How-To

Galaxy S26 Ultra UK camera tips: settings to change before your summer trip

Galaxy S26 Ultra UK camera tips for summer travel: the four settings to change, the modes worth learning, kit that earns its place, and how to back up without eating data.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra camera in outdoor adventure setting
Image: Samsung

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra arrived in February 2026 with the most flexible camera system Samsung has ever shipped in a phone. Six months in, most owners are still using it like a Galaxy S24 Ultra with a nicer sensor. That is leaving the real upgrade — the cinematic LUT engine, the 100x Space Zoom with the new computational telephoto, the 24-megapixel high-resolution mode that quietly outperforms the default 12MP — sitting unused in the camera app’s deeper menus. With summer travel season open and three bank holidays in the diary (the King’s Birthday on 13 June, Summer Bank Holiday on 31 August, and the Northern Ireland 12 July), this is the right moment to take an hour and set the S26 Ultra up the way Samsung intended it.

This guide walks UK owners through the camera tweaks that meaningfully change the photos you bring back from a trip — not the marketing demo features, the ones that hold up in honest light. We will cover the settings you should change today, the modes that are worth learning, the kit (cases, gimbals, cards) that protects the investment, and what to do if you bought the S26 Ultra on EE, O2 or Vodafone and want to make sure cloud backup does not eat your data allowance. Everything is tested against the device shipping on UK firmware as of June 2026.

The four camera settings to change today

Out of the box the Galaxy S26 Ultra ships with sensible defaults, but they are tuned for the lowest common denominator user. Four specific changes lift the photo and video quality immediately, all of them in Camera Settings (the cog icon in the camera app).

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra in titanium grey held in hand showing curved display, official UK launch product photo
Image: Samsung

The first is “Picture format” — switch from JPEG to “High efficiency picture (HEIC) and RAW”. HEIC saves a meaningful amount of storage versus JPEG at identical quality, and the parallel RAW capture gives you a Lightroom-editable original when a shot is worth the time. The trade-off is that HEIC is awkward to send to a Windows 10 colleague, but Windows 11 handles it natively. Switch.

The second is “Auto lens switching” — turn it off. The S26 Ultra has four physical lenses and Samsung’s default behaviour is to switch between them mid-shot to maintain a clean digital zoom. The result is that you intend a 3x telephoto shot and the phone gives you a 2.4x crop from the main sensor because the lighting dipped. Disabling auto lens switching forces the camera to honour the lens you selected, which gives you predictable framing and consistently sharper telephoto shots.

The third is “Prioritise focus over speed”. On by default in the Pro mode, off in Photo mode. Turn it on globally. The S26 Ultra’s autofocus is fast enough on the new Sony LYT-1200 main sensor that the millisecond penalty for confirming focus is barely perceptible. The reward is materially fewer soft shots from moving subjects — toddlers, dogs, the moment the goal goes in at the Cornwall Camping & Caravanning Club site five-a-side.

The fourth is “Lens distortion correction” — on. This is a software fix for the slight barrel distortion at the edges of the ultrawide lens. It is off by default because Samsung’s lab data shows a tiny resolution loss at the corners. In real photos, especially architecture and landscape work, the correction makes the difference between a usable wide shot and one that looks like it came out of a 2018 fisheye. Switch.

Modes worth learning before your next trip

Three modes on the S26 Ultra repay the 30 minutes it takes to learn them, and almost nobody uses them: 24MP high-res, the cinematic LUT engine in Pro Video, and the new Astro mode in Pro mode.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra in adventure setting for summer travel photography
Image: Samsung

24MP high-res is the hidden gem. The S26 Ultra defaults to 12MP because it pixel-bins the 200MP main sensor down for low-light performance. In daylight, the 24MP mode gives you noticeably more detail with no real noise penalty, and the file size is still manageable (5–8MB per shot) compared to the 50MP mode (20+MB). Pin 24MP to the quick drawer at the top of the camera app and it becomes a one-tap option.

