Recently, the European Union made it mandatory for brands to ship phones, tablets, and other such devices with the European Product Registry for Energy Labelling (EPREL) label. It mentions a device’s energy efficiency, battery life on a single charge, number of charging cycles before the battery’s capacity falls below 80%, and drop resistance, ingress protection, and repairability ratings.The companies are required to submit these labels before they launch the device or start shipping them, and soon as they do, the EU publishes them on its platform, revealing key information about upcoming devices. Well, those labels for Samsung’s four upcoming devices, Galaxy S25 FE, Galaxy Tab S10 Lite, Galaxy Tab S11, and the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra are here (via Sudhanshu Ambhore), revealing a few of their key aspects.Galaxy S25 FE offers marginally better battery life over Galaxy S24 FEAccording to it, the Galaxy S25 FE can last up to 42 hours and 37 minutes on a single charge. In comparison, its predecessor, the Galaxy S24 FE lasts 42 hours on a single charge. The other aspects of the two devices on their labels are the same, including Class B energy efficiency, Class A drop resistance, Class C repairability, 2,000 battery charging cycles, and IP68 rating for dust and water resistance. Galaxy Tab S11 series offer significantly better battery backup but lower battery enduranceAs for the Galaxy Tab S11, it can last 81 hours on a single charge. That’s a significant improvement over its predecessor, the Galaxy Tab S10+, which can last 73 hours. However, the upcoming model’s battery can only do 1,200 charging cycles before its capacity drops below 80%. Whereas, the battery of the last year’s model can last up to 2,000 charging cycles before its capacity drops below 80%. Coming to the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra, its battery can last 94 hours and 51 minutes on a single charge, which is an almost 10-hour bump over that of its predecessor, the Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra. However, the battery of the upcoming model isn’t as durable (1,200 charging cycles) as that of the last year’s model (2,000 charging cycles). Some might say that Samsung should have preferred higher charging cycles over longer battery life. Galaxy Tab S10 Lite EPREL label leakedLastly, we have the Galaxy Tab S10 Lite. It can last 87 hours and 42 minutes on a single charge, its battery can last up to 2,000 charge cycles before its capacity drops below 80%, the tablet has IP42 rating for dust and water resistance, and the device has Class E drop resistance, and Class C repairability rating. Samsung is expected to launch the Galaxy S25 FE on 19 September 2025 and the Galaxy Tab S11 series by the end of this year.The post Galaxy S25 FE, Tab S10 Lite, Tab S11 battery, durability revealed appeared first on SamMobile.