Samsung’s next foldable mystery has shown up in the least glamorous place possible: One UI 9 code. The rumored Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide is back in the leak cycle, this time with graphics that point to a broader inner screen, a mirrored outer display function, and a shape that looks meaningfully different from the company’s current Fold family.
This is not a one-off tease either. Earlier CAD renders already hinted at the device, and the rumored model has also cleared India’s BIS certification. Samsung has been flirting with wider foldable formats for a while, while rivals such as Huawei have already pushed into similar designs; that makes this leak feel less like fan fiction and more like a product plan that has quietly moved into software.
Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide and the H8 codename
Asset files in One UI 9 reportedly reference the codename ”H8,” which has been linked to Samsung’s Wide Fold project before. The demo images and animations suggest an internal display sitting around a 1.3:1 ratio, which lines up with previous talk of a 4:3 panel. That would give the Wide a much more tablet-like feel than the current Galaxy Z Fold 8, whose display ratio is said to sit closer to 1.11:1.
Samsung does not appear to be replacing the regular Fold with this version. The leak points to a separate addition to the lineup, which is exactly the sort of product segmentation Samsung loves when it wants to sell two slightly different versions of the same expensive idea.
Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide specifications
Based on the CAD renders, the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide measures 123.9 x 82.2 x 9.8 mm when folded and drops to 4.9 mm at its thinnest point when open. The outer screen is said to be 5.4 inches, while the inner display stretches to 7.6 inches.
- Folded size: 123.9 x 82.2 x 9.8 mm
- Open thickness: 4.9 mm
- Cover display: 5.4 inches
- Main display: 7.6 inches
- Chipset: custom Snapdragon 8-series
- Memory: up to 16GB of RAM
- Storage: up to 1TB
- Battery: 5000mAh with 45W wired and 25W wireless charging

Under the hood, the Wide is expected to mirror the standard Galaxy Z Fold 8 rather than reinvent the formula. That means Samsung is probably betting on the screen ratio as the main selling point, not a spec-sheet arms race. Given how cautious the company has been with foldables, that feels very on brand: keep the internals familiar, change the shape, charge premium money anyway.
Why a wider foldable could work for Samsung
If this one ships, the appeal is obvious. A wider foldable should make multitasking, reading, and tablet-style apps less cramped, while also giving Samsung a cleaner answer to rivals that have already experimented beyond the narrow book-style fold. The open question is whether buyers want a second Fold with a different silhouette, or whether Samsung is about to discover that a more comfortable screen shape is exactly the thing people were waiting for.