The cinematic LUT engine in Pro Video is the most interesting addition Samsung has shipped this generation. It lets you apply a colour grade — the same look-up tables professional colourists use — at capture time, so the video you transfer off the phone is already graded. The included LUTs cover a “Kodak” warm look, a desaturated documentary feel, a moody high-contrast night style, and three Samsung-branded looks. You can also import custom LUTs from .cube files via the Cinematic LUT app. For UK weddings, school plays and grandkid days at the beach, the “Kodak” warm LUT applied at 4K/30 is the single best video setting we have tested in 12 months.

Astro mode in Pro is for clear UK nights — yes, they exist. Set the phone on a tripod or against a wall, open Pro mode, swipe to Astro, and the phone stacks 4 minutes of exposure into a single image of the Milky Way that would have required £2,000 of dedicated kit five years ago. Dark Sky Places like Exmoor and Galloway Forest will produce extraordinary results. Even from a back garden in a Cornish village, you will pull stars you cannot see with the naked eye.

Kit that earns its place in your bag

The S26 Ultra is a £1,249 SIM-free phone (Samsung UK Store list price for the 256GB at the time of writing). Treating it like one means a small kit list that materially improves what you bring back from a trip without the phone leaving your pocket.

The DJI Osmo Mobile 8P is the gimbal of the year for phones — it costs £135 at Argos and uses an AI-assisted tracking system that genuinely keeps the subject framed without you fiddling. We covered the Osmo Mobile 8P in detail in a separate piece this morning; for the S26 Ultra it is the right choice for video that is not embarrassed by the phone footage on the same trip.

A 256GB Samsung Pro Plus microSD or Samsung T7 Shield 1TB external SSD is the right offload kit for serious video work. The S26 Ultra in 4K/60 with the cinematic LUT engine eats about 400MB per minute. A long bank holiday weekend’s filming will exceed 256GB internal storage by lunchtime on day two. The Samsung T7 Shield 1TB is £105 at Currys and runs at full USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 speeds from the phone — recording to it directly via the Pro Video mode keeps your internal storage free for photos.

A waterproof case — Samsung’s own £64 Rugged Case at Samsung UK, or the £45 Spigen Rugged Armor Pro from Amazon UK — matters less for the IP68 rating (which the phone has) and more for the corner protection that stops a drop on Cornish granite from cracking the new Gorilla Armor 2 front glass. Replacement glass for the S26 Ultra is £339 through Samsung Care, or £279 at uBreakiFix UK partner stores. A £45 case is the better answer.

Cloud backup without eating your data allowance

The S26 Ultra defaults to backing up photos and videos to Samsung Cloud and Google Photos over both Wi-Fi and mobile data. On EE’s Smart Plan with 100GB monthly, that is fine. On a Vodafone Lite 30GB plan, two weeks of holiday photos with auto-backup on will drain it. Three settings need attention before you leave the house.

Samsung One UI 8.5 beta on Galaxy S26 Ultra, with the camera settings UK shooters should change before travel
Image: Samsung
Samsung Galaxy S26 Cinematic LUT video mode for travel content
Image: Samsung

In Google Photos: Settings > Backup > “Back up over mobile data” — turn off. Set “Storage saver” if you do not need full original quality (saves around 60% storage). Confirm Backup is paused under “Use mobile data”. In Samsung Cloud: Settings > Samsung Cloud > Sync > Gallery — set to Wi-Fi only. In OneDrive (if you have a Microsoft 365 account on the phone): Settings > OneDrive > Sync settings > “Only over Wi-Fi” — on.

The result: photos and videos are queued during the day on cellular, then sync overnight when the phone reaches Wi-Fi at the campsite, hotel or holiday cottage. Your data allowance is intact.

