Samsung tucked a live download speed readout into its Good Lock toolkit, buried in the QuickStar module and out of sight for most users. The catch: it only lights up on the One UI 9 beta running Android 17, limited to recent hardware like the Galaxy S26, which means plenty of people will never stumble across it. Android Central confirms the feature’s gated path, a choice that could frustrate testers already navigating early-build quirks. Useful, yes, but discoverability and beta-only access may be the real stress test here.
A new feature, but hidden in plain sight
Samsung just slipped a real-time internet speed readout into its Galaxy ecosystem, the kind of small tool power users have asked for for years. It shows live throughput in KB/s or MB/s as you download, stream, or troubleshoot a sluggish app. The catch: getting to it is not obvious, because it lives inside Good Lock, Samsung’s advanced customization app, not in standard settings.
What you can (and can’t) see with the tool
The readout does not replace your Wi-Fi or cellular bars. It sits alongside them, reporting actual activity instead of signal strength. That difference matters when a video stalls or an update crawls. The feature is basic for now, but it helps pinpoint slow moments or unexpected spikes, for example when a background app pulls data without notice.
Availability restricted to the newest models
Here is the fine print. The speed indicator currently requires One UI 9, built on Android 17, which is still in beta. According to early users, it is confined to recent devices such as the Galaxy S26. To enable it, you need Good Lock from Samsung’s Galaxy Store in the US, then the QuickStar module, where a Network Speed toggle appears in the status bar options.
Why Samsung hides it in Good Lock
Good Lock has long acted as Samsung’s sandbox for features that may or may not graduate to the main OS. This is the case again. Placing the meter inside Good Lock lets Samsung test interest and performance before committing to a wider rollout. There is no confirmation yet that it will move into standard settings, and no timeline for older phones.
What lies ahead for accessibility
For many US Galaxy owners, the obscure path is the real barrier. Plenty of people never install Good Lock, or they assume a status bar control should sit in system settings. The result is predictable: missed discovery, third-party app workarounds, and confusion about device eligibility. If early feedback is strong, Samsung could surface the option more prominently. Until then, enthusiasts will find it first.