Samsung’s pushing into US finance with a new credit card plan. Details come from a Wall Street Journal piece dated November 7, 2025. The move lines up against Apple’s own card, which has carved out a spot since 2019.
The Setup and Partners
This would be a co-branded card. That means Samsung’s name on it, but backed by a bank for the actual money side. Here, British bank Barclays steps in as the issuer—they handle approvals, billing, and risks. Visa runs the network, so it works anywhere Visa does: stores, online, ATMs. Why Visa? Their global reach covers over 200 countries, processes billions of transactions yearly. No fees for users on most swipes, just the bank’s cut.
Talks hit advanced stage months back. Now dragging a bit—regulatory checks, contract tweaks. Expect a formal reveal before December 31, 2025. No exact date yet.
Apple Card, for contrast: Launched 2019, Goldman Sachs issues it, Mastercard network. Offers 3% cash back on Apple buys, 2% on others via Apple Pay. But Goldman’s pulling back—reports say losses from fraud and defaults piled up, plus regulatory heat on consumer lending. Samsung smells opportunity.
Why Samsung’s Jumping In
Samsung wants deeper hooks into daily spending. Phones and watches already track payments via Samsung Wallet. A card ties it tighter—earn rewards redeemable on Galaxy gear or services. Builds loyalty, pulls users from rivals. Barclays gains too: US market’s huge, $1 trillion in credit card volume yearly. They hold under 2% share now; this boosts it without building from scratch.

Extra Services on Deck
Card’s the hook. Samsung eyes a full suite:
- High-yield savings: Accounts paying 4-5% interest, beating big banks’ 0.01%. Funds sit safe, earn on idle cash.
- Digital prepaid: Load money upfront, spend like debit. No overdraft risk, good for budgeting.
- Buy now, pay later (BNPL): Split purchases into installments, zero interest if paid on time. Like Affirm or Klarna, but baked into Samsung apps.
Barclays funds at least the BNPL and prepaid bits, per sources. Rollout starts with card, adds others phased.
Samsung’s Track Record Elsewhere
They’ve tested waters abroad. Korea, 2020: Samsung Pay Card on Mastercard. Physical plastic, 1-2% cash back, integrated with their wallet app. UK, same year: Digital-only version, no plastic—load via app, tap phone. India, 2022: Tied with Axis Bank. Co-branded Visa/Mastercard hybrid, lounge access perks, 1% rewards on all spends. India version hit 1 million users quick, showing demand in emerging spots.
US version could mirror India: Metal or titanium build? Daily cash back on non-Apple stuff, like 3% at Samsung stores. But details fuzzy till announce.
What It Means for Users
Cash back stays key battleground. Apple gives 2% average; Samsung might match or beat on their ecosystem. No annual fee likely, credit limits based on score—FICO 660+ for approval. App integration: Track spends, pay bills, fraud alerts in real time via Galaxy or Wear OS.
Risks? Data sharing—Samsung gets transaction info for targeted ads. Barclays handles security, but breaches hit banks hard. Early adopters wait for beta tests.
Announcement could shift dynamics. Apple dominates tech finance; Samsung’s play forces response. Watch end of year—holidays prime for card drops. If it lands, your next swipe might light up a Galaxy instead of iPhone.