Awesome deals Galaxy Z Fold7, Watch8, S25 Ultra and S95F OLED TV
Last updated: January 20th, 2026 at 06:10 UTC+01:00
SamMobile has affiliate and sponsored partnerships, we may earn a commission.
Don't expect to see improvements in camera and battery specifications, though.
Reading time: 2 minutes
All eyes are currently on Samsung's upcoming flagship series, the Galaxy S26. However, the company has one more important phone that will launch before the Galaxy S26. It is the Galaxy A57. While a lot about the mid-range device has leaked already, its specifications have now been spotted at a reliable location.
The Galaxy A57 appears to be lighter and thinner than the Galaxy A56.
The Galaxy A57 with model number SM-A5760 has been spotted (via AndroidTreasure) in China's Telecommunication Equipment Certification Centre (TENAA) database. The phone measures 161.5 x 76.8 x 6.9mm, which makes it slightly shorter, narrower, and more importantly, thinner than the Galaxy A56 (162.2 x 77.5 x 7.4mm).
Moreover, with a weight of 182g, it is considerably lighter than its predecessor, which weighs 198g.
Samsung has equipped the Galaxy A57 with the Exynos 1680 processor. It has an octa-core CPU, which three CPU clusters clocked at 2.9GHz, 2.6GHz, and 1.95GHz, respectively. It has the Xclipse 550 GPU, which uses a newer AMD RDNA architecture for better performance and efficiency. The phone will be available in 8GB and 12GB RAM variants and come in 128GB and 256GB storage versions.
It does not feature improved camera hardware, though. According to the TENAA database, the Galaxy A57 has a 50MP primary camera, a 12MP ultrawide camera, a 5MP macro camera, and a 12MP front-facing camera.
The upcoming phone has an in-display fingerprint reader, GPS, 5G, LTE, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC, and a USB Type-C port. It is powered by a 5,000mAh battery and supports 45W fast charging.
Asif is a computer engineer turned technology journalist. He has been using Samsung phones since 2004, and his current smartphone is the Galaxy S23 Ultra. He loves headphones, mechanical keyboards, and PC hardware. When not writing about technology, he likes watching crime and science fiction movies and TV shows.