Samsung Galaxy S4 Boot Loop & Random Reboot Fix (2026)
If your Samsung Galaxy S4 keeps rebooting or gets stuck on the Samsung logo during boot, you’re dealing with one of two problems: degraded hardware (overwhelmingly the most common cause in 2026) or a software corruption that can still be fixed at home. The S4 launched in 2013 and received its last official firmware update in 2015 with Android 5.0.1 Lollipop, which means any phone still in use today is running an unsupported OS on hardware that’s well past its expected service life. This guide walks through every fix that still works, from the 30-second safe-mode test to a full recovery-mode wipe — and tells you honestly when the device is simply done.
Start here: identify which failure mode you’re seeing
Boot loop behavior on the Galaxy S4 falls into three patterns, and the right fix depends on which one you have:
- Random reboots while in use — phone works, but shuts down and restarts on its own. Usually a rogue app, corrupt cache, or swollen battery.
- Stuck at the Samsung logo or the blue “Samsung Galaxy S4” splash — never reaches the lock screen. Often a failed update, corrupt system partition, or a hardware fault known as the “sudden death syndrome” (eMMC chip failure) that plagues S4 units after 2 to 3 years of heavy use.
- Boots, then restarts at the lock screen or shortly after — usually a single misbehaving app, most commonly one that auto-starts on boot (launchers, battery monitors, security apps).
Fix 1: Boot into Safe Mode to rule out a bad app
Safe Mode loads Android with only the factory-installed apps running. If the phone is stable in Safe Mode, a third-party app is the cause — and you can uninstall it without wiping anything.
- Press and hold the Power button until the “Power off” menu appears.
- Press and hold the Power off option on the screen until “Reboot to safe mode” appears.
- Tap OK. The phone restarts with “Safe mode” in the bottom-left corner.
If the phone can’t stay on long enough to reach that menu, force shutdown first: pull the back cover, remove the battery for 30 seconds, then reinsert and power on while holding Volume Down. Keep Volume Down held until you see the home screen.
Once in Safe Mode, leave the phone running for 15 to 20 minutes. If it doesn’t reboot, go to Settings → More → Application Manager → Downloaded and uninstall apps in reverse order of when you installed them, starting with the most recent. Reboot normally after each uninstall to test.
Fix 2: Wipe the cache partition (does not delete your data)
The cache partition holds temporary system files, and a corrupted cache is the single most common software cause of boot loops after a firmware update or a failed install. Wiping it is safe — it does not touch your photos, contacts, apps, or messages.
- Turn the phone completely off. If it’s stuck on the logo, pull the battery for 30 seconds.
- Press and hold Volume Up + Home + Power simultaneously.
- Release Power when the Samsung logo appears, but keep Volume Up and Home held until the blue Android recovery screen loads.
- Use Volume Down to navigate to Wipe cache partition, then press Power to select.
- Use Volume Down to highlight Yes, press Power to confirm.
- When the wipe finishes, Reboot system now is highlighted — press Power.
The first boot after a cache wipe takes two to three minutes. Don’t touch the phone until you see the lock screen.
Fix 3: Check the battery — the #1 hardware cause in 2026
The original S4 battery is the EB-B600BE (also sold as EB-B600BU and EB-B600BC depending on region), a 3.8V 2600 mAh lithium-ion pack. A 2013-era lithium battery in 2026 has been through 1,000+ charge cycles and lost 40% or more of its capacity — if it’s the original, it is almost certainly the cause of random shutdowns and boot loops, even if the percentage indicator reads 50% or higher.
Visual checks before you buy a replacement:
- Spin test: Remove the battery and place it flat on a hard surface. A healthy battery sits still. A swollen battery spins or rocks — this is a safety hazard and the phone will not boot reliably.
- Contact check: Inspect the gold pins on the phone and the battery. Green corrosion or discoloration means poor contact and unstable power delivery. Clean gently with a cotton swab dipped in 90%+ isopropyl alcohol, let dry completely, then reseat.
- Try with a known-good charger: Use a genuine Samsung charger or an Anker-branded replacement. Counterfeit chargers deliver unstable voltage that causes the S4 to reboot under load.
