Samsung has officially launched Samsung Browser for Windows, bypassing the beta program it announced in October 2025. In a blog post dated March 2026, Samsung stated that the Windows version brings device continuity, Samsung Pass integration, and a new AI assistant developed with Perplexity. Samsung Browser for Windows is available on Windows 11 and Windows 10 version 1809 or later.
The announcement from Samsung on October 30, 2025, described Samsung Internet for PC as a beta program limited to users in the United States and Korea, with wider expansion planned for later. The new announcement on March 26 describes the Windows version as an official launch, marking a broader step for the product rather than a routine beta update.
The new features focus on continuity, search, and tab context. Users can continue browsing the same webpage when transitioning from mobile to PC, while Samsung Pass can sync login information and autofill between different devices. The new assistant in Samsung Browser understands natural language messages, current page content, and open tab activity to provide structured responses, find specific moments in videos, search browsing history in natural language, and summarize or compare multiple tabs at once.
Samsung’s browser site lists other Windows features, including tab management, on-device web page translation, a sidebar, secret mode, and synchronization via Samsung Cloud. These are presented alongside the new Windows launch rather than as separate future updates.
The availability is more restricted than the launch title suggests. The browser itself supports Windows 10 version 1809 and newer. However, the AI features on Windows and Android are currently limited to South Korea and the United States. The same-page transfer feature has stricter hardware requirements – users need the latest version of Samsung Account plus Samsung Continuity Service or the Galaxy Connect app on PC, available on Galaxy Book3, Galaxy Book4, Galaxy Book5, and Galaxy Book6 devices.
Samsung’s PC browser is clearer than during the beta phase, but some key features still depend on region and hardware.







