Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Your Android phone is getting an AirDrop-style tap to share trick

Google and Samsung are building a feature that lets you transfer files by tapping two phones together.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Google Pixel 10a smartphone
Google Pixel 10a Google

Google and Samsung are quietly building a tap to share feature for Android that works a lot like Apple’s AirDrop. The idea is simple enough. You hold two phones close together, and files transfer between them without digging through share menus or hunting for a nearby device name.

According to Android Authority, evidence for the feature has been piling up across three separate places. It appears in Samsung’s One UI 9 builds, inside Google Play Services code, and even in Android 17 system files. Developers tracking these builds say the feature has been taking shape since late 2025, and it now looks like it’s heading toward a proper release rather than staying a Samsung experiment.

Samsung and Google are building it together

The tap to share feature first showed up in Samsung’s One UI 8.5 as a hidden Labs experiment. Now in One UI 9, it has its own name and a clear description telling users to hold the top of the phone close to another device to send files.

But this isn’t just a Samsung project. Google Play Services code from November 2025 includes something called “Gesture Exchange,” which was built for sharing contact information like AirDrop’s NameDrop feature. That same Gesture Exchange name has since appeared in One UI 9’s Quick Share app, suggesting the contact sharing tool has grown into a full file transfer system.

Recommended Videos

Android 17 beta builds add another layer, with references to an OS-level service called “TapToShare.” NFC probably handles the initial tap to wake everything up, and then Quick Share takes over to move the actual files.

This isn’t just for Samsung phones

What makes this worth paying attention to is the cross-brand potential. Because the tap to share code lives inside Google Play Services and Android 17 itself, it should work across devices from different manufacturers. That would solve one of Android’s oldest pain points.

An iPhone user knows AirDrop works with any other iPhone. An Android user today has Quick Share, but the experience can feel fragmented depending on whether the other phone runs Samsung software, uses a different brand’s version, or requires a separate app. Building the feature directly into Android removes that friction entirely.

When you can expect tap to share

Google will likely announce the feature alongside the stable release of Android 17. Samsung devices could get it first given how much work is already visible in One UI 9 builds, but the broader rollout should follow.

There is a catch worth noting, as these discoveries come from code teardowns, which means nothing is set in stone until Google makes an official announcement. Features spotted in development builds sometimes get delayed or scrapped entirely. Still, the clues are unusually widespread this time.

The smart move is to keep an eye on Android 17 news. If tap to share lands as expected, sharing files between Android phones will finally feel as natural as bumping two devices together.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Google really wants Gemini involved in every part of your phone now
Gemini is getting deeper access to your Google Contacts on Android
Google Gemini Live Feature

Google is continuing its push to make Gemini a central part of Android by giving the AI assistant deeper integration with Google Contacts. A newly discovered update suggests Gemini may soon handle contact-related tasks more directly, potentially turning it into a more capable personal assistant for calls, messaging, and everyday communication.

According to a report by 9to5Google, the latest Google app beta includes references showing that Gemini integration with Google Contacts is expanding beyond basic assistant functions. The feature appears designed to let Gemini interact more naturally with saved contacts, helping users quickly find people, initiate communication, and manage relationship-based tasks through conversational commands.

Read more
Google’s new AI reply system could make texting feel easier
Soon you’ll only need one tap to pretend you typed a thoughtful reply
google pixel showing phone app

Google appears to be experimenting with a new AI feature inside Google Messages that could make replying to texts significantly faster. The feature, currently spotted in development, introduces a “tap to draft” system that automatically generates longer and more contextual responses instead of the short smart replies users are already familiar with.

According to a report by 9to5Google, the upcoming functionality expands Google Messages’ existing Smart Reply system by allowing users to tap suggested prompts that instantly create full draft responses inside a conversation. Rather than replying with simple one-word or one-line answers like “Sounds good” or “Thanks,” the new feature appears designed to generate more natural, conversational replies that users can edit before sending.

Read more
Right to repair isn’t a hobbyist crusade. It’s a fight over ownership
A dying battery should not turn a paid-off device into company property again.
Repairing computers

The least sexy part of modern gadget design might also be the most revealing: the battery you’re not supposed to replace.

I understand the official story. Sealed phones look cleaner, feel slimmer, and can survive the kind of splash that ruins your week. Adhesives help make that possible, which is the respectable version of the argument. Nobody wants a flagship phone with the structural elegance of a TV remote from 2006.

Read more