Samsung has officially announced Flex Titanium, a new foldable display structure that the company says makes the fold crease less visible on its Galaxy foldables. Samsung Display revealed the technology through Samsung Mobile Press on July 14, one week before the July 22 Galaxy Unpacked event in London, where it is set to debut. If you have ever noticed the valley running down the middle of a Galaxy Z Fold or Z Flip screen, this is aimed squarely at your biggest complaint.
What Samsung Flex Titanium actually changes
The visible crease has been the single most persistent weakness of Samsung’s foldable line since the first Galaxy Fold in 2019. Flex Titanium is Samsung’s structural answer to it. Instead of the polymer (plastic) support film used under the panel until now, the new stack introduces two titanium-based layers that reshape how the screen is supported at the hinge. Per the official diagram, the display is built from five layers, top to bottom:

- Protective Layer — the outermost surface you touch
- Ultra Thin Glass — the flexible glass cover
- OLED Panel — the display itself
- Titanium-alloy Film — a new stiffening layer under the panel
- Titanium Plate — the base support with micro-patterned holes at the fold
Samsung says the titanium-alloy film offers 20 times greater mechanical stiffness than the polymer film it replaces, while measuring roughly one-third the thickness of a human hair. Those are Samsung’s own figures, not independently tested numbers. Beneath that film sits the titanium plate, drilled with precision-processed micro holes so it can still flex at the fold point. Samsung says this eliminates air gaps between the plate and the display module, giving firmer support when the phone is open while still allowing it to fold repeatedly. Samsung also says the panel uses a new high-resolution architecture and next-generation organic materials that lower power consumption, so the change is meant to help battery life alongside flatness.
What Samsung is — and isn’t — claiming
This is the important part to get right. Samsung is claiming reduced crease visibility, not a display with the fold eliminated. There is no percentage figure anywhere in the release for how much less visible the crease becomes, and the two real numbers Samsung gives — the 20x stiffer film and the one-third-hair thickness — describe the film itself, not the crease. Any framing that suggests the crease disappears goes further than Samsung’s own words.
Two Samsung executives framed the announcement. Sunghoon Moon, EVP and Senior Executive of the Mobile R&D Office – H/W, said Samsung’s strength in the foldable category comes from connecting user needs with the company’s technologies. Kyung-Jin Yoo, EVP and Head of the Mobile Display Product Development Team at Samsung Display, said: “By introducing sophisticated micro-patterned holes to the folding section, we have successfully secured flexibility with robust durability.”
It’s worth naming what’s missing, though. Structural announcements like this almost always come with a fold-cycle durability rating, and this one doesn’t. The Galaxy Z Fold7 was rated for 500,000 folds; Samsung has made no new fold-cycle claim for Flex Titanium. That’s a notable omission for a technology whose whole pitch is a reengineered support structure.
Which phones get it, and when
Samsung’s release only refers to “next-generation Galaxy foldable devices” — it does not name a single model. Given that Flex Titanium was revealed one week before Galaxy Unpacked, our expectation is that it debuts in the Galaxy Z Fold8, Z Fold8 Ultra, and Z Flip8 on July 22, but that is androidpure’s inference from the timing, not something Samsung has confirmed. Unpacked runs at 2 PM BST in London on July 22, and Samsung has already opened Galaxy Z Fold8 and Z Flip8 pre-reservations in India, so buyers here can register interest before the phones are official.
Some perspective on the bigger picture: a stiffer titanium support layer is legitimate engineering, but a less visible crease is not new ground for the category. Rival foldables from Oppo, Honor, and Huawei have narrowed or softened their creases over the past couple of generations, so this reads as Samsung catching up on a long-standing pain point rather than inventing something the market has never seen. That doesn’t make it unwelcome — it’s arguably overdue.
One caveat to keep front of mind: this is a pre-launch teaser with no independent hands-on testing behind it. How much flatter the screen actually looks, how the crease holds up over months of folding, and whether the power savings are noticeable can only be judged once the phones reach reviewers after July 22. Until then, “reduced crease visibility” is a claim to verify, not a settled fact.
Source: Samsung Mobile Press / Samsung Display official announcement.






