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FiledApr 21 · 2026
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NewsSmartphones·4 min read·Apr 21, 2026

AMOLED Shipments to Decline 7% in 2026, Omdia Forecasts

Omdia expects AMOLED smartphone display shipments to fall to 778 million units in 2026, the first drop in years as memory prices and weak Chinese demand bite.

OY
Omer YLD
Founder & Editor-in-Chief
Apr 21, 20264 min · 876 words
Macro photograph of a smartphone AMOLED display showing the pixel grid under studio lighting
Above → Macro photograph of a smartphone AMOLED display showing the pixel grid under studio lighting

Omdia has sharply downgraded its 2026 AMOLED smartphone display forecast, now projecting shipments will fall to 778 million units — a 7% year-on-year decline and the first annual contraction for the panel type in years. The research firm detailed the revised outlook in an April 20 press release, pointing to rising memory prices, higher petrochemical input costs, and weakening demand from Chinese handset brands as the primary drivers.

That is a notable revision from Omdia's own January 2026 outlook, which had pegged shipments at 810 million units. In three months the number has slipped another 32 million panels, a swing large enough to reshape capacity planning at Samsung Display, LG Display, BOE, and China Star.

What Omdia Actually Changed

Omdia's display research group says 2025 closed at roughly 817 million AMOLED smartphone panels. The 778 million projection for 2026 is therefore a step down of about 39 million units year over year. Two sub-categories tell the story:

  • Flexible AMOLED is expected to decline for the first time in seven years, ending a long streak of growth driven by foldables and premium flagships.
  • Rigid AMOLED will contract for the second consecutive year, with buyers continuing to migrate to flexible panels where the price gap has narrowed.

Brian Huh, Principal Analyst at Omdia's Display research practice, summed it up bluntly: "Despite Apple's more aggressive iPhone sales strategy, the global AMOLED display market is expected to decline in 2026 due to weakening demand from Chinese smartphone brands."

Why Is the AMOLED Market Declining in 2026?

The short answer: costs rose faster than phone makers could pass them on. Memory prices have climbed steadily since the second half of 2025, and AMOLED panels share bills of materials with DRAM and NAND-heavy devices. Add in pricier petrochemical feedstocks for emissive layers, elevated freight costs, and lingering geopolitical frictions, and the math stops working for aggressive Chinese OEMs that compete primarily on price.

Omdia notes that several Chinese brands have already trimmed their 2026 smartphone production plans. That translates directly into smaller panel purchase orders at BOE, Visionox, and China Star — the three suppliers that absorbed most of the industry's incremental AMOLED capacity in 2023 and 2024.

Who Wins and Who Loses

Apple is the outlier. Omdia expects Cupertino to gain AMOLED share in 2026 thanks to stable semiconductor sourcing, higher product margins, and a more assertive iPhone pricing and mix strategy. That tracks with broader market coverage — Bloomberg and IDC have both flagged a 2026 smartphone-market contraction, with Apple relatively insulated.

Samsung Display, the long-time AMOLED volume leader, is caught in the middle. It ships panels to Apple (a tailwind) and to Chinese brands (now a headwind). Net-net, most panel analysts expect Samsung Display's 2026 revenue to hold steadier than unit volumes suggest, because Apple pays more per panel than any other customer.

For foldables, the flexible-panel slowdown matters. Devices like the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 and rumored trifolds depend on flexible AMOLED capacity ramping, not contracting. A year of flat or negative flexible shipments will not derail foldables, but it may keep prices from falling as quickly as enthusiasts hoped.

What It Means for Camera-Forward Flagships

Flagships that lean on display quality as a selling point — think high-refresh, HDR-bright panels paired with top-tier imaging — sit in the awkward middle of this forecast. Devices like the iPhone 17 Pro Max and Galaxy S26 Ultra already use the most expensive LTPO flexible panels Samsung Display and LG Display produce. With panel fabs running below capacity, there is little incentive to cut the prices buyers pay for those top bins. Expect premium-tier phones to hold or nudge up on price in 2026 even as mid-range OLED volumes soften.

On the camera side, the Oppo Find X9 Ultra and similar imaging flagships typically rely on BOE or Visionox for their OLED panels. Those Chinese suppliers are precisely the ones facing the steepest order cuts, which may push some OEMs back toward Samsung Display for cover panels — at a higher unit cost.

How It Compares to Prior Forecasts

Three months ago Omdia still expected modest growth dissipation, not a sharp drop. The April revision is aligned with coverage from OLED-Info, which had previously flagged that Omdia saw only a minor dip before the memory-price shock compounded through Q1. DSCC has been more conservative on 2026 from the start but has not yet published a post-April update matching Omdia's 778-million figure.

What's Next

Omdia still expects AMOLED shipments to resume growth in 2027, assuming memory pricing normalizes and Chinese OEM inventories correct by the second half of 2026. That arc matters for anyone building 2027 flagship roadmaps around under-display cameras, tandem-stack OLEDs, or larger foldable panels — the capacity will be there, but at prices that reflect a year of restraint at the fabs.

The takeaway: 2026 is a cost story, not a technology story. AMOLED demand has not peaked structurally; it is compressed by the same memory and macro pressures reshaping the rest of the phone market. If you are buying a flagship this year, premium OLED quality is not going anywhere. If you are a panel buyer, this is the first real cyclical test AMOLED has faced in a decade.

Filed underAmoledDisplaysOmdiaSmartphonesSupply ChainNews
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About the writer

Omer YLD

Founder & Editor-in-Chief

Omer YLD is the founder and editor-in-chief of Technerdo. A software engineer turned tech journalist, he has spent more than a decade building web platforms and dissecting the gadgets, AI tools, and developer workflows that shape modern work. At Technerdo he leads editorial direction, hands-on product testing, and long-form reviews — with a bias toward clear writing, honest verdicts, and tech that earns its place on your desk.

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