The Samsung Exynos (stylized as SΛMSUNG Exynos), formerly Hummingbird (), is a series of ARM architecture-based system-on-chips developed by Samsung Electronics' System LSI division and manufactured by Samsung Foundry. It is a continuation of Samsung's earlier S3C, S5L and S5P line of SoCs.
The debut of Samsung's indigenously developed SoC is Samsung Hummingbird (S5PC110/111), later renamed as Exynos 3 Single 3110. Samsung announced it on July 27, 2009. In 2011, Samsung announced Exynos 4 Dual 4210 that was later equipped on Samsung Galaxy S II. Since then, Samsung has used Exynos as a representative brand name of their SoC, based on Arm Cortex cores. In 2017, Samsung launched their proprietary Arm ISA-based customized core designs, codenamed "Exynos M". Exynos M series core made a debut with Exynos M1 nicknamed "Mongoose", which was used for Exynos 8 Octa 8890. The Exynos M-series have been implemented throughout the flagship lineup of Samsung Exynos 9 series, until Exynos 990. From 2021 onwards, Exynos M6 and M7 microarchitecture developments have been cancelled and instead Samsung adopts Arm Cortex-X core series as the primary core.
In 2022, Samsung started adoption of AMD RDNA GPU microarchitecture into their SoC, beginning on Exynos 2200 with Xclipse 920, which used customized "mobile RDNA" based on RDNA 2. In 2024, Samsung expanded AMD RDNA 3-based GPU into their midrange chips, since Exynos 1480 (Xclipse 530).
In early 2011, Samsung first launched the Exynos 4210 SoC in its Samsung Galaxy S II mobile smartphone. The driver code for the Exynos 4210 was made available in the Linux kernel and support was added in version 3.2 in November 2011.
On 29 September 2011, Samsung introduced Exynos 4212 as a successor to the 4210; it features a higher clock frequency and "50 percent higher 3D graphics performance over the previous processor generation". Built with a 32 nm high-κ metal gate (HKMG) low-power process; it promises a "30 percent lower power-level over the previous process generation".
On 30 November 2011, Samsung released information about their upcoming SoC with a dual-core ARM Cortex-A15 CPU, which was initially named "Exynos 5250" and was later renamed to Exynos 5 Dual. This SoC has a memory interface providing 12.8 GB/s of memory bandwidth, support for USB 3.0 and SATA 3, can decode full 1080p video at 60 Frame rate along with simultaneously displaying WQXGA-resolution (2560 × 1600) on a mobile display as well as 1080p over HDMI. This SoC was used in some from 2013. Samsung Exynos 5 Dual has been used in a 2015 prototype supercomputer, while the end-product will use a chip meant for servers from another vendor.
On 26 April 2012, Samsung released the Exynos 4 Quad, which powers the Samsung Galaxy S III and Samsung Galaxy Note II. The Exynos 4 Quad SoC uses 20% less power than the SoC in Samsung Galaxy S II. Samsung also changed the name of several SoCs, Exynos 3110 to Exynos 3 Single, Exynos 4210 and 4212 to Exynos 4 Dual 45 nm, and Exynos 4 Dual 32 nm and Exynos 5250 to Exynos 5 Dual.
In 2010 Samsung founded a design center in Austin called Samsung's Austin R&D Center (SARC). Samsung has hired many ex-AMD, ex-Intel, ex-ARM and various other industry veterans. The SARC developed high-performance, low-power, complex CPU and System IP (Coherent Interconnect and memory controller) architectures and designs. In 2012, Samsung began development of GPU IP called "S-GPU".
In Hot Chips 2018, Samsung announced a new custom core named Exynos M3, codenamed Meerkat. M3 has widened decoder width from 4-wide to 6-wide, and introduced L3 cache structure. Also, it achieved over 50% IPC increase versus Exynos M1 and M2.
