
Budget smartphones have always existed in a sort of software slow lane. Manufacturers have typically prioritized their flagship and upper-midrange lines when rolling out major updates, leaving the cheaper devices to wait months, sometimes longer, before seeing the same software features. That pecking order has been so consistent for so long that it’s practically become an unspoken rule of the Android ecosystem, especially within Samsung’s own Galaxy lineup.
Samsung’s Galaxy A17 5G is changing that, at least for now. The $199 phone, which only made its way to US store shelves earlier this year, began receiving One UI 8.5 before several pricier Galaxy models, including the Galaxy S22, the A55, and the A35. That makes it not only the cheapest Galaxy phone on the new software, but also a very unexpected one to lead the charge.
Designer: Samsung

The rollout began in South Korea on May 26, 2026, with firmware version A175NKSU5CZE9, before expanding to other regions. Samsung releases updates to multiple devices at a time, so getting new software the same week as other phones isn’t remarkable. The order, however, tells a different story. The Galaxy S22 was once a top-tier flagship, and both the A55 and A35 sit comfortably above the A17 in Samsung’s current lineup.

On paper, the Galaxy A17 5G doesn’t have much to shout about. It runs on Samsung’s Exynos 1330 chip, pairs that with a 6.7-inch display, and backs everything up with a 5,000 mAh battery. Those are solidly mid-tier numbers, and at $199.99, the phone was never going to compete with the Galaxy S25 or even the A55 on raw performance. That was never really the point, though.

Samsung promises six years of OS and security updates for the Galaxy A17 5G, which is genuinely compelling at this price. Google’s Pixel 9a offers seven years of support but costs $499 to start. At $199, the A17 gets surprisingly close to that coverage level, putting it in a different conversation entirely, one that’s less about what the hardware can do today and more about how long it’ll stay relevant.

One UI 8.5 brings a range of new features and interface improvements, including enhancements to Gemini AI. Not everything will run at full capacity on the A17’s Exynos 1330, since some of the more demanding AI tools favor higher-end chipsets. But for someone who bought a $199 phone expecting years of use, getting a meaningful software update rather than just a security patch is the kind of thing that counts.
Android 17 is also expected to hit stable release in the coming weeks, based on where Google’s release notes currently stand, which means Samsung will soon have to decide which phones get One UI 9. The A17 just showed it’s on the list for timely updates, and with six years of committed support on the books, there’s good reason to think it’ll be there when that time comes.
The post $199 Galaxy A17 Beat the Galaxy S22 to One UI 8.5 first appeared on Yanko Design.