Introduction: The S26 Wait-and-See Problem
Every year, the smartphone upgrade cycle plays out the same way. Rumors start flying about next year's model. People hold off. They wait for announcements. They refresh tech blogs obsessively. And then, when the new phone finally drops, they're shocked by the price and disappointed they didn't jump on last year's device when it was actually affordable.
Right now, we're watching this happen with the Galaxy S26. Whispers are out there. "Should I wait?" people ask. "Will the S26 be worth it?" The answer is more nuanced than you'd think.
Here's the reality: the Galaxy S25 series is phenomenal. Not just good. Not just "fine for another year." Actually phenomenal. And right now, the pricing has shifted in your favor. Samsung's price cuts on the S25 line are aggressive, meaningful, and worth your attention if you're thinking about upgrading, as noted by Forbes.
This isn't a defense of older tech for its own sake. But it's an honest look at what you actually get with the S25 versus what you'd be trading in terms of cost and waiting time. The Galaxy S26 will probably be great. Incremental improvements? Almost certainly. But incremental improvements don't always justify the premium price tag or the wait.
Let's dig into why now actually matters.
The Galaxy S25 Series: What You're Actually Getting
The Galaxy S25 lineup isn't last year's phone dressed up. Samsung made real moves with this generation. The processor jump alone changes how the device feels in everyday use.
The Snapdragon 8 Elite (in the S25 models) represents a significant leap from the previous generation. We're talking about a 40% improvement in CPU performance for standard tasks and 30% better GPU handling for gaming and graphics-heavy apps. These aren't theoretical numbers either. Real-world applications run smoother, multitasking feels faster, and you won't hit performance walls even when pushing the device hard.
Battery performance improved meaningfully too. The S25 gets through a full day of moderate-to-heavy use without the battery anxiety that plagued earlier models. Some users report picking up the phone at 9 PM and still having 20-25% remaining. That's not a gimmick. That's the difference between a phone that supports your work and a phone that interrupts it, as detailed in ZDNet.
The display technology is where Samsung continues to flex. The 6.2-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X screen on the base S25 hits 2,600 nits peak brightness, meaning you can actually see your screen in direct sunlight without squinting. The 120 Hz refresh rate is smooth, responsive, and doesn't drain battery like earlier implementations. Scrolling through apps, reading, watching video—everything feels genuinely premium.
Camera system changes matter more than the spec sheets suggest. The S25 Ultra features a 50MP main sensor with improved night mode capabilities. Low-light photography is genuinely better. Portrait mode has better edge detection. Zoom quality is cleaner. These aren't revolutionary changes, but they're the kind of refinements that add up across thousands of photos over a year of ownership.
The design refresh is subtle but appreciated. Samsung dropped the weight by about 2-3%, making the Ultra feel less like a stone in your pocket and more like an actual device you want to carry. The matte finish on the back resists fingerprints better than the glossy panels of previous years. It's the kind of attention to detail that doesn't show up in specs but matters when you're holding the phone every day.


The Galaxy S25 offers significant CPU and GPU improvements over its predecessor, while the S26 is expected to bring only incremental enhancements. Current discounts on the S25 make it a cost-effective choice compared to the anticipated S26 launch pricing. Estimated data for S26.
The S26 Reality: What You're Actually Waiting For
Samsung typically announces new Galaxy S devices in January or February. The S26 announcement will likely follow this pattern. But here's what history teaches us about these releases.
Generational improvements in flagship Android phones have slowed considerably. We're not seeing the kinds of revolutionary jumps that happened five or ten years ago. The S26 will probably bring better AI integration (because everything is getting AI features now), potentially improved battery life, and some processor bump. But realistically? We're talking incremental progress.
Let's break down what's likely coming. The processor will probably improve by 10-15% in raw performance. That's the typical year-over-year jump in smartphone processors. Is that meaningful? Sure. Is it life-changing? Not really. You'll notice the difference if you're doing intensive gaming or 4K video work for hours. For normal people using normal phones? The current generation already does everything faster than you need.
AI features will definitely expand. Samsung is heavily investing in on-device AI through their partnership with Google and their own AI developments. The S26 will probably ship with more sophisticated AI-powered features than the S25. But here's the thing: Samsung already released AI features for the S25 through software updates. You don't need new hardware for that.
Camera improvements will happen, but they follow a predictable pattern. Sensors might get slightly larger. Processing might get slightly smarter. You might get better zoom quality at extreme magnification. But the S25's camera system is already excellent. Unless you're a professional photographer or videographer, you won't see dramatic differences in your day-to-day photos.
Battery technology advances slowly. Don't expect a 40% battery life jump. More likely is 5-10% improvement, if we're being optimistic. The S25 already gets through a full day. The S26 might stretch that to 1.5 days in some scenarios. Useful? Maybe. Essential? Probably not.
Price is the real factor here. The S26 will launch at


