The Galaxy A60 will be placed between Galaxy A50 and Galaxy A30. A leak hints that Samsung may launch the Galaxy A60 on April 19. Ahead of the launch, key specs sheet of the Galaxy A60 has also been leaked. The leak reveals it could feature a slightly bigger display, a Qualcomm processor which could most probably be the Snapdragon 675 SoC instead of the Exynos series, an improved camera setup with a 32MP sensor, and a slightly larger battery.
Galaxy A60 Rumored Specs
Glass back and bigger display
The Galaxy A60 could come with a glass back instead of the polycarbonate back on the Galaxy A50. Up front, there could be a similar but slightly bigger 6.7-inch Full HD+ (2340 x 1080 pixels) Infinity-U type Super AMOLED panel. It could also feature the same in-display fingerprint sensor.
Snapdragon 675
It is rumored that Samsung might use a Qualcomm chipset instead of its own Exynos series. The Galaxy A60 could come with a Snapdragon 675 chipset. It will be paired with up to 8GB RAM and up to 128GB storage. The storage will be expandable up to 512GB.
32MP Camera
The Galaxy A60 will also come with a triple camera setup at the back. However, this will use a 32MP primary camera instead of the 25MP sensor in Galaxy A50. However, this will retain the 5MP depth sensor and 8MP ultra-wide angle camera. It could also come with an improved 32MP front camera.
Battery and others
This could pack a bigger 4,500mAh battery in comparison to the 4,000mAh unit on Galaxy A50. It will also come with fast charging support. It will sport similar connectivity options like Dual 4G VoLTE, Wi-Fi 802.11 ac (2.4GHz + 5GHz), Bluetooth 5, GPS + GLONASS, NFC, and USB Type-C. The smartphone will run on the Android 9.0 Pie with One UI skin on top.
Launch Date, Expected Price
The Samsung Galaxy A60 launch date is expected to be April 19th, however, it is not confirmed that it is a global launch date or some specific country’s. Coming to the price, the Galaxy A60 price in India is expected to be around Rs. 25,000. Above-mentioned features and specifications are based on leaks so these should be taken with a grain of salt.