The following content is brought to you by Lifehacker partners. If you buy a product featured here, we may earn an affiliate commission or other compensation.TL;DR key takeaways:The Samsung Galaxy S26 Series can take over small, repetitive tasks to streamline your day and simplify your life.Now Brief summarises schedule details from your messages and notifications, so you’re always one step ahead.Automation chains "if" conditions to "then" actions, so your phone adjusts settings automatically when pre-set triggers fire.Features also include Photo Assist[1] for in-Gallery editing, Call Screening for filtering unknown numbers, and Privacy Display[2] (on the Galaxy S26 Ultra) for keeping your screen from prying eyes.You check your phone a thousand times a day: for the weather, for calendar updates, to see if the train's still on time, to monitor the timer you set for the pasta, to keep up with the group chats you're half-following while you cook… the list goes on. None of this takes more than a few seconds, but the cumulative effect is a day that feels chopped into a hundred tiny interruptions.The Samsung Galaxy S26 Series is built to smooth out the scattered tasks that chip away at your time and attention. And two features in particular take over most of the friction-y, repetitive bits of your day. The first sits on your lock screen, summarising your schedule at a glance; the second runs in the background, automating the routines you'd otherwise need to manage manually. Samsung Galaxy S26 £1,049.00 at Samsung Shop Now Shop Now £1,049.00 at Samsung Now Brief tells you what's coming before you've askedNow Brief is the Galaxy S26’s new-and-improved daily summary, displayed on the lock screen as a widget you can glance at without unlocking. The morning version is the one you'll likely lean on most: it gives you a quick snapshot of your schedule, from your 9 a.m. stand-up, to your lunch reservation across town at noon, to the rain that's forecast in the afternoon, to the school pick-up planned for 4 p.m. (It might also flag that your dog hasn't had their walk yet, or that you've got a parcel due before lunch.)The feature pulls from your calendar, your weather app, and supported categories like health, travel, news, and SmartThings, so you know the shape of the day from the moment you wake up. It also refreshes throughout the day, so you’ll get an afternoon and an evening version tailored accordingly.Perhaps the best part of the feature is how much it surfaces things you've never explicitly added, especially after a couple of weeks; the feature gets smarter and more tuned to your schedule the more you use it.That customisation is thanks to the Personal Data Engine[3] doing behind-the-scenes work to spot relevant info across your apps and present it effortlessly. (A bonus: processing happens on-device whenever possible rather than in the cloud, so less of your data leaves your hands.)Now Bar keeps the live stuff one glance awayNow Bar is Now Brief’s sibling feature that handles real-time activity, such as music controls, active timers, navigation prompts, voice recording sessions, and live sports scores. Now Brief gives you the overview; Now Bar gives you the "right now" of what's underway or en route.Take a typical cooking session where you’ve got a podcast playing and a 20-minute oven timer running, plus the live score from the football match you're half-watching in the background. On most phones, that's three apps to swipe between every time you need to check something. On the Galaxy S26, all of it sits on the Now Bar at the bottom of the lock screen—so you won’t burn the lasagne or miss a winning goal.Automation handles the routines you used to do manuallyAutomation lives in the Modes and Routines section of Settings, and it’s a neat design feature that harkens back to early-2010s automation tools like IFTTT (If This, Then That).In the phone’s Settings, under Modes and Routines, you can set an "if" condition and a "then" action, and the phone handles the rest. Possible triggers include options like location, time of day, Bluetooth connection, WiFi network, app open or close, charging status, headphones connect, etc.A few routines worth setting up:When your car's Bluetooth connects, Driving Mode switches on, Maps opens, and your “on the road” playlist starts automatically. Your hands stay on the wheel from the moment you buckle in.When you pop in your headphones at the gym, Do Not Disturb activates, and your "pump it up" playlist queues up to get you in the zone.Weekdays at 9 p.m., work-app notifications go silent, and the display switches to Dark Mode.When you leave the office, personal notifications come back on, work notifications are muted, and a "buy milk" reminder pops up for the shopping you keep putting off.You can browse the preset Modes the device ships with (Sleep, Driving, Exercise, Work, Relax) for inspiration, or build your own from the "+" icon at the top of the Routines tab. The Settings menu is granular enough that you can chain multiple conditions together, e.g., "WiFi connected to your home network and it's after 7 p.m. and the phone is charging," for routines that only kick in under very specific circumstances.Other device features that streamline your lifeThe device’s Galaxy AI features address other everyday headaches: Photo Assist and Creative Studio[4] let you polish photos or remix them into shareable content for social media; Call Screening gives you relief from spam. On the hardware side of things, Privacy Display provides peace of mind that whatever's on your screen—from embarrassing messages from mum to dating app notifications or sensitive banking details—stays reserved for your eyes only. The feature is available on the Galaxy S26 Ultra; switch it on in Settings under Display, then use the Quick panel icon to toggle it whenever you need it. This built-in feature means you no longer need to spend time hunting for the corner seat in a cafe or contorting yourself to shield your screen from fellow passengers on the commute home.Time savings works like compound interest: Saving thirty seconds, fifty times a day, adds up to noticeable time by the end of the week. With the Galaxy S26, you do the configuring once, and the device keeps cashing the dividends.The Samsung Galaxy S26 Series is available now at samsung.com.FAQAre Now Brief, Now Bar, and Automation available on every Samsung Galaxy S26 model?Yes. Now Brief, Now Bar, and the Modes and Routines feature (which includes Automation) are available across the Galaxy S26, Galaxy S26+, and Galaxy S26 Ultra. How is Now Brief on the Samsung Galaxy S26 series different from older versions?On the Galaxy S26 Series, Now Brief is more proactive and personalised than on earlier Galaxy phones. It aggregates relevant information from your messages and notifications without you needing to flag anything manually. A flight reservation, hotel check-in reminder, delivery update, or birthday from your contacts can all appear in the daily brief, drawn from the larger context of your apps and routines. Information is processed on-device via the Personal Data Engine.What's the difference between Now Brief and Now Bar?Now Brief and Now Bar work together but serve different roles. Now Brief is a daily summary based on your schedule, the weather, your selected interest categories, and contextually relevant information from your apps. Now Bar is the lock screen toolbar that displays real-time activity from supported apps, including music controls, active timers, navigation prompts, recording sessions, and live sports scores. Now Brief tells you what's coming up across your day; Now Bar shows what's happening on your phone in the moment.Disclaimers:[1] Requires network connection and Samsung account login. A visible watermark is overlaid on the saved image to indicate it was generated by Galaxy AI. Accuracy of output not guaranteed. [2] Requires manual activation in settings to function. Privacy Display feature is not AI-powered. [3] Personal Data Engine is exclusive to Samsung native apps and is not applicable to third-party applications. Personal Data Engine recognises 20 languages and certain accents/dialects. The Personal Data Intelligence menu must be switched on. Analysed data will be deleted once the Intelligence menu is turned off.[4] Requires network connection and Samsung account login. Accuracy of output not guaranteed.