Samsung updates its software support chart monthly. Each update can quietly drop a phone from the list, meaning that the device will no longer receive securitySamsung updates its software support chart monthly. Each update can quietly drop a phone from the list, meaning that the device will no longer receive security
Samsung phones that lost software support in June 2026
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Table of contents
Galaxy M53 5G: The phone that lost software support
About the Galaxy M53 5G
Software support history
What losing software support means for your phone
Samsung phones still receiving software updates
How to check for software updates on your Samsung phone
What to do if you own a Galaxy M53 5G
Samsung updates its software support chart monthly. Each update can quietly drop a phone from the list, meaning that the device will no longer receive security patches. In June 2026, only one Samsung phone lost its software support: the Galaxy M53 5G. Every other device on the May chart carried over unchanged.
If you own a Galaxy M53 5G or you are thinking of buying one secondhand, here is everything you need to know.
Galaxy M53 5G: The phone that lost software support
The Galaxy M53 5G was removed from Samsung’s quarterly security update row in June 2026. According to Sammy Fans, Samsung’s quarterly chart showed the removal of one Galaxy M-series phone, with no other additions or changes observed. The M53 5G had been grouped with the M54 5G, M55 5G, M55S 5G, and M56 5G. After the June update, that row now starts from the M54 5G.
The last firmware the M53 5G received was M536BXXSFGZE2, which carries the May 2026 security patch and was released on May 28, 2026. Sammy Fans confirmed this is likely the final update for the device.
About the Galaxy M53 5G
Samsung launched the Galaxy M53 5G in India on April 22, 2022, with sales starting April 29. Here are the key specs:
Software support history
The Galaxy M53 5G launched on Android 12 with One UI 4.1. At launch, Samsung promised two years of OS updates and four years of security updates. The phone ended up getting far more than that, receiving four major Android upgrades in total:
Android 13 (One UI 5.0/5.1)
Android 14 (One UI 6.0/6.1)
Android 15 (One UI 7)
Android 16 (One UI 8.0) in October 2025, its final OS version
The phone was excluded from One UI 8.5, which is based on Android 16 QPR2 and began rolling out on May 6, 2026. Some sources speculated the M53 5G might receive 8.5 as one final feature update, but that did not happen. One UI 8.0 is its last version.
Throughout its lifespan, the M53 5G was always on a quarterly security update schedule, not a monthly one.
What losing software support means for your phone
Your phone does not stop working. Calls, texts, Wi-Fi, your camera, and apps you already have installed keep working. The hardware is unaffected. What changes is the security maintenance that runs in the background.
Here is what losing support actually means:
No more security patches: Samsung will no longer send fixes for newly discovered vulnerabilities. To put that in perspective, the June 2026 patch that the M53 5G will not receive fixes 45 security issues, including five rated Critical and 28 rated High, covering problems in Android and Samsung’s own software.
App compatibility can decline over time: Apps that check your device’s security patch level, especially banking and payment apps, may eventually limit features or block access entirely.
Samsung services may flag your device: Samsung Pay, Knox, and Secure Folder rely on a healthy security setup. An unpatched device becomes a weaker link over time, and some services may reflect that.
Google updates continue for a while: Google Play Protect, Play Services, and Google Play system updates come from Google, not Samsung, so those will keep arriving for some time. They do not replace Samsung’s system-level patches, but they do offer some continued protection.
Samsung phones still receiving software updates
Samsung’s June 2026 scope page currently lists two update tiers: monthly (flagships) and quarterly (mid-range and older flagships). The biannual tier that used to cover the oldest budget devices no longer exists. Samsung discontinued it in 2026.
Monthly security updates
Galaxy Z series (foldables): Z TriFold, Z Fold4, Fold5, Fold6, Fold7, Fold Special Edition, Z Flip4, Flip5, Flip6, Flip7, Flip7 FE, and the W-series (W23 through W26)
How to check for software updates on your Samsung phone
If you want to see your current software version or check for a new update, follow these steps:
Open Settings on your phone.
Scroll down and tap Software update.
Tap Download and install.
Your phone will check for updates. Follow the on-screen steps to install if one is available. Samsung recommends doing this on Wi-Fi with your battery above 60%.
To check your Google Play system update separately, go to Settings > Security and Privacy > Updates > Google Play system update. Google sends these updates independently, so they continue to arrive even after Samsung ends its own support.
What to do if you own a Galaxy M53 5G
Your phone is safe to keep using for now. The May 2026 patch (firmware ending in GZE2) is your last expected update from Samsung. Here are a few practical steps to take:
Keep your apps updated through the Play Store. Google can still push Play Services and Play Protect updates.
Turn on two-factor authentication for your important accounts, especially your banking and email accounts.
Avoid downloading apps from outside the Play Store.
If a banking app or work app starts warning you about an outdated security patch, that is the clearest sign it is time to upgrade.
If you are shopping for a used Samsung phone, skip the M53 5G and other recently retired models. A Galaxy S23 or newer will give you monthly updates and several more years of OS upgrades. If you want a mid-range option, look for a current A5x or A3x model still on the quarterly list.
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