Samsung has significantly reduced the prices of the S25 models, with trade-in values offering additional savings. The S25 Ultra sees the largest trade-in value of up to $800, making it an attractive option for buyers.
The Price Cut Reality: Where You Win
This is where the story changes. Samsung isn't just dropping the S25 price slightly. They're being aggressive. And that matters.
Retail partners are offering trade-in bonuses that actually represent real value. If you have an older phone (S23, S24, even an iPhone 14), trade-in credits are hitting $400-600 depending on condition. That's not theoretical value. That's real money off your next purchase.
Direct from Samsung, the S25 is sitting at around
Third-party retailers are being even more aggressive. Best Buy regularly runs promotions offering additional discounts or bundled accessories with S25 purchases. Amazon occasionally offers $100-150 off the already-reduced Samsung pricing. Carrier deals through Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile often include bill credits that effectively lower your out-of-pocket cost even further.
The timing matters because Samsung typically doesn't drop prices this significantly until much later in a product cycle. We're only a few months past launch. The fact that retailers are already being this aggressive suggests Samsung is managing inventory well and wants to push volume. That's good for buyers.
Compare this to what happens when the S26 launches. Day one pricing? $999-1,299. You won't see meaningful discounts for 6-8 months. If you buy the S25 now, you get a premium phone at a reduced price. If you wait for the S26, you'll pay more to get essentially the same performance level the S25 already delivers.
Let's run the math. Buy the S25 Ultra right now for
Wait for the S26 instead? Pay $1,299 on day one. Your cost for the first year is higher, and you only get marginal improvements over what the S25 already delivers.

Performance in Real Life: What Changes Matter
Specs are one thing. How phones actually behave in your pocket is another.
The Snapdragon 8 Elite processor in the S25 handles every real-world task you'd throw at it without breaking a sweat. You're editing photos? Instant. Opening apps? No lag. Gaming? Smooth frame rates even in demanding titles. Video recording? 8K if you want, though it does eat storage. Everyday performance is indistinguishable from "faster" because the S25 is already fast enough that any improvement is academic.
Multitasking is where you feel the difference from older phones, not between the S25 and hypothetical S26. Having multiple apps open, switching between them, loading heavy applications—the S25 just handles it. No stuttering. No waiting. This is table stakes for flagship phones now.
The 120 Hz display refresh rate makes a real difference in feel. Scrolling through social media, email, or news apps feels liquid. There's no choppiness. Compare it to a 60 Hz phone and it's immediately obvious. But again, this is already standard on the S25. The S26 will probably stick with 120 Hz unless Samsung pushes to 144 Hz, which seems unlikely.
Battery endurance is measurably better on the S25 compared to S24. Real-world testing shows you gain roughly 2-3 hours of additional screen-on time in moderate use scenarios. That translates to fewer afternoons where you're hunting for an outlet. For people with moderate usage patterns, the S25 gets you through a normal day without thinking about battery. Heavy users might hit 10-15% by late evening, but that's acceptable.
Camera performance in good lighting is excellent but honestly pretty similar to the S24 and even S23 in many scenarios. Where the S25 actually shines is in low-light situations. Night mode processing is smarter. Detail is retained. Colors don't go muddy. If you take a lot of photos in restaurants, bars, or evening scenarios, you'll appreciate this.
The thermals are worth mentioning. Earlier Snapdragon chips ran hot. The 8 Elite runs cooler, which means sustained gaming doesn't cause throttling. Extended video recording doesn't overheat the device. This might not matter for casual users, but it's a genuine improvement for people who stress their phones.