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Hot Chips 2018: Samsung's Exynos M3 CPU architecture Deep Dive, Andrei Frumusanu, Anandtech, Aug 20 2018 SPEC2006 benchmark result showed that it has performance advantage comparing with counterparts of Snapdragon 845 (Cortex-A75) at their respective peak clock speed, and by lowering the clock speed to 1.79 GHz it matched the power efficiency versus Cortex-A75 of Snapdragon 845. However, Samsung Galaxy S9 with Exynos 9810 was criticized in early period of their release due to the poor CPU core scheduler settings.
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> The Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9+ Review: Exynos and Snapdragon at 960fps, Andrei Frumusanu, Anandtech, March 26, 2018
In 2019, Samsung revealed Exynos 9820 with fourth-generation custom core named Exynos M4 (Cheetah). It has been manufactured on Samsung 8 nm LPP process. Unlike the past flagship Exynos series with 4+4 dual-cluster settings, Exynos 9820 implemented 2+2+4 core cluster configurations. Benchmark result presented that Exynos 9820 had performance parity but worse efficiency over Snapdragon 855.
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> The Samsung Galaxy S10+ Exynos & Snapdragon Review: Almost Perfect, Yet So Flawed Later, Samsung announced Exynos 9825, a revised SoC manufactured on their first 7 nm manufacturing process named 7LPE. Exynos 9825 Mobile Processor, Samsung Electronics Exynos 9825 came equipped with Samsung Galaxy Note10 series and Samsung Galaxy F62/M62.
In 2020, Samsung released last Mongoose-based SoC, named Exynos 990. Exynos 990 came with their fifth-generation custom core (Exynos M5) codenamed Lion. However, M5 showed less performance and worse power efficiency against Cortex-A77 of Snapdragon 865.
On 1 October 2019, rumors emerged that Samsung had laid off their custom CPU core teams at SARC. On 1 November 2019, Samsung filed a WARN letter with the Texas Workforce Commission, notifying of upcoming layoffs of their SARC CPU team and termination of their custom CPU core development. SARC and ACL will still continue development of custom SoC, AI, and GPU.
In June 2021, Samsung hired engineers from AMD and Apple to form a new custom architecture team.
In October 2021, Google released their Pixel 6 series of phones based on Google's Tensor SoC, which was made in collaboration with Samsung.
In 2024, Samsung officially announced Exynos 2400, with RDNA 3 microarchitecture-based Xclipse 940. Exynos 2400 Mobile Processor In the same year, along with Exynos 2400, Samsung released Exynos 1480, with RDNA 3 based Xclipse 530, marking the end of Arm Mali GPU era in their mid-range processors. Exynos 1480 Mobile Processor
