This year, Samsung Wallet will be available in 13 more nations.
Four months have passed since the Samsung Wallet service was unveiled. Eight nations presently offer it: China, France, Germany, Italy, Korea, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Samsung has now disclosed that it would introduce Samsung Wallet to thirteen other nations before the year is over.
In 2022, Samsung Wallet will be made available in Bahrain, Denmark, Finland, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Norway, Oman, and Qatar as well as South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Vietnam, and Bahrain. Users can keep their credit cards, debit cards, membership cards, gift cards, digital keys, boarding tickets for flights, driver's licences, ID cards, and even blockchain wallets in Samsung Wallet.
For even fewer functionality, Samsung previously offered two apps: Samsung Pass and Samsung Pay.
Samsung Knox, according to the South Korean company, makes Samsung Wallet exceptionally secure. The user's biometrics, such as a fingerprint, are used to protect the app. Additionally, sensitive data is typically protected from physical hacking efforts because it is stored in a secure environment (a distinct portion of a CPU) inside a smartphone.
'Samsung Wallet takes everyday ease to the next level, and we have worked hard with our trusted partners and developers to strengthen our Wallet experience,' said Jeanie Han, EVP and Head of the Digital Life Team.
We are committed to quickly extending the platform to as many markets as we can, allowing as many Samsung Galaxy users as possible to take advantage of the digital wallet.
Wallet basically combines Samsung's Pay and Pass apps, as it does elsewhere. It can hold stuff like IDs, boarding passes, and digital vehicle keys in addition to being used to make bank card payments. The software keeps the most sensitive data in 'isolated' settings in addition to the standard data protection to guard against hacks. If you want a multi-purpose wallet on your Galaxy phone, it's not much different from Apple's counterpart in that aspect, but it still makes it incredibly helpful.