Google’s Find My Device service has existed for a long time, acting as a way to quickly and easily locate Android phones and select other devices. But it has also been quite limited, as it only works with devices that have location capabilities and are connected to the internet. Pretty soon, Google is going to change all that.
It will do this through a new Find My Device network, announced at Google IO 2023 in May, that’s capable of using Bluetooth trackers coupled with over a billion Android devices worldwide to locate things even if they’re offline or don’t have location capabilities, so far more devices will be trackable.
Below, you’ll find full details of what this new Find My Device network is, how it works, how you can set it up, and when it’s actually launching. We’ll also look at whether the search giant Google AirTag-like tracker of its own to go with this network.
Android Find My Device network: what is it?
Google’s Find My Device network already exists, albeit in limited form. If you’ve been an Android user for any length of time then you’ve probably interacted with it. But in its current form it’s not really a ‘network’, as it doesn’t leverage other Android devices to help you find lost objects.
With the new Find My Device network it will, and this update will also add support for various Bluetooth trackers (such as those from Tile, Chipolo, and Pebblebee), as well as some other devices, such as Pixel Buds, and headphones from Sony and JBL.
Additionally, Find My Device will let you detect unwanted AirTags and other trackers (in other words ones that someone might have hidden in your belongings in order to stalk you). In fact, that feature has already rolled out, but the rest is still to come.
In all, this is set to be the biggest update to Find My Device since the service’s original launch back in 2017.
Android Find My Device network: when will it launch?
Google originally planned to launch its new Find My Device network in summer 2023, but in a Google blog post from late July, the company revealed that it’s delaying the launch.
It’s made this decision because it wants to wait until Apple fully rolls out unknown tracker alerts to its own Find My service. Currently, if you have an iOS device then you can get alerts for unknown AirTags, but not for other Bluetooth trackers.
Apple is working on updating the feature to work with other trackers too, but this update is one that Google and Apple have jointly been working on, so that alerts can be sent across Android and iOS platforms. The specification for this cross-platform alert system hasn’t yet been finalized, so Google has therefore decided “to hold the rollout of the Find My Device network until Apple has implemented protections for iOS.”
In theory, the specification for the system will be finalized by the end of the year, but it’s not clear whether that means Google’s Find My Device network will also launch by the end of the year, or whether we’ll be waiting even longer.
Android Find My Device network: how will it work?
Right now, if you lose your Android phone then – assuming you’ve enabled Find My Device – you’ll be able to see its last known location on a map. If it’s online with location services enabled then that location should be up to date, but if not it won’t be.
If it’s online then you can also do things like remotely play a sound on it to help find it, or if you think it may have been stolen you can remotely lock it, sign out of your Google account, or even erase it. It’s a handy feature, but it requires the device to be online for an up to date location, and it only works with select devices, such as Android phones and Wear OS watches.