| Exynos 980 (S5E9630) | 8 nm (Samsung 8LPP) | ARMv8.2-A | 2 + 6 cores (2.2 GHz Cortex-A77 + 1.8 GHz Cortex-A55) | Mali-G76 MP5 | 728 | 174.7 | LPDDR4X | 32-bit (2×16-bit) Dual-channel | 2133 MHz (17.1 GB/s) | Single core NPU + DSP | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac/ax | Q4 2019 | |||
| Exynos 990 (S5E9830) | 7 nm (Samsung 7LPP) | 91.83 | 2 + 2 + 4 cores (3.02 GHz Exynos M5 "Lion" + 2.6 GHz Cortex-A76 + 2.11 GHz Cortex-A55)Actual product value is 2.73 GHz + 2.50 GHz + 2.00 GHz. 2 MB System Cache | Mali-G77 MP11 | 832 | 585.7 | LPDDR5 | 64-bit (4×16-bit) Quad-channel | 2750 MHz (44 GB/s) | Dual-core NPU + DSP | Q1 2020 |
| Exynos 2100 (S5E9840) | 5 nm (Samsung 5LPE) | 128.1 | ARMv8.2-A | 1 + 3 + 4 cores (2.91 GHz Cortex-X1 + 2.81 GHz Cortex-A78 + 2.2 GHz Cortex-A55) | Mali-G78 MP14 | 854 | 765.2Single-issue | LPDDR5 | 64-bit (4×16-bit) Quad-channel | 3200 MHz (51.2 GB/s) | 6K MAC Triple NPU + DSP 1352 MHz (26 TOPs) | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 6 | Q1 2021 | ||
| Exynos 2200 (S5E9925) | 4 nm (Samsung 4LPE) | 104.7 | ARMv9.0-A | 1 + 3 + 4 cores (2.95 GHz Cortex-X2 + 2.70 GHz Cortex-A710 + 2.10 GHz Cortex-A510)Actual CPU clock speeds on the products are 2.80, 2.52, and 1.82 GHz, for respective cores. | Xclipse 920 "Voyager" (RDNA 2 based 384:24:24:6 3 WGP) | 1306 | 1,003 | 8K MAC Dual NPU + DSP 1066 MHz | Bluetooth 5.2, Wi-Fi 6E | Q1 2022 | |||||
| Exynos 2400/2400e (S5E9945) | 4 nm (Samsung 4LPP+) | 137.4 | ARMv9.2-A | 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 cores (3.1/3.2 GHz Cortex-X4 + 2.9 GHz Cortex-A720 + 2.6 GHz Cortex-A720 + 1.95 GHz Cortex-A520) | Xclipse 940 "Magellan" (RDNA 3 based 768:48:32:12 6 WGP) | 1095 | 3,406.8Dual-issue | LPDDR5X | 4266 MHz (68.2 GB/s) | 17K MAC NPU (2x + 2x ) + DSP 1300 MHz | Bluetooth 5.3, Wi-Fi 6E | Q1 2024 | |||
| Exynos 2500 (S5E9955) | 3 nm (Samsung 3GAP) | 1 + 2 + 5 + 2 cores (3.3 GHz Cortex-X925 + 2.74 GHz Cortex-A725 + 2.36 GHz Cortex-A725 + 1.8 GHz Cortex-A520) | Xclipse 950 "Galileo" (RDNA 3 based 1024:64:64:16 8 WGP) | 999 | 4,091.9Dual-issue | 24K MAC NPU (2x + 2x ) + DSP (59 TOPs) | Bluetooth 5.4, Wi-Fi 7 | Q2 2025 | |||||||
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| 2 nm (Samsung SF2) | ARMv9.3-A | 1 + 3 + 6 cores (3.8 GHz C1-Ultra + 3.25 GHz C1-Pro + 2.75 GHz C1-Pro) | Xclipse 960 (RDNA based) | 32K MAC NPU | Q1 2026 |
| Exynos 3 Single 3110 (previously Hummingbird S5PC110) | 45 nm (Samsung 45 nm HKMG) | ARMv7 | 1 core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A8 | PowerVR SGX540 | 200 | 3.2 | LPDDR, LPDDR2 or DDR2 | 64-bit (2×32-bit) Dual-channel | 200 Hertz (3.2 GB/s) | rowspan=33 | Q2 2010 | ||||
