Samsung is preparing a major overhaul of its One UI beta program that could remove one of the most frustrating parts of testing software on Galaxy phones. The new approach is designed to make both enrollment and withdrawal far simpler, reducing the friction that has long discouraged ordinary users from trying beta builds.
According to a notice in Samsung Members, as highlighted by SamMobile, the company is separating beta access into two distinct stages. Users will first join the broader Beta Program, and only after that will they enroll in the specific beta test that applies to their device.
This change means the terms and conditions for beta participation will no longer need to be approved repeatedly for every model or every new test. Samsung says that once a user joins the Beta Program, that approval remains valid until the user explicitly decides to leave the program.
A cleaner path inside Samsung Members
Samsung is also changing how the beta experience appears inside the Samsung Members app. The company is moving away from temporary beta banners and replacing them with a permanent space called “Beta Program Home.”
That page will serve as the main hub for all active individual beta tests, while also surfacing tips related to beta participation. Samsung appears to want a more organized setup that is easier to understand for users who are not used to experimental software programs.
The new layout is also meant to shorten the path into a beta build. From the dedicated page, users will reportedly be able to enter the relevant beta with a single tap, which removes several of the steps that previously made the process feel unnecessarily complicated.
Leaving beta will be just as direct
Samsung is not only simplifying entry. It is also making the exit process more straightforward for users who want to return to a stable build.
On the detail page for each beta, a new “More” menu will include a “Withdraw from beta program” button. That gives users a clear and direct way to leave testing without searching through a more confusing set of menus.
The ability to leave quickly matters because many users are interested in beta features but remain cautious about software that may still be unstable. A simple exit path can make the program feel less risky and more approachable.
Why the change matters
Beta programs are meant to help companies test features, find bugs, and gather feedback before a stable release. In practice, however, complicated sign-up steps can limit participation among everyday users.
Samsung’s new structure could lower that barrier significantly. If joining and leaving becomes easier, more Galaxy owners may feel comfortable trying One UI beta releases without worrying about being locked into a cumbersome process.
That could also improve the quality of feedback Samsung receives. A broader and more varied group of testers is more likely to expose issues that might not appear during narrower testing among technical users alone.
The shift is expected to begin with One UI 9, making the new structure the foundation for the next wave of beta testing on Galaxy devices. If Samsung’s implementation works as described, the beta experience should feel more direct, more organized, and much less like an administrative hurdle.
Source: www.androidpolice.com