A genuine EB-B600BE battery is available from third-party sellers for around $10 to $18 in 2026. Only buy from a seller with recent reviews — old stock lithium batteries often arrive already degraded. Avoid any battery that lists capacity above 2600 mAh (“3200 mAh,” “3800 mAh” are a lie — the physical cell cannot hold that).
Fix 4: Factory reset via Recovery Mode
If the phone won’t boot far enough to reach Settings, you can factory reset from Recovery. This erases everything on the device, so only use it after you’ve tried Fixes 1 through 3 and backed up what you can (Samsung Account, Google account, or a microSD card).
- Power off the phone. Pull the battery for 30 seconds if needed.
- Hold Volume Up + Home + Power until the blue recovery screen appears.
- Use Volume Down to navigate to Wipe data/factory reset.
- Press Power to select, then select Yes — delete all user data.
- When finished, select Reboot system now.
The first boot after a factory reset takes five to ten minutes. If the phone still gets stuck on the logo after a factory reset, the problem is hardware — proceed to Fix 5.
Fix 5: Flash stock firmware with Odin (advanced)
If a factory reset doesn’t help, the system partition itself may be corrupted. Reflashing the stock Samsung firmware restores the device to factory software state. This requires a Windows PC, a USB cable, Samsung USB drivers, and the right firmware file for your exact model (GT-I9500, GT-I9505, SGH-I337, SCH-I545, SPH-L720, SGH-M919, etc.).
The steps at a high level:
- Download the matching stock firmware for your exact model and region from a trusted source such as SamMobile or Samfrew. The wrong firmware will brick the phone.
- Install Samsung USB drivers on Windows and install Odin3 (v3.09 or v3.10 works reliably for the S4).
- Boot the phone into Download Mode: Volume Down + Home + Power, then press Volume Up to confirm the warning.
- Connect the phone to the PC. Odin should show “Added!” with a blue or yellow COM port ID.
- In Odin, click AP (or PDA on older Odin versions) and select the firmware .tar.md5 file. Leave Auto Reboot and F. Reset Time checked. Do not check Re-Partition.
- Click Start. The flash takes five to fifteen minutes. Do not unplug the phone.
- When Odin shows “PASS!” in green, the phone reboots automatically into the factory setup wizard.
A failed Odin flash is recoverable — repeat the process — but it does not fix a physical eMMC fault. If Odin fails with “FAIL!” in red at the bootloader or modem stages, the memory chip itself has died.
Fix 6: The “sudden death syndrome” (eMMC failure)
A well-documented manufacturing defect affects Galaxy S4 units produced in 2013 and 2014, caused by a faulty eMMC memory chip (part number KLMAG2GE4A, manufactured by Samsung Semiconductor). Phones with this defect typically fail suddenly after 12 to 36 months of use with one of these symptoms:
- Phone freezes, then reboots itself, and from that point will never boot past the Samsung logo.
- Odin flashes fail at the bootloader or system partition stage.
- Factory reset completes but the reboot hangs indefinitely.
This is not repairable by software. The only fix is replacing the eMMC chip (board-level repair, typically $60 to $120 at a specialist) or replacing the logic board entirely. Given that a working used S4 sells for under $40 on eBay in 2026, neither repair path makes financial sense. Move your SIM and microSD card into a working phone and recycle the broken unit through Samsung’s trade-in program or Call2Recycle.
When to stop troubleshooting and upgrade
The honest answer in 2026: if your Galaxy S4 is still in daily use, you’re running a phone that hasn’t received a security patch in over a decade, can’t run modern banking apps, and cannot access most of Google Play. Even if you fix the boot loop, the device is locked out of 4G VoLTE on most US carriers (AT&T and Verizon shut down 3G in 2022, which means many S4 units can’t make voice calls anymore) and will be fully blocked from T-Mobile’s network by the end of 2026.
Reasonable upgrade paths from the S4, ranked by how familiar the transition will feel:
- Samsung Galaxy A15 5G — under $200 new, removable-style replaceable battery via authorized repair, seven years of security updates (through 2030).
