
NEWS – Kitchen layouts have quietly dictated appliance choices for decades, and the tradeoff has always felt non-negotiable. You measure the gap, pick the fridge that fits, and accept that the doors won’t swing all the way open if a wall sits too close. Samsung’s latest Bespoke lineup, unveiled at KBIS 2026 alongside its broader AI kitchen strategy, challenges that assumption with engineering built to put the appliance ahead of the floor plan.
Price: TBD
Where to Buy: Samsung
This isn’t a CES concept pitch. KBIS pulls kitchen designers, contractors, and retailers who install products in actual homes, and the difference in how hardware gets scrutinized is something you feel the moment you walk the floor. Samsung chose this audience deliberately. These are professionals who run tape measures before reading spec sheets. Convincing them carries weight a keynote can’t replicate. It’s a smart play that puts Samsung directly in front of the people who decide what goes into real kitchens.
So the real question is: can a fridge built to fit anywhere and a range designed to look like restaurant equipment change the way people approach their next renovation?
The Zero Clearance Play
Samsung’s new Bespoke AI 3-Door French Door Refrigerators tackle a problem that sounds minor until you’ve wrestled with it during an actual install. Specially designed hinges and slim door profiles let the doors swing fully open with just 4mm of clearance on each side, roughly the thickness of two stacked credit cards.

For tight kitchens where the fridge presses against walls or cabinetry, this eliminates one of the oldest friction points in appliance layout, and the fact that it took this long for a major brand to engineer a proper fix says more about the industry than it does about Samsung. The engineering feels overdue, which is exactly what makes it compelling. Whatever space you’re working with, that 4mm number changes the designer-to-client conversation before a single cabinet gets ordered.
Four sizes span the full range: 24 cu. ft. counter-depth, an industry-first 29 cu. ft. full-depth, and 25 cu. ft. and 30 cu. ft. models without the external dispenser. Counter-depth sits flush with standard cabinetry without custom panels, while the 29 cu. ft. full-depth option pushes storage into territory that hasn’t existed at this footprint before. Smart platform play from Samsung.
Inside, a full-metal interior panel and stainless steel finish replace the usual plastic shelving with something that feels heavier the moment you open the door. The External Tall Water and Ice Dispenser handles large bottles and pitchers, with curved and crushed ice options. Sphere Ice, a slow-melting spherical ice maker in the freezer, keeps cocktails cold longer without diluting them as quickly. It’s the kind of feature you’d expect from a barware brand rather than a refrigerator manufacturer, and that mismatch is what makes it interesting. Niche? Absolutely. But it signals Samsung paying attention to how kitchens actually get used beyond storage. For anyone building a space that doubles as an entertaining hub, these small details are the ones that land.

SmartThings connectivity ties the Bespoke AI refrigerator lineup together, and the integration feels purposeful rather than bolted on. AI Energy Mode learns usage patterns and adjusts compressor speed and defrost cycles to cut power draw by up to 15 percent. Temperature adjustments and remote monitoring run through the SmartThings app, handy if you tend to second-guess whether you shut the freezer properly after leaving the house. Wi-Fi and a Samsung account are required for the smart features.
Ranges That Earn the Pro Label
Samsung’s redesigned Bespoke Smart Slide-in Ranges borrow design cues from professional kitchen equipment. Large stainless steel knobs illuminate when active, and precision hinges close the oven door with a controlled pull. The company says its No Preheat Air Fry Max mode speeds up air frying by 15 percent without a warmup cycle, while True Convection circulates heated air evenly across every rack.

A new Air Sous Vide mode uses precise temperature control and airflow to slow-cook food without a separate immersion circulator. Gas versions put out up to 23K BTU through a dual burner, while electric models run a 3.6kW cooktop with tri-ring and dual-ring elements for different pan sizes. Both configurations come with five burners and a Fingerprint Resistant Stainless Steel finish.
The Connected Layer
Samsung linked the ranges to its new Bespoke Over-the-Range Microwave with Air Fry Max through Auto Connectivity. Fire up the cooktop, and the microwave’s vent fan and lighting activate on their own. A back-slanted front panel keeps sightlines clear down to the burners. SmartThings handles remote preheating, cooking progress, and recipe suggestions through SmartThings Food, pulling the full cooking surface into one managed system.
Home Appliance Remote Management monitors health and runs diagnostics across the Bespoke AI lineup through SmartThings, with support reaching back to 2019 models. As our earlier look at Samsung’s KBIS booth noted, the company gave this reliability story dedicated floor space at KBIS rather than burying it in footnotes.

Regular software updates keep the smart features current. That post-sale support matters more than most buyers realize when signing off on a connected kitchen. Samsung is betting that reliability outsells novelty with this crowd, and giving that message floor space at a trade show full of skeptics says a lot about where the company thinks the real concerns sit.
Who Should Skip This
Budget renovations won’t find much to work with, and Samsung hasn’t released pricing to soften that reality. The materials, smart integration, and build quality all point toward the premium tier. Buyers who aren’t invested in SmartThings or don’t plan to adopt it will lose a meaningful part of what separates these appliances from standard hardware. Voice runs through Bixby, and Samsung hasn’t confirmed Google Assistant or Alexa support for the broader lineup. A Samsung zero clearance refrigerator alone isn’t reason enough to replace what’s already working unless you’re deep into a new build or full renovation.
Who This Is For
Kitchen designers and contractors on mid-to-premium builds should pay close attention to these Samsung Bespoke AI appliances. This lineup covers ground that used to require mixing brands. Zero clearance refrigerators eliminate a constraint that’s frustrated installers for years. Each Samsung Bespoke range brings commercial visual weight to residential spaces without Wolf or Thermador pricing. SmartThings ties it all together. Samsung’s wider KBIS showing paired these with its Dacor luxury line, giving builders a single-brand ecosystem from family kitchens to high-end hidden designs. That depth is rare for one vendor.
Home cooks who care about both aesthetics and genuine cooking performance will find substance here. The Samsung Bespoke range lineup delivers flexibility well past basic bake and broil, and the Bespoke AI refrigerator lineup finally addresses the clearance frustration that’s plagued compact-kitchen homeowners for years. These Samsung smart kitchen appliances are the clearest signal yet that the company views the kitchen as a connected platform rather than a set of standalone boxes.
The fridges and ranges announced here aren’t concepts waiting for a production timeline. They’re hitting retail this spring at Samsung.com and select retailers nationwide, with pricing still to come. For an industry that’s heard connected kitchen promises for five years, actual products with ship dates carry weight. The hardware is real. The audience Samsung chose to show it to first says everything about where the company thinks the market is heading.
Price: TBD
Where to Buy: Samsung
Samsung’s KBIS 2026 presence runs through February 19 at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando. Worth watching.






