Samsung just broke one of the biggest tech barriers by letting the Galaxy S26 send files via AirDrop for the first time ever

Published on Apr 07, 2026 at 9:17 AM (UTC+4)
by Author Daisy Edwards
Last updated on Apr 07, 2026 at 8:29 PM (UTC+4) · Edited by Amelia Jean Hershman-Jones
Samsung just broke one of the biggest tech barriers by letting the Galaxy S26 send files via AirDrop for the first time ever

It’s the news Android users have been waiting for: iPhone and Samsung users have long been stuck on opposite sides of one of tech’s most annoying little divides, but Samsung is finally crossing it and bringing AirDrop to the Galaxy S26.

Sending photos, videos, and files between the two could feel way harder than it needed to be, especially when AirDrop made things so easy inside Apple’s own world, and people had to fiddle about with WhatsApp.

But now Samsung has finally smashed through that wall with a change that could make sharing across devices much less painful.

According to reports, the update is rolling out first to the Galaxy S26 line and lets Samsung’s Quick Share work with AirDrop on iPhones – here’s why we know it’s really happening.

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Samsung just broke one of the biggest tech barriers

This is a pretty huge tech shift because Quick Share and AirDrop have basically done the same job for years, just in totally separate ecosystems.

Both are built to let people send files wirelessly from one phone to another, but until now, that convenience stopped when the first person had an iPhone, and the other had a Galaxy.

That has been one of those everyday tech frustrations that people just accepted, even though it never really made sense.

Now, the tech giant is changing that by updating Quick Share so Galaxy S26 owners can send files to iPhones using AirDrop support, but anyone with an older Samsung device won’t be able to do it.

The feature reportedly began rolling out in South Korea on March 23, 2026, with the US following over the next week, which means this is not some vague future promise but an actual change arriving now.

There is a catch, though, because Samsung says it is limited to the Galaxy S26 series for the moment, with more devices expected later.

Letting the Galaxy S26 send files via AirDrop could change the tech world

Turning it on also sounds pretty straightforward.

Users just need to head into the Quick Panel, tap Connected Devices, then Quick Share, and select the new option to share with Apple devices.

From there, a nearby iPhone should appear as long as its AirDrop settings are open to receive files.

What makes this even more interesting is that Samsung is following a path Google had already started with Pixel devices, which suggests this could be the beginning of a much bigger cross-platform change.

If more Android phones get the same support, one of the most stubborn barriers in mobile tech might finally start to disappear.

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