New leaks suggest the upcoming Fold 8 will shave a few millimetres off its predecessor, add a 5 000 mAh battery with 45 W fast‑charging, and debut Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset. The smaller Fold 8 Wide appears to keep the 50 MP main sensor but drops the telephoto lens, offering a lighter, more affordable foldable option.
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Fold 8 Wide – what the leaks tell us

What’s new?
- Thickness & weight – The Fold 8 is rumored to be 4.1 mm thick and weigh about 210 g, a modest reduction from the Fold 7’s 4.6 mm/228 g. The Fold 8 Wide should sit around 200 g, making it the lightest device in Samsung’s foldable line‑up.
- Battery – A 5 000 mAh cell, roughly 14 % larger than the Fold 7’s pack, will be paired with 45 W wired charging. The Wide variant gets a 4 800 mAh battery, also supporting 45 W.
- SoC – Both models are slated to run Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, a step up from the Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 used in the Fold 7. The Elite version promises higher sustained clock speeds and better power efficiency, which should translate into smoother multitasking on the dual‑screen setup.
- Camera stack – The Fold 8 retains the 200 MP main sensor and dual 10 MP front cameras from the Fold 7. The only change is a new 50 MP ultra‑wide‑angle lens, replacing the previous 12 MP unit. The telephoto module is left unchanged, but the leak provides no details on its specs. The Fold 8 Wide, by contrast, drops the telephoto entirely and offers a 50 MP main sensor plus a 50 MP ultra‑wide lens.
- Display – The Wide model will feature a 7.6‑inch inner panel with a 4:3 aspect ratio, aimed at a more compact form factor. The main Fold 8 keeps the 7.8‑inch 120 Hz panel that debuted with the Fold 7.
- Pricing – No official numbers yet, but the reduction in size and camera hardware suggests the Wide could launch at a lower price point than the flagship Fold 8.
How it compares to the Fold 7 and rivals
| Feature | Fold 7 (2024) | Fold 8 (leak) | Fold 8 Wide (leak) | Competitor (e.g., Oppo Find N 2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thickness | 4.6 mm | 4.1 mm | 4.2 mm (estimated) | 5.0 mm |
| Weight | 228 g | 210 g | 200 g | 215 g |
| Battery | 4 300 mAh | 5 000 mAh | 4 800 mAh | 4 500 mAh |
| Fast‑charge | 25 W | 45 W | 45 W | 65 W |
| SoC | Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 | Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 | Same | Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 |
| Main camera | 200 MP | 200 MP | 50 MP | 50 MP |
| Ultra‑wide | 12 MP | 50 MP | 50 MP | 48 MP |
| Telephoto | 10 MP (3×) | 10 MP (3×) | – | 12 MP (2×) |
| Inner display | 7.8" 120 Hz | 7.8" 120 Hz | 7.6" 120 Hz | 7.1" 120 Hz |
The most tangible upgrade is the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5. Benchmarks from early‑access chips show a 7‑10 % uplift in single‑core performance and up to 15 % better GPU scores compared with the Gen 4. Combined with a larger, faster‑charging battery, the Fold 8 should stay on the charger for less time while delivering longer screen‑on periods.
Camera-wise, the jump from a 12 MP ultra‑wide to 50 MP is significant. The new sensor uses a larger pixel size and Samsung’s ISOCELL HM2 technology, which should improve low‑light detail and reduce noise. However, keeping the 200 MP main sensor unchanged means the overall imaging experience will feel familiar to Fold 7 owners.
The Fold 8 Wide’s removal of the telephoto lens mirrors the trend seen in other manufacturers: a cheaper, more portable foldable that sacrifices some versatility for a lower price. Its 4:3 inner screen will appeal to productivity users who prefer a squarer canvas for document work and web browsing.
Who should care?
- Power users who already own a Fold 7 and want a slimmer chassis with a stronger chipset will see a clear benefit. The 45 W charger also means less downtime during travel.
- Photographers who prioritize the 200 MP main sensor can keep using the same hardware, but the 50 MP ultra‑wide upgrade will make landscape and group shots sharper.
- Budget‑conscious buyers may find the Fold 8 Wide attractive. At roughly 200 g and a smaller battery, it promises a lighter pocket‑friendly experience without the telephoto lens’s added cost.
- Competitor shoppers (e.g., those eyeing the Oppo Find N 2) will need to weigh the Fold 8’s larger battery and Snapdragon 8 Elite against the Find N 2’s higher‑speed charging and slightly more compact form factor.
Bottom line
If the leaks hold up, Samsung’s next‑gen foldables will refine the formula rather than overturn it: a thinner body, a bigger, faster‑charging battery, and a more capable chipset, while keeping the high‑resolution main camera unchanged. The Fold 8 Wide appears positioned as a lighter, less camera‑heavy alternative that could broaden the foldable market beyond early adopters. Expect official specs and pricing later this year, likely ahead of the usual August‑September launch window.
Sources: TechManiacs leak, Samsung’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 announcement, early benchmark data from Qualcomm’s developer portal.

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