- Samsung Galaxy A35 5G — around $400, direct descendant of the Galaxy S-series design language, IP67 rated, four years of Android OS updates.
- Certified refurbished Galaxy S23 — around $400 through Samsung’s certified pre-owned program, flagship specs, three years of remaining support.
What we tried but doesn’t work in 2026
Fixes that were recommended for the S4 in 2015 to 2018 but no longer apply:
“Update to Android 5.1 or 6.0 Marshmallow”— Samsung never released Marshmallow for the S4. Android 5.0.1 is the final official build. Any “Marshmallow update” download you find online is either a custom ROM or malware.“Use Samsung Smart Switch to restore”— Smart Switch dropped S4 support in 2022. It will not detect the device on current Windows or macOS versions.“Re-enable Google Services via Play Store update”— Play Services 23.x and newer require Android 6.0 minimum. The S4’s Android 5.0.1 can no longer receive current Play Services.
Warranty and service
Samsung’s standard one-year limited warranty on the Galaxy S4 expired in 2014, and out-of-warranty board-level repair is no longer offered through Samsung’s US service network. Third-party repair shops that still work on the S4 include iCracked-affiliated techs and uBreakiFix (check local availability at 1-877-320-2237). Expect board-level repair quotes of $80 to $150 with a 30- to 60-day limited workmanship warranty.
If the phone still has personal data you need to extract and it won’t boot at all, a data-recovery specialist such as DriveSavers or Gillware can pull data directly from the eMMC chip, but quotes start at $300 and run into four figures depending on the chip condition.
Pushing the battery while the battery is in the phone and restart with a charger will fix it
I had the same problem with my phone rebooting few times a day and nigh, and I fix it myself… so what I did was to remove 2 applications from my phone: GAS BUDDY and PEEL REMOTE… and now I have almost 2 weeks with no problem… so try it, this might be yours problem too… Good Luck.
Hello all. My galaxy s4 mini, I think is stuck in a boot loop. I press the power button and all it does is comes up with the samsung logo and then goes black, it then does the whole thing again and again and again. It will not stop until i remove the battery. I have tried all recovery options, sometimes I get the android robot with “no command” under him and then the phone starts the loop all over again, other times I have had ODIN MODE with the robot and it says downloading…. but that screen never changes. Its now driving me insane PLEASE HELP.
My phone was completely stuck in that reboot loop. I did every thing I thought possible and I did not want to reset my phone to factory setting and lose all my contacts information’s. From reading in an other page somewhere that there were some bad factory battery witch they described as being swelled up or something, that were produced and replaced by Samsung. I had the brilliant idea to put my battery in the freezer for 5 or 10 minutes in order for it to shrink back down. Guess what, it worked 🙂 I was able to turn my phone back on and go to safe mode and delete my recently added apps.
Guys, I found a solution for those who put the battery out and in, then the galaxy boots and goes a black screen. Its a problem on the power button that keeps pressing power even if you are not pressing. It’s not normal that the phone goes on when you put the battery in. How I discovered that? Well, I smashed my Galaxy S4 four times in the table, then it has gone on. When android booted, I just passed my finger on the power button and the “switch off, reset, airplane” screen showed up. I concluded that the power button was pressed. Then I removed the battery and put a thin knife right behind the button, between the grey plastic and the plastic cover. This way I pierced the plastic.
i got a samsung s4 and it is doing a bunch of different boot ups,one times it boots and freezes,next it boots to my carrier screen,then also its just vibrates and nothing appears on screen.
Please Help Im Desperate
i’ve tried all the steps above
my galaxy s4 mobile keeps restarting. followed all steps. after that my mobile restarted and started working. but after some time again facing same problem.
first option works for me
thankssssssss
So my Samsung S4 has got his problem an hour ago after attempting to install an incompatible ROM and I was (desperately) experimenting solutions. Luckily I found one:
– Turn off the phone by holding the power button.
– Quickly Press the following [ Power + Volume Down + Home Button ]
– The download menu will appear
– Press Volume Down to cancel and Restart Device
Done! Enjoy your phone ^^
my device is samsung after the hard reset phone doesnt reboot it says reboot error