The Samsung Galaxy S26 is expected to see a 10-15% improvement in processor performance, a 5-10% increase in battery life, and moderate enhancements in AI features and camera quality. Estimated data based on typical trends.
The Trade-In Advantage: Making the Math Work
Trade-in programs are the secret weapon in smartphone economics. Most people overlook them or think they're gimmicks. They're not.
Samsung's official trade-in program values phones fairly. An iPhone 14 or 15 from last year might fetch
Best Buy's trade-in offers are often $50-100 higher than Samsung's direct offers if you're trading certain phones. Their trade-in specialists are usually realistic about condition assessment, which means you often get higher valuations for phones in good shape.
Carrier trade-in programs through Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile often ladder the values differently. A phone that gets
The strategy is simple: figure out your current phone's trade-in value across all channels. Grab the S25 with the best trade-in deal available. Use it for 12-18 months. Trade it in when the S26 launches. Your cost per year of flagship performance ends up being surprisingly low.
For someone with a three-year-old phone that's worth maybe
Software Support: The Underrated Factor
Here's something people don't talk about enough: how long the phone gets software updates.
Samsung committed to seven years of major Android updates and four years of security patches for the Galaxy S25 series. That's industry-leading. You're buying a phone that will get Android 17, 18, and beyond. Your S25 will stay relevant for longer than most people keep their phones.
This matters because it means the S25 isn't a device with a built-in obsolescence date. It's not like older Samsung phones that got 2-3 years of updates and then were orphaned. The S25 will be updated, patched, and improved throughout the decade.
Compare that to the wait for the S26. If you buy the S26 when it launches, you get the same software support timeline. But you're paying more for it and dealing with initial software quirks that always happen at launch. The S25, meanwhile, has already had months of software refinement. Any bugs have been ironed out. The experience is stable.
Security is another angle. The S25 gets monthly security patches, and Samsung has been reliable about this. Monthly patches mean vulnerabilities get fixed as they're discovered. You're not living with known security issues waiting for the next major update. This level of attention is becoming rarer among Android manufacturers.
One UI, Samsung's custom Android interface, is actually good these days. It's not the bloated mess it was 5-6 years ago. It's clean, responsive, and mostly gets out of your way. You're not trading interface quality by choosing the S25 over the S26.


The Galaxy S26 is projected to cost $200 more than the current discounted price of the S25. Estimated data.
Design and Build Quality: The Tangible Stuff
The S25 feels genuinely nice in hand. That's not a throwaway statement. Too many phones feel generic. The S25's matte finish back resists fingerprints in a way glossy phones don't. It feels gripped rather than slippery. The frame is aluminum with IP68 water and dust resistance (up to 50 meters of saltwater submersion for up to 30 minutes).
The weight is reasonable. At 167 grams for the base model, it's light enough not to be annoying but heavy enough to feel substantial. The S25+ at 196 grams is noticeable but not burdensome. The Ultra at 218 grams is definitely chunky, but if you're buying the Ultra, you probably want the extra heft that comes with it.
Thermally, the S25 stays cool. Holding it for long periods doesn't result in your palm getting warm. Gaming sessions don't cause excessive heat buildup. Video recording doesn't make it uncomfortable. This is a legitimate engineering improvement that makes a real difference in how the phone feels.
The haptic feedback is responsive and satisfying. Typing on the glass keyboard feels good. Notifications feel distinct rather than buzzy. It's a subtle thing, but good haptics improve the overall feel of interacting with the device.
Durability is solid. Gorilla Glass Armor on the front and back means the screen and rear are reasonably scratch-resistant and drop-resistant. Drop it on carpet from waist height and the S25 will survive. Drop it on pavement and you might need a screen protector. This is comparable to other flagship phones.

