Samsung · Filed Jan 20, 2026 · Published May 28, 2026 · verified — real USPTO data

Samsung Patents a No-Reset Method for Switching Wearables Between Phones

Switching your Galaxy Watch from one phone to another usually means a factory reset — wiping your settings and starting over. Samsung's new patent describes a way to skip all of that entirely.

Samsung Patent: Seamless Wearable Device Switching Explained — figure from US 2026/0150139 A1
FIG. 1A — rendered from the official USPTO publication PDF.
Publication number US 2026/0150139 A1
Applicant Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Filing date Jan 20, 2026
Publication date May 28, 2026
Inventors Jaehyeok LEE, Gwangseo AHN, Jaehoon LEE
CPC classification 455/41.2
Grant likelihood Medium
Examiner CENTRAL, DOCKET (Art Unit OPAP)
Status Docketed New Case - Ready for Examination (Feb 20, 2026)
Parent application is a Continuation of PCTKR2024006683 (filed 2024-05-16)
Document 19 claims

What Samsung's no-reset wearable handoff actually does

Imagine you get a new Samsung phone and want to move your Galaxy Watch over to it. Right now, you'd typically have to reset the watch first — losing your watch faces, health history, and app settings in the process. That's a real friction point that makes swapping phones more painful than it needs to be.

Samsung's patent describes a smarter handoff: the new phone and the watch quietly exchange ID information to confirm they belong to the same user account. Once they verify that match, the watch enters a special "transfer mode" — no full reset required — and the new phone runs through a streamlined setup using the watch's existing identity info.

The result is that your watch moves to your new phone like a contact migrating to a new SIM, not like a device being wiped and reprogrammed. Your settings, your data, and your preferences should survive the switch.

How the transfer mode handshake passes device identity

The system works through a structured Bluetooth or wireless handshake between the phone and the wearable. Here's the sequence the patent outlines:

  • The wearable broadcasts an advertising signal — a standard BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy) beacon announcing its presence.
  • The new phone transmits user identification information tied to the owner's account.
  • The wearable checks whether that user ID matches the one it already knows and sends back a confirmation.
  • If there's a match, the phone requests that the wearable switch to a "transfer mode" — a special pairing state designed specifically for this re-connection scenario, not a full factory wipe.
  • The wearable responds with its own identification information, which the phone then uses to run the setup procedure.

The key distinction is the phrase "without a reset." Traditional Bluetooth pairing to a new host device generally requires clearing prior pairing data. This patent carves out a mode where both devices agree — via shared account credentials — that no destructive reset is needed. Think of it like a trusted re-introduction rather than a cold start.

What this means for Galaxy Watch and multi-phone households

For anyone who upgrades their phone regularly — or shares wearables across devices — this is a genuine quality-of-life fix. Factory resets are a known pain point in the Galaxy ecosystem, and they discourage users from freely moving between devices. A seamless transfer mode lowers the cost of upgrading and could make Samsung's ecosystem feel more fluid, similar to how Apple's Handoff and Quick Start work for iPhones and Apple Watches.

Strategically, reducing ecosystem friction is a real competitive lever. If pairing a Galaxy Watch to a new Galaxy phone becomes as painless as signing into your Samsung account, that's one fewer reason to consider switching to a competing platform. It's not flashy engineering, but the user-retention implications are clear.

Editorial take

This is a deliberately unsexy patent about a genuinely annoying problem. Factory-resetting a wearable every time you switch phones is the kind of friction that quietly erodes brand loyalty, and Samsung has clearly noticed. The account-matching handshake approach is clean and practical — don't be surprised if this shows up in a near-term Galaxy Watch firmware update.

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Source. Full patent text and figures from the official USPTO publication PDF.

Editorial commentary on a publicly published patent application. Not legal advice.