| Exynos 3 Quad 3470 | 28 nm (Samsung 28 nm HKMG) | 4 cores 1.4 GHz Cortex-A7 | Mali-400 MP4 | 450 | 16.2 | LPDDR2 or LPDDR3 | 400 MHz (6.4 GB/s) or 533 MHz (8.5 GB/s) | Q3 2014 | |||||||
| Exynos 3 Quad 3475 | 4 cores 1.3 GHz Cortex-A7 | Mali-T720 | 600 | 12 | LPDDR3 | 533 MHz (8.5 GB/s) | Q3 2015 | ||||||||
| Exynos 4 Dual 4210 | 45 nm (Samsung 45 nm HKMG) | 2 cores 1.2 GHz Cortex-A9 | Mali-400 MP4 | 266 | 9.6 | LPDDR2, DDR2 or DDR3 | 400 MHz (6.4 GB/s) | Q2 2011 | |||||||
| Exynos 4 Dual 4212 | 32 nm (Samsung 32 nm HKMG) | 2 cores 1.5 GHz Cortex-A9 | 400 | 14.4 | Q1 2012 | ||||||||||
| Exynos 4 Quad 4412 | 4 cores 1.6 GHz Cortex-A9 | 400–533 | 14.4–19.2 | Q2 2012 | |||||||||||
| Exynos 4 Quad 4415 | 28 nm (Samsung 28 nm HKMG) | 4 cores 1.5 GHz Cortex-A9 | 533 | 19.2 | Q3 2014 | ||||||||||
| Exynos 5 Dual 5250 | 32 nm (Samsung 32 nm HKMG) | 2 cores 1.7 GHz Cortex-A15 | Mali-T604 MP4 | 533 | 72.5 | LPDDR2, LPDDR3 or DDR3 | 533 MHz (8.5 GB/s) or 800 MHz (12.8 GB/s) | Q3 2012 | |||||||
| Exynos 5 Hexa 5260 | 28 nm (Samsung 28 nm HKMG) | 2+4 cores (1.7 GHz Cortex-A15 + 1.3 GHz Cortex-A7) | Mali-T624 MP4 | 600 | 81.6 | LPDDR3 | 800 MHz (12.8 GB/s) | Q2 2014 | |||||||
| Exynos 5 Octa 5410 | 4+4 cores (1.6 GHz Cortex-A15 + 1.2 GHz Cortex-A7) | PowerVR SGX544 MP3 | 480–532 | 49 | Q2 2013 | ||||||||||
| Exynos 5 Octa 5420 | 136.96 | 4+4 cores (1.9 GHz Cortex-A15 + 1.3 GHz Cortex-A7) | Mali-T628 MP6 | 533 | 108.7 | LPDDR3e | 933 MHz (14.9 GB/s) | Q3 2013 | |||||||
| Exynos 5 Octa 5422 | 4+4 cores (2.1 GHz Cortex-A15 + 1.5 GHz Cortex-A7) | Q2 2014 | |||||||||||||
| Exynos 5 Octa 5430 | 20 nm (Samsung 20 nm HKMG) | 110.18 | 4+4 cores (1.8 GHz Cortex-A15 + 1.3 GHz Cortex-A7) | 600 | 122.4 | LPDDR3e/DDR3 | 1066 MHz (17.0 GB/s) | Q3 2014 | |||||||
| Exynos 5 Octa 5800 | 28 nm (Samsung 28 nm HKMG) | 4+4 cores (2.0 GHz Cortex-A15 + 1.3 GHz Cortex-A7) | ? | ? | LPDDR3/DDR3 | 933 MHz (14.9 GB/s) | Q2 2014 | ||||||||
| Exynos 7 Octa 5433 | 20 nm (Samsung 20 nm HKMG) | 113.42 | ARMv8-A | 4 + 4 cores (1.9 GHz Cortex-A57 + 1.3 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | Mali-T760 MP6 | 700 | 117.6 | LPDDR3 | 825 MHz (13.2 GB/s) | Paired with Samsung M303/Intel XMM 7260 LTE Cat 6 (300Mbit/s) or Ericsson M7450 LTE Cat 4 | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi | Q4 2014 | |||
| Exynos 7 Octa 7420 | 14 nm (Samsung 14LPE) | 78.23 | 4 + 4 cores (2.1 GHz Cortex-A57 + 1.5 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | Mali-T760 MP8 | 772 | 172.9 | LPDDR4 | 1553 MHz (24.88 GB/s) | Paired with Shannon 333 LTE Cat 9 (450 Mbit/s) | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi | Q2 2015 | ||||