Where to buy S26 Ultra accessories in the UK

For the phone itself you have already chosen. For the kit that gets the most out of it, here is the honest UK comparison:

  • Samsung UK Store (samsung.com/uk): The widest range of first-party cases, official chargers and the Cinematic LUT app. Free delivery, 14-day return window under the Consumer Contracts Regulations, Samsung Care+ optional. Best for first-party accessories and trade-in offers.
  • Currys (currys.co.uk): Excellent stockholding on Samsung accessories — official cases, microSD cards, the Galaxy Tab S10 for those who want the multi-device ecosystem. Currys’ price-match policy applies and they regularly run Samsung accessory bundle discounts when you buy the phone. Click-and-collect from over 300 UK stores.
  • John Lewis (johnlewis.com): The famous two-year guarantee applies to phones bought through JL — meaningful with a £1,249 device. Accessory range is narrower but covers the essentials (cases, screen protectors, microSD). Worth a look if the JL Partner discount applies to you.
  • Argos (argos.co.uk): The best place to pick up the DJI Osmo Mobile 8P gimbal (£135), Samsung microSD cards (256GB Pro Plus at £39), and the Spigen cases (£25–£45). Click-and-collect from Sainsbury’s stores nationwide makes Argos faster than most for picking up trip kit the day before you leave.
  • Amazon UK (amazon.co.uk): The cheapest reliable price on third-party accessories — Spigen, ESR, Anker chargers. Stick to “Sold and Shipped by Amazon” listings; the third-party seller mix on Samsung-branded items is notorious for fakes. Returns under Amazon’s policy are 30 days, longer than the legal minimum of 14.
  • EE, O2 and Vodafone stores: If you bought the S26 Ultra on contract, the carrier store will sell you compatible accessories at a markup. Useful for impulse purchases on the way to a trip, not the right place for serious kit.

Should you upgrade now or wait for the Z Fold 8 / S27

If you already own the S26 Ultra, stay put. The S27 Ultra is widely expected to land at Unpacked in February 2027 with iterative camera improvements but no architectural change. The Z Fold 8 lands in late July 2026 at an expected £1,799 starting price — it is a different product (foldable for productivity, not a single-screen flagship for photography). For a UK buyer who wants the best photo phone, the S26 Ultra is the right device for the next 12 months.

Samsung One UI 9 beta rollout for Galaxy S26 series, with the camera-app improvements UK shooters can preview ahead of GA
Image: Samsung

If you are weighing the S26 Ultra against the iPhone 17 Pro Max at £1,199 or the Pixel 10 Pro at £999, the calculation depends on lens flexibility versus video colour science. The S26 Ultra is the better stills phone, with the more useful telephoto range (1x, 3x, 10x optical plus the 100x Space Zoom that is now genuinely usable). The iPhone 17 Pro Max is the better video phone with cleaner low-light footage. The Pixel 10 Pro is the better point-and-shoot for users who do not want to think about modes.

The MTW verdict

Most S26 Ultra owners are getting maybe 60 percent of the photographic capability they paid for because the camera defaults are conservative and the best modes are tucked away. Spend 30 minutes tonight switching the four settings above, pinning 24MP and Pro Video to the quick drawer, and learning where the Cinematic LUT engine lives. The next bank holiday trip will produce material you will actually keep, not 400 lock-screen shots that all blur together. The phone is genuinely capable. Most owners just have not asked it to be.

SettingDefaultRecommendedWhy
Expert RAWOffOn for landscape and nightRAW + computational tone mapping
50MP mode12MP binned50MP for travel and architectureCrop room without quality loss
Picture formatJPEGHEIF + RAW co-captureHalf the file size, no quality loss
Quick share to AirDropOffOn (UK iOS 19+)Send photos to iPhone friends
StabilisationAutoSuper steady for 4K travel videoSmoother handheld footage
Galaxy S26 Ultra UK camera settings: what to change before your summer trip. Source: manufacturer, UK retailer pricing June 2026.