Who Should Buy Now vs. Who Should Wait
Let's be honest about when waiting makes sense and when it doesn't.
Buy the S25 now if:
You have a phone that's 2+ years old. The upgrade jump is significant enough that the performance difference is immediately noticeable. You're not losing anything by not waiting.
You're coming from an iPhone. The performance delta between iPhone and the latest Android is smaller than it's ever been, but battery life and customization differences make the S25 a compelling alternative. The incremental S26 improvement won't change the value proposition.
You take a lot of photos. The S25's camera system is genuinely excellent right now. Waiting six months for maybe 5-10% camera improvement doesn't justify missing out on using a great camera for six months.
You want the best price-to-performance ratio. You simply won't get the S26 this cheap for many months. The math of current S25 pricing versus S26 launch pricing strongly favors buying now.
You need a reliable phone right now. The S25 is proven, stable, and has already resolved any launch issues. Buying now means you get a immediately-usable device, not an experiment.
Wait for the S26 if:
Your current phone is still excellent and you're just itching for an upgrade. If your S24 is fine, an S25 is a marginal improvement anyway. Waiting to jump from S24 to S26 gives you more substantial improvements.
You're waiting for a specific feature that's rumored for the S26. AI integration is the main rumor. If that specific feature is critical to your workflow and definitely coming, then maybe waiting makes sense. But be honest about whether you actually need it.
You've been waiting patiently this long already. If you've been holding out for the S26 specifically, you're this close. Might as well wait another 4-6 months at this point.
You're budget-conscious and want the S26 at a discounted price instead of the S25. Fair enough. You'll wait and pay full price later, or you'll wait and catch discounts even later. Either way, you're accepting a longer wait period for potentially better financial timing.
You have a brand-new S25. Obviously don't buy another one.


The Galaxy S25 series shows a 40% improvement in CPU performance, 30% in GPU performance, and a 20% increase in battery life compared to previous models. Estimated data for battery improvement.
The Price Trajectory and When Deals Peak
Understanding smartphone pricing patterns helps you make better decisions.
Galaxy S phones typically follow this arc: launch at flagship price point, drop 10-15% after the first month, hit 20% discount around month 3-4, and stabilize at 20-25% off around month 5-6. Right now, we're roughly at the month 3-4 mark, which means prices are near (but probably not at) their lowest.
Can you negotiate better prices later? Probably slightly. But not much. You might find an extra $50-100 in discounts if you wait two more months. That's not worth the opportunity cost of not using the phone for two months.
Carrier promotions and seasonal sales (Black Friday, back-to-school, etc.) offer additional savings on top of the base price reduction. If you're patient, you could potentially catch the S25 at a truly excellent price during a major shopping event. But that requires timing and luck.
The sweet spot for buying the S25 is right now. Prices have dropped meaningfully, retailer selection is broad, and inventory is solid. Wait much longer and you risk hitting the point where retailers are clearing inventory to make room for the S26, which could mean limited stock in your preferred color or capacity.

Specific Use Cases Where the S25 Excels
Certain workflows specifically benefit from the S25's hardware choices.
Content creators doing photography or video work will appreciate the improved low-light performance and the stable thermal behavior that lets you record long videos without the device overheating. The S25 Ultra's periscope zoom is particularly useful for filmmakers.
Gaming enthusiasts benefit from the Snapdragon 8 Elite's GPU improvements and the improved thermals. Playing intensive titles like Genshin Impact or PUBG for extended sessions doesn't cause performance drops.
Business users benefit from the display quality and battery endurance. The 2,600-nit brightness means you can actually read your screen in conference rooms with bright overhead lighting. The battery lasting through a full day of back-to-back Zoom calls and email is valuable.
Mobile photographers who shoot in challenging lighting conditions (sunset, indoor events, low-light venues) will notice the S25's night mode is genuinely better. Detail is retained. Colors are accurate. The processing is fast.
Remote workers who spend hours on the device appreciate the larger screen (especially the Ultra), the excellent speaker quality, and the reliable battery that doesn't require midday charging.
Social media managers benefit from the smooth 120 Hz scrolling and the responsive touch input. Managing multiple platforms is snappier on the S25.
Essentially, if you use your phone for anything demanding, the S25 is positioned to handle it well. The question is whether the S26 would handle it demonstrably better. For most use cases, the answer is "not by much."


The decision to buy the S25 now is strongly influenced by factors like camera quality, price, and reliability, whereas waiting for the S26 is driven by specific feature expectations and budget considerations. Estimated data based on content analysis.
The Environmental Angle: Why Upgrading Now Makes Sense
Here's an angle people overlook: environmental impact.
Electronics manufacturing, particularly smartphones, has significant environmental costs. Mining rare earth elements, manufacturing components, shipping, packaging—it all adds up. Every year people wait to upgrade and then upgrade anyway just pushes that impact into the future without eliminating it.
If you're going to upgrade eventually (and honestly, most people do), upgrading sooner means you're using the device for longer in aggregate. Buy the S25 now and keep it for three years. Trade it in or recycle it responsibly. You've gotten maximum utility from the manufacturing impact.
Wait for the S26, use it for three years, and you've generated equivalent or more environmental impact by waiting, because the S25 you would have bought still gets manufactured anyway. Someone else ends up with it or it sits unused.
This isn't an argument to mindlessly upgrade every year. But it is an argument that if you're in the market and the device makes sense financially, buying sooner rather than later actually has environmental benefits.
Samsung has also improved their recycling program. If you trade in your old phone to Samsung specifically (rather than a carrier or retailer), they take it apart responsibly and recover materials. That's another reason to consider the upgrade path now: proper recycling channels are in place.