| Exynos 7 Quad 7570 | 14 nm (Samsung 14LPC) | 4 cores 1.4 GHz Cortex-A53 | Mali-T720 MP1 | 830 | 16.6 | LPDDR | 32-bit Single-channel | 533 MHz (4.2 GB/sec) | LTE Cat.4 2CA 150 Mbit/s (DL) / 50 Mbit/s (UL) | Bluetooth 4.2, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n | Q3 2016 | ||||
| Exynos 7 Quad 7578 | 28 nm (Samsung 28 nm HKMG) | 4 cores 1.5 GHz Cortex-A53 | Mali-T720 MP2 | 668 | 26.7 | 933 MHz (7.5 GB/sec) | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi | Q2 2015 | |||||||
| Exynos 7 Octa 7580 | 8 cores 1.6 GHz Cortex-A53 | LTE Cat.6 2CA 300 Mbit/s (DL) / 50 Mbit/s (UL) | |||||||||||||
| Exynos 7 Octa 7870 | 14 nm (Samsung 14LPP) | Mali-T830 MP1 | 700 | 22.4 | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi | Q1 2016 | |||||||||
| Exynos 7880 | 8 cores 1.9 GHz Cortex-A53 | Mali-T830 MP3 | 950 | 91.2 | LPDDR4 | 32-bit (2×16-bit) Dual-channel | 1600 MHz (12.8 GB/sec) | LTE Cat.7 3CA 300 Mbit/s (DL) / 2CA 100 Mbit/s (UL) | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi | Q1 2017 | |||||
| Exynos 7872 | 2 + 4 cores (2.0 GHz Cortex-A73 + 1.6 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | Mali-G71 MP1 | 1200 | 28.8 | LPDDR3 | 32-bit Single-channel | 933 MHz (7.5 GB/sec) | LTE Cat.7 2CA 300 Mbit/s (DL) / Cat.13 2CA 150 Mbit/s (UL) | Bluetooth 4.2, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n | Q1 2018 | Meizu M6s | ||||
| Exynos 7884A | 2 + 6 cores (1.35 GHz Cortex-A73 + 1.35 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | Mali-G71 MP2 | 450 | 21.6 | LPDDR4 | 32-bit (2×16-bit) Dual-channel | 1866 MHz (14.9 GB/sec) | LTE Cat.4 2CA 150 Mbit/s (DL) / 2CA 50 Mbit/s (UL) | Q3 2018 | ||||||
| Exynos 7884 | 2 + 6 cores (1.6 GHz Cortex-A73 + 1.35 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | 676 845 | 32.4 40.6 | Shannon 327 LTE Cat.12 3CA 600 Mbit/s (DL) / Cat.13 2CA 150 Mbit/s (UL) | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac | Q2 2018 | |||||||||
| Exynos 7885 | 2 + 6 cores (2.2 GHz Cortex-A73 + 1.6 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | 1100 | 52.8 | Q1 2018 | |||||||||||
| Exynos 7904 | 2 + 6 cores (1.8 GHz Cortex-A73 + 1.6 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | 770 | 37 | Q1 2019 | |||||||||||
| Exynos 8 Octa 8890 | 4 + 4 cores (2.3 GHz, up to 2.6 GHz in dual-core load, Exynos M1 "Mongoose" + 1.6 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | Mali-T880 MP12 | 650 | 327.6 | LPDDR4 | 64-bit (2×32-bit) Dual-channel | 1794 MHz (28.7 GB/s) | Shannon 335 LTE DL: LTE Cat 12 600 Mbit/s, 3CA UL: LTE Cat 13 150 Mbit/s, 2CA | Bluetooth 4.2, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac | Q1 2016 | |||||
