Galaxy A37 Variants for the US, Canada, China and More Certified

Samsung is reportedly planning an earlier-than-usual launch for its 2026 mid-range lineup. The Galaxy A37 and Galaxy A57 are expected to arrive as early as February, instead of the typical March timeline. Ahead of that, the company is moving quickly to secure regulatory approvals. After appearing in multiple certification listings in recent weeks, the Galaxy A37 has now cleared another key hurdle, showing up on the Bluetooth SIG database.
Galaxy A37’s Bluetooth certification confirms a wide US launch
First spotted by our own Mohammed Khatri, the Bluetooth SIG recently certified multiple Galaxy A37 variants. These include US carrier-locked and unlocked models, a Verizon-specific variant, as well as Canadian and Chinese versions. The following model numbers were spotted:
- SM-A376U — US carrier-locked
- SM-A376U1 — US carrier-unlocked
- SM-A376V — Verizon variant
- SM-A376W — Canada
- SM-A3760 — China
The presence of a dedicated Verizon model suggests Samsung is prioritizing close carrier integration in the US, rather than limiting availability to unlocked units. The company often does that, so nothing new. It’s unclear if it plans something similar for the Galaxy A57. Note that the Galaxy A5x lineup often skips a US release or arrives stateside later than the global markets.
If rumors of an early launch are accurate, Samsung may be planning to drop the new mid-range devices before the Galaxy S26 series. The next-gen flagships are expected to go official in late February, with sales beginning in mid-March. There’s no way the company would overrule the S26 release with the Galaxy A37 and A57, and instead of delaying the latter models to April, it might launch them by mid-February.
Leaks suggest camera improvements are on the way for these devices. Both the Galaxy A37 and its higher-end sibling may feature a new 50MP main camera, marking a notable upgrade for Samsung’s mid-range photography hardware. However, an early launch may mean the phones ship with One UI 8 instead of One UI 8.5, which debuts with the Galaxy S26 series. Stick around for more.