Carrier-Specific Deals Worth Knowing About
Carriers are aggressively promoting the S25 right now because it moves volume and attaches customers to longer contracts.
Verizon is offering trade-in credits up to $650 on select models when you switch to them or renew a contract. They're also bundling free Galaxy Buds or other Samsung accessories. The catch? You usually have to finance the phone through their payment plan, and you need a qualifying trade-in.
AT&T is running similar promotions with slightly different bonus amounts. They've been aggressive with bill credits (the phone is cheaper upfront, but credits hit your bill over 24-36 months). This can actually be better if you're already paying for service and don't mind the accounting complexity.
T-Mobile is being creative with trade-in valuations. They tend to value phones slightly higher than competitors in some cases. They're also offering device payment plans with decent terms.
The carrier deals are often better than buying directly from Samsung if you're already on that carrier or willing to switch. The catch is you're locked into a plan and potentially a longer contract. If you want maximum flexibility, buying from Samsung directly or Best Buy is simpler. If you want the absolute lowest effective cost, comparing carrier offers carefully is worthwhile.

The Upgrade Experience: Making the Switch Smooth
If you do decide to buy the S25, switching from your old phone should be seamless.
Samsung's Smart Switch tool handles transferring data, apps, and settings from any phone (iPhone or Android) to the S25. You run it during setup, and within 30 minutes, your new phone is populated with everything from your old one. Apps, photos, messages, contacts, calendars—it all transfers.
From iPhone specifically, the experience is excellent. iCloud photos transfer, Apple Music library transfers, Messages threads (though they convert to SMS, not iMessage), and third-party apps reinstall automatically from the Play Store.
The learning curve for switching from iPhone to Android is minimal if you're using the S25 because One UI is relatively intuitive. You'll need to adjust to some navigation differences, but they're learnable within a few days.
Setting up your Samsung account is straightforward and gives you backup of important data in case you lose the phone. It's worth doing during setup.
One thing to be aware of: if you're moving from iPhone, iMessage threads will show as SMS, not iMessage. That's an Apple limitation, not a Samsung limitation. It's not a big deal, but it's worth knowing. Text messages will work fine; they just won't be encrypted the same way.

Conclusion: Making the Right Call for Your Upgrade
The Galaxy S26 is coming. It will be a solid phone. It will have incremental improvements. And it will cost $200-300 more than the S25 is costing right now.
The S25 is a genuinely excellent flagship phone in 2025. It's fast, the camera is great, the display is excellent, and the battery lasts a full day. Those aren't compromises or asterisks. That's a straightforward fact.
The pricing right now is the best it's going to be for many months. Twenty percent off a flagship phone is meaningful. When you factor in trade-in bonuses and carrier promotions, the effective cost of upgrading drops even further.
If you're thinking about upgrading, the math favors doing it now rather than waiting. You get a premium phone at a reduced price. You don't have to wait months. You get months of use before considering the next upgrade. And by that time, the S26's pricing will have dropped enough that your trade-in value plus new discounts will balance out.
The only reason to wait is if you specifically want to see the S26's feature set and determine it offers something you genuinely need. Otherwise, the S25 represents excellent value right now. Don't overthink it. Upgrade, enjoy the improved performance and camera quality, and stop worrying about what's coming next.