| 4 + 4 cores (2.0 GHz Exynos M1 "Mongoose" + 1.5 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | Mali-T880 MP10 (Lite) | 273 | Meizu PRO 6 Plus (64 GB) | ||||||||||||
| Exynos 8895 | 10 nm (Samsung 10LPE) | 103.64 | 4 + 4 cores (2.314 GHz Exynos M2 "Mongoose" + 1.69 GHz Cortex-A53) GTS | Mali-G71 MP20 | 546 | 262.1 | LPDDR4X | Shannon 355 LTE DL: LTE Cat 16 1050 Mbit/s, 5CA, 256-QAM) UL: LTE Cat 13 150 Mbit/s, 2CA, 64-QAM | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac | Q2 2017 | |||||
| Exynos 9609 | 4 + 4 cores (2.2 GHz Cortex-A73 + 1.6 GHz Cortex-A53) | Mali-G72 MP3 | LPDDR4X | 32-bit (2×16-bit) Dual-channel | 1600 MHz (12.8 GB/sec) | Shannon 337 LTE Cat.12 3CA 600 Mbit/s (DL) / Cat.13 2CA 150 Mbit/s (UL) | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac | Q2 2019 | |||||||
| Exynos 9610 | 4 + 4 cores (2.3 GHz Cortex-A73 + 1.7 GHz Cortex-A53) | 1053 | 113.7 | Q4 2018 | Samsung Galaxy A50 | ||||||||||
| Exynos 9611 | 850 | 91.8 | Q3 2019 | ||||||||||||
| Exynos 9810 (S5E9810) | 10 nm (Samsung 10LPP) | 118.94 | ARMv8.2-A | 4 + 4 cores (2.9 GHz Exynos M3 "Meerkat" + 1.9 GHz Cortex-A55) | Mali-G72 MP18 | 572 | 370.7 | LPDDR4X | 64-bit (4×16-bit) Quad-channel | 1794 MHz (28.7GB/s) | Shannon 360 LTE DL: LTE Cat 18 1200 Mbit/s, 6CA, 256-QAM UL: LTE Cat 13 200 Mbit/s, 2CA, 256-QAM | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac | Q1 2018 | ||
| Exynos 9820 (S5E9820) | 8 nm (Samsung 8LPP) | 127 | 2 + 2 + 4 cores (2.73 GHz Exynos M4 "Cheetah" + 2.31 GHz Cortex-A75 + 1.95 GHz Cortex-A55) | Mali-G76 MP12 | 702 | 404.4 | 2093 MHz (33.488 GB/s) | Dual-core NPU 1024 MAC units @ 933 MHz (1.86 TOPs) | Shannon 5000 LTE DL: Cat.20 2000 Mbit/s, 8CA, 256-QAM UL: Cat.13 316 Mbit/s, 3CA, 256-QAM | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac/ax | Q1 2019 | ||||
| Exynos 9825 (S5E9825) | 7 nm (Samsung 7LPP) | 2 + 2 + 4 cores (2.73 GHz Exynos M4 "Cheetah" + 2.4 GHz Cortex-A75 + 1.95 GHz Cortex-A55) | 754 | 434.3 | Q3 2019 |
| Exynos 4 Dual 4212 (Single core) | 32 nm (Samsung 32 nm HKMG) | ARMv7-A | 1 core 0.8 GHz Cortex-A9 | Mali-400 MP4 | 400 | 14.4 | LPDDR2, DDR2 or DDR3 | 64-bit (2×32-bit) Dual-channel | 400 MHz (6.4 GB/s) | rowspan=7 | Q3 2013 | ||||
| Exynos 3 Dual 3250 | 28 nm (Samsung 28 nm HKMG) | 2 cores 1.0 GHz Cortex-A7 | Mali-400 MP2 | 400 | 7.2 | LPDDR2 or LPDDR3 | Q2 2014 | ||||||||
| Exynos 7 Dual 7270 (SC57270) | 14 nm (Samsung 14LPP) | ARMv8-A | 2 cores 1.0 GHz Cortex-A53 | Mali-T720 MP1 | 667 | 13.3 | LPDDR | 32-bit (2×16-bit) Dual-channel | LTE Cat.4 2CA 150 Mbit/s (DL) / 50 Mbit/s (UL) | Bluetooth 4.2, Wi-Fi 4, GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou, Galileo, eMMC | Q3 2016 | ||||
