Samsung looks set to take the one-screen trick it kept locked to its most expensive phone and hand it to a cheaper one. According to Weibo tipster Digital Chat Station, the Galaxy S27 Pro is being tested with the same hardware-level Privacy Display that debuted on the S26 Ultra, and Korean supply-chain reporting from ET News lines up with the same claim. The Pro is tipped to run a 6.47-inch panel with a 5,000mAh battery.


For anyone who hasn’t seen Privacy Display in person, it isn’t a software filter or a screen protector you stick on. The S26 Ultra builds it into the panel using wide-angle and narrow-angle LEDs, so the screen looks normal head-on but dims or scrambles for anyone glancing from the side. Think about reading your banking app on a packed train without the person next to you catching your balance. Until now, you had to buy the Ultra to get it.
The more interesting part is the model it’s landing on. The S27 Pro is a do-over. Samsung had an S26 Pro lined up for this year, suppliers and all, then quietly shelved it before Unpacked. That left a 2026 lineup with a soft-selling Plus sitting under an Ultra that sold extremely well, and the takeaway wrote itself: people wanted Ultra features, not a bigger base phone. So the Pro returns for 2027 as a four-model lineup alongside the standard S27, the S27+ and the S27 Ultra, which puts Samsung on the same yearly cadence as Apple’s iPhone Pro tier.
At 6.47 inches it’s actually smaller than the 6.7-inch S26+, which points the Pro straight at the compact-flagship buyer Apple has had mostly to itself on the iPhone Pro side. The camera setup reportedly mirrors the S27 Ultra, a 200MP main, 50MP ultrawide and 50MP periscope with 5x zoom, though the telephoto sensor may not be identical. The catch most buyers will accept is the missing S Pen, kept back as the Ultra’s reason to exist.
There’s a quieter angle worth flagging. Samsung reportedly has no plans to license the Privacy Display panel to other manufacturers, and that includes Apple, which sources iPhone displays from Samsung. If that holds, Samsung gets to spread a genuine differentiator across its own range while a major customer waits on the outside, even as separate leaks point to similar privacy-screen tech showing up on rival phones and a future MacBook Pro.
The usual caution applies harder than normal here. The S26 Pro had months of leaks too, right up until Samsung pulled it. Galaxy Unpacked 2027 is expected in January or February, and nothing on the S27 Pro is locked until Samsung says so on stage.













