Last updated: April 7th, 2026 at 19:15 UTC+02:00
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The Galaxy XR can now be deployed in organizations and is also getting enhanced usability for regular consumers.
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Abhijeet Mishra / SamMobile
Samsung Galaxy XR - Source: Abhijeet Mishra / SamMobile
Samsung has pushed out a new software update for Galaxy XR, and it's a pretty meaty one. The headline addition is Android Enterprise support, but there's also a handful of quality-of-life improvements that should make the headset more pleasant to use day-to-day.
Up until now, Galaxy XR was more or less a consumer-only product. That changes today. The headset now supports Android Enterprise, which means IT teams can manage these devices the same way they manage phones and tablets across their organization.
That covers the basics you'd expect: remote wipe, password policies, network configuration, and device restrictions. There's also support for zero-touch enrollment and QR code setup to make it easier to roll out a fleet of headsets to employees.
Samsung Knox is baked in for hardware-level security, which should help companies in stricter industries feel better about deploying these things. Samsung and Google are clearly pitching this at healthcare, manufacturing, training, and retail use cases.
Samsung also confirmed that Galaxy XR will receive software and security updates for up to five years, which should make it ieaser for business to decide if they should invest in the platform long-term.
Beyond the enterprise stuff, the update brings some useful tweaks for regular users. You can now save custom virtual keyboard positions, which is useful if you find yourself constantly adjusting where the keyboard sits in your view.
There's also a desktop session restore feature that brings back up to three apps in their previous layout after a reboot. On the accessibility side, Samsung has added single eye tracking and pointer customization, making the headset more usable for people with different visual or mobility needs.
Wall panel alignment is also new: it's an on-screen guide that helps you line up content with your physical surroundings more accurately.
If you use Chrome or YouTube on the headset, the Auto Spatialization feature could be a game changer: it allows you to convert regular 2D content into spatial 3D. Essentially, you can add depth to a standard flat video, and regular websites and web-based video content can get the same treatment.
Native XR content is still pretty limited as most developers and creators haven't built dedicated spatial experiences yet, so being able to automatically upgrade the stuff you already watch and browse is a great way to make the headset feel worthwhile in the meantime.
Samsung says the update is available starting today, though we weren't able to download it on our Galaxy XR just yet, likely because it's a phased rollout. So if the update isn't available for your headset right away, be sure to check again later.
Abhijeet's writing career started with guides for custom firmware for Samsung devices (including the original Galaxy S), and he moved to SamMobile in mid-2013 and worked up the ranks to Editor-in-chief. In addition to phones and mobile devices, his interests include gaming on both PC and console, PC hardware, and spending countless hours on YouTube watching videos on tech, movies, games, politics, and internet dramas.