| Exynos 9110 (SC59110XSC) | 10 nm (Samsung 10LPP) | 2 cores 1.15 GHz Cortex-A53 | LPDDR4 LPDDR4X | Shannon 3012 LTE Cat.4 2CA 150 Mbit/s (DL) / Cat.5 75 Mbit/s (UL) | Q3 2018 | ||||||||||
| Exynos W920 (SC55515XBD) | 5 nm (Samsung 5LPE) | ARMv8.2-A | 2 cores 1.18 GHz Cortex-A55 | Mali-G68 MP2 | 667 | 85.4 | LPDDR | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 4, GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou, Galileo, eMMC 5.1 | Q3 2021 | ||||||
| Exynos W930 (SC55515XBE) | 2 cores 1.4 GHz Cortex-A55 | Bluetooth 5.2, Wi-Fi 4, GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou, Galileo, eMMC 5.1 | Q3 2023 | ||||||||||||
| Exynos W1000 (SC55535AHA) | 3 nm (Samsung SF3) | 17.67 | 1 core 1.6 GHz Cortex-A78 4 cores 1.5 GHz Cortex-A55 | 702 | 89.9 | LPDDR | Bluetooth 6.0, Wi-Fi 4, GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou, Galileo, eMMC 5.1 | Q3 2024 |
Exynos Modem 333
Exynos Modem 5100
Exynos Modem 5123
Exynos Modem 5300
Exynos Modem 5400
| Exynos Auto 8890 (SGA8890A) | 14nm (Samsung 14LPP) | 4 + 4 cores (2.6 GHz2.3 GHz for >2-core load Exynos M1 "Mongoose" + 1.6 GHz Cortex-A53) (ARMv8-A) | Mali-T880 MP12 | 650 | 327.6 | LPDDR4 | 64-bit (2×32-bit) Dual-channel | rowspan="2" | Shannon LTE DL: LTE Cat 12 600Mbit/s, 3CA UL: LTE Cat 13 150Mbit/s, 2CA | Bluetooth 4.2, Wi-Fi 5 | Q1 2017 | Audi A4 (B9) (2019–2025) | ||
| Exynos Auto T5123 | 7nm (Samsung 7LPP) | 2 cores Cortex-A55 (ARMv8.2-A) | LPDDR4X | 16-bit (1×16-bit) Single-channel | 2133 MHz (8.5 GB/s) | LTE DL: Cat.24 3000 Mbit/s, 8CA, 1024-QAM UL: Cat.22 422 Mbit/s, 2CA, 256-QAM 5G NR Sub-6 GHz DL: 4.55 Gbit/s UL: 1.92 Gbit/s | Q4 2021 | |||||||
| Exynos Auto V7 | 8nm (Samsung 8LPP) | 8 cores 1.5 GHz Cortex-A76 (ARMv8.2-A) | 2× Mali-G76 (MP8 + MP3) | LPDDR4X LPDDR5 | 128-bit (8×16-bit) Octa-channel | 2133 MHz (68.2 GB/s) | NPU | Q4 2021 | ||||||
| Exynos Auto V9 (S5AHR80A) | 8 cores 2.1 GHz Cortex-A76 (ARMv8.2-A) | 3× Mali-G76 (MP12 + MP3 + MP3) | NPU (8.5 TOPS) | Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 6 | Q1 2019 | |||||||||
| Exynos Auto V920 (S5AV920) | 5 nm (Samsung 5LPE) | 10 cores (4+4+2) ARM Cortex-A78AE (ARMv8.2-A) | Samsung Xclipse GPU | LPDDR5 | 128-bit (8×16-bit) Octa-channel | 3200 MHz (102.4 GB/s) | NPU (23.1 TOPS) | 2025 |
The Exynos Auto V920 comes with additional features such as:
While both the Exynos and Snapdragon versions Galaxy S7, S8, and Note 8 has similar performances, the Exynos 9810-based models of Galaxy S9 and Note 9 has worse performance and efficiency than the Snapdragon 845 models. The Exynos 9820 used in Galaxy S10, which utilizes older CPU cores and inferior manufacturing process than the Snapdragon 855, continued this discrepancy.
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