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Samsung is cooking up a money-saving trick for its browser

Leaked feature could auto-find and apply coupon codes at checkout.

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Samsung might soon make online shopping a little less painful, and a bit cheaper too. A teardown of the latest Samsung Internet build, thanks to Android Authority, reveals a new feature called “Smart shopping”, and it’s exactly what it sounds like.

The browser could soon automatically find and apply coupon codes at checkout, saving users the hassle of hunting for discounts manually. The feature appears to surface available deals, show their validity, and even offer a one-tap option to apply them, making the whole process feel seamless.

How does it actually work?

This is where things get a bit more… interesting. Samsung’s browser would use data like the website you’re visiting, your cart contents, location (via IP), and browsing context to find relevant coupons. The idea is to deliver context-aware discounts in real time, rather than generic coupon suggestions. The folks at Android Authority enabled the settings page for a quick look, though the feature itself wasn’t functional yet. Here’s how it looks:

More importantly, this appears to be an opt-in feature, meaning users can enable or disable it from the browser settings. This feature essentially turns Samsung Internet into a built-in deal assistant, similar to browser extensions like Honey, but without needing extra installs. It’s a small quality-of-life upgrade, but one that could genuinely save users money, especially for frequent online shoppers.

Saving money… but at what cost?

Of course, there’s a catch, because there’s always one. While the idea of automatic coupon hunting sounds great, it relies on the browser accessing your shopping activity, browsing behavior, and contextual data to work effectively. That naturally raises some eyebrows around privacy, even if Samsung says the feature is opt-in and data usage is limited to specific scenarios.

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At the end of the day, this isn’t some flashy headline-grabbing feature, but a practical one. And honestly, those are the ones that tend to stick. If Samsung gets the balance right, your browser might soon do more than just load pages. It could quietly save you money in the background.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
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