Samsung has started rolling out its June 2026 security update to the Galaxy A07 and Galaxy A37, plugging 45 vulnerabilities in the company’s software. The patch is already reaching international versions of both phones in India, and it lands just after the pair picked up One UI 8.5 – a reminder that budget and midrange phones now live on the same tight update treadmill as Samsung’s flagships.
The new firmware builds are A376EXXS3AZF6 for the Galaxy A37 and A076BXXS4BZF4 for the Galaxy A07. Samsung is expected to widen availability in the coming days, which is the usual story for its staged software drops: one market first, then the rest of the queue.
Galaxy A07 and A37 firmware details
- Galaxy A37: A376EXXS3AZF6
- Galaxy A07: A076BXXS4BZF4
- Patch level: June 2026 security update
- Known fixes: 45 vulnerabilities
That security-first pace matters because Samsung has also moved both models onto a newer software branch very recently. More importantly, the company is signaling that even affordable devices are being folded into the same upgrade cadence that usually gets the headlines on Galaxy S phones.
One UI 9.0 is already on the horizon
According to Sammobile, the Galaxy A37 and Galaxy A07 are also on the list for One UI 9.0 based on Android. For now, that software is still in beta and limited to the Galaxy S26 series, but the broader rollout is expected to begin after the debut of the Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Galaxy Z Flip 8 next month. If Samsung keeps that schedule, older devices will follow after the foldables get their moment in the spotlight.
The A37 gets a little extra bragging rights here: Samsung says it will receive six major operating system upgrades. That kind of long runway has become one of the company’s best-selling points in the crowded Android midrange, especially as rivals continue to promise support but often stop short on execution.
What Galaxy A owners should watch for next
For now, the practical question is simple: whether your phone has the patch yet. If you own either model, it is worth checking for the update manually, because security releases often arrive in waves rather than all at once. The bigger story, though, is that Samsung is treating its lower-cost phones less like afterthoughts and more like long-haul software citizens – which is exactly what buyers have been asking for.

