familiar raised key area, which Samsung markets as the Key Island, is also expected to stay in place. In the box, buyers should get the usual stripped-down accessory set: a charging cable, a SIM tool, and a quick start guide, but no charger.

The real split comes with materials and chipset choice. The Galaxy A37 is tipped to use a plastic mid-frame and an Exynos 1480 processor, effectively replacing the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 used by the previous model. The Galaxy A57, meanwhile, is expected to step up to a metal mid-frame and debut Samsung’s newer Exynos 1680 chip for better overall performance.

Samsung appears to be keeping the display and battery story consistent across both phones. The report says each device will feature a 6.7-inch 120Hz panel with peak brightness up to 1,200 nits, plus a 5,000mAh battery and 45W charging. On paper, that gives the pair a fairly balanced midrange package rather than pushing one obvious weak point.

Camera hardware is also said to match on both models. The rear setup reportedly includes a 50MP main camera, an 8MP ultra-wide camera, and a 5MP macro shooter, while the front camera comes in at 12MP. Video recording is said to top out at 4K at 30 frames per second.

Software support may end up being one of the bigger selling points. Both phones are expected to ship with One UI 8.5 based on Android 16, and Samsung is reportedly promising six years of operating system updates. If that holds, the update policy would give both devices a real edge for buyers who keep midrange phones longer than the usual two- or three-year cycle.

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