Samsung Browser Officially Exits Beta and Launches on Windows With Agentic AI Inside
Samsung Browser Officially Exits Beta and Launches on Windows With Agentic AI Inside
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Tech Report
Windows / Browsers / AI
Samsung Browser Officially Exits Beta and Launches on Windows — With Agentic AI Inside
After five months of beta testing, Samsung’s popular mobile browser is now a stable desktop release worldwide — bringing seamless cross-device continuity and a Perplexity-powered AI assistant to Windows 10 and 11.
Image: Samsung Electronics official press imagery, March 26, 2026
Samsung Electronics today announced the official launch of Samsung Browser for Windows, bringing its long-popular mobile browser to desktop PCs as a fully stable release. The browser — formerly known as Samsung Internet — exits a five-month beta period and is now available worldwide on any machine running Windows 10 (version 1809 or later) or Windows 11. The stable release ships as version 30.0.0.95.
The launch represents a meaningful step in Samsung’s ambition to build a tighter device ecosystem around Galaxy hardware. Where most browser synchronisation stops at bookmarks and history, Samsung Browser goes further: users can resume browsing a webpage from the exact scroll position they left — shifting from a Galaxy phone to a Windows laptop without any friction.
“Samsung Browser for Windows bridges the gap between devices, allowing users to seamlessly continue browsing as they move between mobile and PC.”
— Samsung Electronics, Official Press Release, March 26, 2026Resume browsing from the exact same scroll position as you switch between your Galaxy phone and Windows PC — not just bookmarks and history.
Securely store credentials and personal details. Autofill passwords and profile information across devices without re-entering data manually.
A built-in AI assistant understands page context, manages tabs, navigates browsing history, and performs complex tasks — like building a travel itinerary from the page you are viewing.
The AI can compare, summarise, and draw insights from information across multiple open tabs simultaneously — all without leaving the browser.
The headline addition is what Samsung calls “agentic AI” — an assistant developed in partnership with Perplexity that is embedded directly into the browser rather than bolted on as a separate panel. The AI understands natural language, reads the context of the current page, and can act on that information. Samsung demonstrated scenarios such as asking the browser to create a structured four-day travel plan based on a destination article, or using natural language to sift through browsing history to locate a specific page or even a timestamp within a video.
The multi-tab context awareness feature is particularly notable: the assistant can hold awareness of several open tabs at once, allowing users to request cross-tab comparisons or consolidated summaries without switching windows. AI features are currently limited to South Korea and the United States, with an expansion to additional markets planned for a future update.
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Release Status | Stable (v30.0.0.95) — formerly in beta since November 2025 |
| Supported OS | Windows 11 & Windows 10 (version 1809 and above) |
| Geographic Availability | Worldwide |
| AI Features | South Korea & United States More markets coming |
| AI Partner | Perplexity |
| Cross-Device Sync | Bookmarks, history, scroll position, open tabs |
| Security | Samsung Pass (password manager & autofill) |
| Previous Name | Samsung Internet (renamed to Samsung Browser) |
It is worth noting that the rebranding from “Samsung Internet” to “Samsung Browser” — already rolled out on Galaxy phones and tablets — has now been applied to the Windows application as well, giving the product a unified name across all platforms.
Samsung has not announced a macOS version of the browser. The Windows release is available to download now from the Microsoft Store and Samsung’s official channels.
