The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra is a balanced flagship phone, but can it compete with Ultra-branded camera phones from China? To find out, I pitted the best Samsung phone against the Oppo Find X9 Ultra, which is widely considered the best camera phone available right now. But while the Oppo flagship was the favorite going into my photo walk, the Samsung surprised me in a few ways.
With the S26 Ultra, the Korean giant doubled down on software and bundled it with larger apertures on two sensors, whereas Oppo went all-in on hardware upgrades and paired them with meaningful software advancements. It also added 10x optical zoom, making the Find X9 Ultra the only Ultra phone with this feature in 2026. Oppo says its 10x telephoto camera is 3x more light-sensitive than the Galaxy S23 Ultra’s 10x camera.
The resulting camera system beats the Galaxy S26 Ultra in most scenarios, but Samsung’s flagship phone surprised me on multiple occasions. It’s certainly a better camera phone than the Galaxy S25 Ultra, despite having seemingly similar hardware.
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra vs. Oppo Find X9 Ultra: Specs
The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra covers 13-111mm focal lengths. It has a 50MP 13mm f/1.9 ultra-wide camera with a 1/2.5-inch sensor, a 200MP 23mm f/1.4 main camera with a 1/1.3-inch sensor, a 10MP 67mm f/2.4 3x telephoto camera with a 1/3.94-inch sensor, and a 50MP 111mm f/2.9 5x periscope telephoto camera with a 1/2.52-inch sensor. It looks formidable until you see what Oppo has on offer this year.
The Find X9 Ultra covers focal lengths from 14mm to 230mm. It has a 50MP 14mm f/2 ultra-wide camera with a 1/1.95-inch sensor, a 200MP 23mm f/1.5 main camera with a 1/1.2-inch sensor, a 200MP 70mm f/2.2 3x telephoto camera with a 1/1.28-inch sensor, and a 50MP 230mm f/3.5 10x telephoto camera with a 1/2.75-inch sensor.
I took more than 500 photos on each phone and narrowed down this comparison to 25 images. Here’s how the two Ultra phone cameras compare:
Main camera
Both Samsung and Oppo shoot pixel-binned images from their 200MP sensor by default. I recommend using a higher resolution mode (like 24MP or 50MP on the Galaxy S26 Ultra and 50MP on the Oppo), but I kept the default settings for this comparison.
The Galaxy S26 Ultra boosts color saturation to add a pop, whereas Oppo’s shots look more natural. While I like Samsung’s contrast, there’s some artificial color sharpening going on, making it look less natural.
On the other hand, the Find X9 Ultra gives you a more pleasing bokeh, thanks to a bigger sensor. Both phones captured good amount of details, as you can see the texture on the leaves.
However, I prefer Oppo’s color science and Master Mode, which give me natural tones with minimal phone-like color processing.
In evening shots, the Galaxy S26 Ultra gave my photos a teal hue, whereas the Find X9 Ultra had a pink hue. My skin tone was better captured by the Oppo phone, and it had more details. In comparison, the Samsung shot looks slightly noisy and less appealing overall.
Samsung has been working on improving its night mode photos for a few years now, and the Galaxy S26 Ultra beats its rivals in this scenario on most occasions. I want my low-light photos to look like low-light shots instead of artificially brightened photos. That’s why I like Samsung’s saturated colors on the entrance board versus Oppo’s brightened picture quality at night.
However, if you switch to the Master Mode, things change drastically. The Find X9 Ultra handles night light well and doesn’t overexpose the shots to brighten every detail. In my testing, Master Mode consistently delivered better results than Oppo’s default processing, and I relied on it for night shots.
Telephoto cameras
This is one of the scenarios where Samsung surprised me. I like its cooler tone versus Oppo’s warmer look, which gave my skin a yellow tint. It doesn’t look bad, but I’m simply not that pale. Again, this could be fixed by using the Master Mode, but I expected better color science from the default processing. However, Oppo’s shot captured rich details as compared to a slightly smoother-looking skin on the Samsung flagship.
In challenging lighting situations like the above, when the setting sun was directly hitting my face, Samsung processed the photo better than Oppo.
The Galaxy S26 Ultra managed to get the golden hour look, while the Find X9 Ultra’s shot looks washed out. Both photos were captured with tap and shoot, so the focus was set, and the cameras didn’t struggle to find the subject automatically. Again, I wish Samsung captured more details with a more natural-looking bokeh. It looks soft and slightly artificial in comparison to the Oppo’s.
Oppo’s bigger lens and smarter processing comes in handy when you need rich details in shots like above. Samsung struggled to focus on the thick webbing, while the Find X9 Ultra focused and captured even the single strands. And this extends to the 10x telephoto camera.
Oppo demolishes the Galaxy S26 Ultra in macro shots. This was a tricky subject because the small flower kept moving in the slightest breeze. I struggled to get it in focus with the Galaxy S26 Ultra, which it simply couldn’t do. That’s why I don’t have a comparison photo for this shot. The Oppo Find X9 Ultra, by contrast, focused on the same subject with a single tap and even captured those white threads in the picture.
One of the reasons I love having big telephoto cameras, like the one on the Find X9 Ultra, is that they allow me to get so close to small subjects and capture things I’d never be able to focus on with my eyes. Oppo’s macro mode is right up there with Vivo’s, and Samsung doesn’t have a match for it.
Ultra-wide camera
When it comes to my ultra-wide testing, the Oppo Find X9 Ultra was able to get more contrast and highlight the blues of the sky without blowing out the green leaves as the Galaxy S26 Ultra did.
Overall, I prefer Oppo’s shot here because it has more details on the tree trunks and didn’t overexpose the leaves. However, Samsung’s processing focused on better exposing the leaves and didn’t have the same halo effect as its rival.
Verdict
The Oppo Find X9 Ultra consistently captured richer details compared to the Galaxy S26 Ultra. However, the Samsung flagship stood its own and even beat the Oppo phone on a couple of occasions. While I prefer having bigger sensors, the Galaxy phone surprised me in the best ways.
That said, Oppo easily wins in most scenarios. It is, hands-down, the current king of smartphone telephoto cameras. TechRadar’s Cameras Editor Timothy Coleman also compared the Find X9 Ultra to two dedicated cameras and concluded, “It feels like this flagship Chinese phone renders most travel zoom compacts redundant,” which can’t be said about the Galaxy S26 Ultra. The Master Mode is an added benefit if you like shooting film-like colors. I simply can’t stop shooting with this phone.
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