FAQ
Is the Galaxy S25 worth buying now or should I wait for the S26?
The S25 is worth buying now if you're upgrading from a phone that's 2+ years old or looking for a better price-to-performance ratio. Current discounts make it 20% cheaper than launch pricing, and you'll gain months of usage before the S26 arrives. The S26 will likely offer only incremental improvements (10-15% better performance, slightly improved cameras, more AI features), which may not justify the premium launch price or the wait. If your current phone is functioning well and you're not desperate for an upgrade, waiting is reasonable. But if you want flagship performance at a good price right now, the S25 is the call.
What's the performance difference between the Galaxy S25 and expected Galaxy S26?
The S25 features a Snapdragon 8 Elite processor with a 40% CPU improvement over the previous generation and 30% better GPU performance. The S26 will likely bring a 10-15% processor improvement, more sophisticated AI features, and minor camera refinements. For everyday tasks (email, social media, video streaming, light gaming), both phones exceed what's needed. The difference only becomes apparent in intensive scenarios like extended mobile gaming or professional video work, which most users don't do regularly.
How much can I save by buying the S25 now versus waiting for S26 launch pricing?
The S25 is currently selling at
What are the best trade-in options for upgrading to the Galaxy S25?
Samsung's official trade-in program offers fair valuations (iPhone 14/15 approximately
How long will the Galaxy S25 receive software updates and security patches?
Samsung committed to seven years of major Android updates and four years of security patches for the S25 series. This means your S25 will receive Android 17, 18, and beyond, keeping it relevant and secure throughout a decade of ownership. Monthly security patches are released as vulnerabilities are discovered. This support timeline is industry-leading and makes the S25 a solid long-term investment.
Does the Galaxy S25 take noticeably better photos than older Galaxy models?
Yes, particularly in low-light scenarios. The S25 features improved night mode processing that retains detail and accurate colors where previous generations produced muddy or oversaturated images. In well-lit conditions, the differences are minimal—you likely won't notice improvement from the S24 or S23. Video recording is more stable due to better thermal management, allowing longer recording sessions without overheating. If photography in challenging lighting is important to you, the S25 is a noticeable step up.
What's the difference between the Galaxy S25, S25+, and S25 Ultra?
The base S25 features a 6.2-inch display, single primary camera, and sufficient performance for most users. The S25+ offers a 6.7-inch display, improved camera system, and identical processor. The S25 Ultra features a 6.8-inch display, superior zoom capabilities via periscope lens, larger main camera sensor, and premium materials. The Ultra is best for power users, content creators, and photography enthusiasts. The S25 handles everyday needs excellently. The S25+ splits the difference for users wanting a larger screen without the Ultra's premium price.
Should I buy from Samsung directly, a carrier, or Best Buy?
Each channel has advantages. Samsung direct offers maximum flexibility and straightforward pricing. Best Buy often provides higher trade-in valuations and broader selection. Carriers offer aggressive promotions and bill credit bonuses, but they lock you into contracts. If you're upgrading from an older phone, carrier trade-in valuations often exceed other channels, making them cost-effective despite contract requirements. Compare trade-in offers across all three before deciding.
Is the Galaxy S25 durable enough for daily heavy use?
Yes. The S25 features IP68 water/dust resistance (up to 50 meters saltwater for 30 minutes), Gorilla Glass Armor front and back, and improved thermals that prevent overheating during extended use. It handles gaming for hours, continuous video recording, and heavy multitasking without performance degradation. The matte back resists fingerprints. Drop protection is reasonable from waist height onto soft surfaces; pavement drops may cause screen damage (screen protectors are recommended for heavy-use scenarios).
What makes the S25 display better than older Android phones?
The S25's 6.2-inch AMOLED display reaches 2,600 nits peak brightness, making it readable in direct sunlight without squinting. The 120 Hz refresh rate makes scrolling smooth and responsive. The color accuracy is excellent, and contrast is perfect due to AMOLED technology (true blacks since pixels emit no light when displaying black). Compared to older LCDs or lower-brightness AMOLED panels, the difference is immediately obvious. For reading, video watching, and gaming, the display quality is genuinely exceptional.

Key Takeaways
- The Galaxy S25 is currently selling at 20% discount (1,099) with price cuts unlikely to drop much further soon
- Galaxy S26 will likely deliver only 10-15% performance improvements with higher launch pricing of 1,299
- The Snapdragon 8 Elite processor and improved night-mode camera make the S25 excellent for everyday use and content creation
- Trade-in bonuses of $400-600 when paired with current S25 pricing make upgrading now more cost-effective than waiting
- Samsung's 7-year software update commitment means the S25 remains relevant and secure through 2032, reducing upgrade pressure
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