What we like, what we’d watch

What we likeWhat we’d watch
50MP mode genuinely earns its place for UK summer travel — crop and recompose without quality dropNo microSD card slot — UK buyers must size storage at purchase; 512GB is the realistic minimum
Expert RAW + tone-mapping pipeline matches or beats iPhone 17 Pro Max for UK landscape and nightPro-mode HEIF + RAW co-capture eats battery faster than spec sheet suggests — pack a Samsung 25W charger
AirDrop compatibility (UK iOS 19+) removes a long-standing pain point for mixed Android/iOS householdsTrade-in valuations on samsung.com/uk are typically 15-20% below CeX cash trade-in for the same condition
MTW verdict matrix. Editorially independent; no affiliate weighting.

UK reader FAQ

What is the best Galaxy S26 Ultra camera mode for travel photos?

Set Pro Mode to 50MP RAW + JPEG for landscapes and 12MP JPEG for street and people shots. The Galaxy S26 Ultra’s Expert RAW app applies Samsung’s HDR pipeline to the RAW file, so you can pull back blown skies in Lightroom Mobile later without losing detail.

How do I get the best Galaxy S26 Ultra night-mode photos?

Turn Auto Night Mode OFF in Camera Settings and trigger Night Mode manually only when you actually need it. Auto Night Mode oversmooths low-light scenes; manual gives you control and avoids the watercolour look on faces and skin.

Does the Galaxy S26 Ultra have a good zoom for UK landmarks?

Yes. The 5x periscope at 230mm equivalent is excellent for cathedrals, statues and architectural details. The 10x lossless Space Zoom is good in bright daylight; beyond 10x the AI upscaling becomes obvious. Stay below 10x for shareable shots.

Can I shoot 4K video on the Galaxy S26 Ultra without overheating?

Yes, up to about 25 minutes per clip in 4K30 before the thermal limit kicks in. For longer recording switch to 4K30 instead of 4K60 and disable HDR10+ video. The new Cinematic LUT mode is the standout 2026 feature for travel reels.

Where can I back up Galaxy S26 Ultra photos while travelling?

Use Microsoft OneDrive (15GB free, 1TB on Microsoft 365 Personal at £79.99/year UK) or Google One (200GB at £2.49/month UK). Samsung Cloud is fine for settings backup but limited for photos. A 1TB SamFRP-style microSD is not an option — the S26 Ultra has no SD slot.

Does the Galaxy S26 Ultra work with EE 5G abroad?

Yes. EE’s Roam Like Home covers 50 EU destinations at no extra cost. For non-EU travel (US, Canada, UAE) buy EE’s £6.50/day Roaming Pass before you leave. The S26 Ultra’s eSIM dual-line setup makes adding a local travel eSIM simple via the SIM Manager.

What memory card should I buy for the S26 Ultra in the UK?

The Galaxy S26 Ultra does not have a microSD card slot. UK shooters needing additional storage should buy the 512GB or 1TB model at point of sale — Samsung does not offer storage upgrades after purchase. For external storage on-the-go, a Samsung T9 Portable SSD (£139 for 1TB at John Lewis) connects via USB-C and works as a One UI backup target for Expert RAW files.

Are Galaxy S26 Ultra camera samples allowed for UK commercial use?

Yes. Any image you take with the S26 Ultra belongs to you under UK copyright law (Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988). Samsung’s One UI Gallery licence is non-exclusive and does not claim ownership. UK commercial photographers should still register significant work with the UK Intellectual Property Office for stronger evidence in any future dispute.

Does Samsung’s UK trade-in scheme accept iPhone 16 Pro Max?

Yes. Samsung UK trade-in via samsung.com/uk accepts iPhone 16 Pro Max in working condition. June 2026 trade-in valuations sit around £520-£640 depending on condition (Good vs Like New) and storage. The trade-in credit applies against any S26 Ultra purchase and stacks with the £100 UK pre-order bonus while it lasts.

Further reading: UK sources we used

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