Samsung Health is now showing users a mandatory consent screen titled “Consent to the Use of Health Data for AI Training and Modelling,” and the terms are unusually blunt: agree, or you can no longer sync your health data to your Samsung account. The Samsung Health AI training consent prompt tells anyone who declines that their already-synced health data will be deleted, unless Samsung is legally required to keep it. In other words, this is not a “maybe later” checkbox you can quietly ignore — refusing has a direct cost to how the app works for you.
To be precise about what declining actually does, because it matters: turning down consent means (a) you can no longer sync Samsung Health data to your Samsung account, and (b) the data already synced there gets deleted, except where Samsung has a legal obligation to retain it. This is Samsung’s own in-app notice — not a leak or a rumor — and the wording is the company’s, seen directly in the prompt.

What data the consent covers
The screen isn’t limited to step counts. Per Samsung’s own language, the consent covers health and wellness data, medication data, health records, and menstrual and cycle-tracking data. Samsung says this data “will be used for AI training and modelling, including human review, to improve Samsung Health, including algorithms to analyse health conditions and our AI features.”
The phrase “including human review” is worth sitting with. It means some of the health information you agree to share can be looked at by people, not just processed by an algorithm — a meaningful detail if you use Samsung Health to log medication or track a cycle.
How to check and manage Samsung Health AI training consent
You can review or withdraw consent at any time. Open the Samsung Health app, then go to Settings > Privacy > “Consent to the use of health data for AI training and modelling” and use the toggle there.
One honest caveat: switching that toggle off triggers the same warning described above. You’ll be told that your data can no longer sync to your Samsung account and that already-synced data will be deleted (again, unless Samsung is legally required to retain it). So while the control exists and is easy to find, using it isn’t consequence-free.
Why the “freely given” part matters
Here’s where it gets uncomfortable, and this is androidpure’s own read of the public facts. Under GDPR, consent is meant to be freely given and revocable without the user suffering a detriment for saying no. A consent request where declining leads to your existing data being deleted sits in real tension with that standard — if the practical price of refusing is losing your synced history, it’s fair to ask how “free” the choice really is. Samsung frames the ask as necessary to improve Samsung Health and its AI features, which is a legitimate goal, but the design puts the cost of declining squarely on the user’s own data.
Users on Samsung’s EU community forums have raised exactly these GDPR concerns about how the consent is structured. It’s worth being clear that we’re describing forum discussion, not confirmed regulatory action.
Why now: the AI health companion push
The timing isn’t random. This consent groundwork appears to be laying the foundation for Samsung’s next-generation, AI-powered Samsung Health features — an “AI health companion” experience with personalized coaching, sleep insights, heart-health scores and more, which Samsung has previewed for Galaxy Watch. Those features are expected to expand around Samsung’s Galaxy Unpacked event on July 22, 2026, where the Galaxy Z Fold8, Z Flip8 and Galaxy Watch9 series are anticipated. (For more on what’s coming, see our earlier report: Galaxy Unpacked Set for July 22: Fold 8 Reservations Open in India.) An AI-first health app needs training data — and this prompt is how Samsung is asking for it.
Where this is showing up
The consent screen is surfacing for users across multiple markets rather than in any single country — outlet reports and user posts describe it in the US and across the EU — but Samsung has not officially detailed the exact rollout regions or timeline. Notably, Samsung has not issued any statement or press release about this consent change beyond the in-app notice itself; one outlet noted the company had not responded to a request for comment by publication time. If that changes, we’ll update this post.
Sources: GSMArena (first spotted), How-To Geek, TechRadar






