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Samsung Galaxy Ring Review: Great, On a Galaxy

Published: July 8, 2026

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Samsung Galaxy Ring in its charging case next to a Galaxy phone

Editor's Note: Tested over two weeks on a Galaxy phone and an iPhone to compare feature parity.

The Samsung Galaxy Ring is the rare first-gen product that feels finished. No subscription, a charging case that tops it up in your pocket, and a gesture trick that lets you pinch your fingers to fire the camera shutter. Wear it with the right phone and it disappears into Samsung Health like it was always there. Wear it with an iPhone and you've spent $399 on a fraction of a ring.

Who is the Galaxy Ring actually for?

Let me save some of you the read: if you don't own a Galaxy phone, keep scrolling. The Ring pairs with iOS in a technical sense, but the AGEs index, the energy score, the tidy way sleep folds into Samsung Health: that's all richest on a Galaxy handset. On a Galaxy S-series phone it's genuinely slick. Everywhere else it's a nice tracker wearing a $399 price tag it can't quite justify.

Is the battery and charging case any good?

This is where Samsung quietly wins. Battery held six to seven days across two weeks, right at the top of the flagship pack. But the case is the real story. It's a squat little puck that banks around 1.5 extra charges, so a weekend trip needs no cable at all. After years of Oura's single charging dock, carrying a topped-up reserve in a coat pocket feels like a small luxury.

Specs, Pros & the Bottom Line

Samsung Galaxy Ring

Samsung Galaxy Ring

Best for people already living in Samsung Health

  • Our Rating: 4.2 / 5.0
  • Price: $399.99
  • Battery (tested): 6–7 days
  • Weight: 2.3–3.0 g
  • Subscription: None
  • Water resistance: 100 m (10 ATM)
  • Sizes: 5–15
  • Finishes: Black, Silver, Gold

Pros

  • No subscription, ever
  • The charging case holds ~1.5 extra charges in your pocket
  • Gesture control (pinch to snap a photo) is a genuinely fun party trick
  • Deep hooks into Samsung Health and Galaxy phones

Cons

  • Most features assume you own a Galaxy phone
  • Most expensive ring here at $399
  • No on-demand ECG despite the price

Buy this ring for the wrong phone and half of it evaporates. The tightest features live inside Samsung Health, and iPhone owners should walk away now. On a Galaxy phone it's a different story. The charging case is the best in the category, battery held six to seven days across two weeks of testing, and the no-subscription promise ages well against Oura. What holds it back is the price: $399 for a ring that skips ECG feels steep when Circular Ring 2 does it for less. Get it if you're a Samsung loyalist who wants tracking that just appears in an app you already open. Everyone else has cheaper, more open options.

What to buy instead

If you're on an iPhone, don't fight it; the Oura Ring 4 plays fair with both platforms and tracks sleep better, subscription and all. Want the no-fee philosophy for less money? The RingConn Gen 2 is $120 cheaper and lasts far longer per charge. The Galaxy Ring only makes sense as the Samsung-native pick.

The verdict

The Galaxy Ring is a very good ring trapped inside an ecosystem tax. For Galaxy loyalists it's an easy, no-subscription yes with the best charging case in the category. For everyone else, the math falls apart the moment you compare prices. Buy it for the phone you already own, not the other way around.