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Fall Detection is an awesome smartwatch perk, but Google is going “account, first!”

Google's Pixel Watch safety feature still works without an account for now, though a grace period may soon end that workaround

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A hand pulling the stretchable strap on the Pixel Watch 4
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Fall Detection is one of the best reasons to wear a smartwatch, especially if you want a safety feature that can help without much setup.

But Google looks ready to make it less flexible on the Pixel Watch, with newly spotted app strings suggesting you’ll soon need to sign in with a Google account to keep using it.

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Right now, Pixel Watch users can still enable Fall Detection without linking an account. According to Android Authority’s APK teardown, code found in version 4.4.0.897056328 of the Pixel Watch app points to new warnings that would tell users to sign in to Personal Safety if they want to keep the feature active.

The strings also suggest Google may allow a grace period before access is cut off, though the exact number of days isn’t clear. That means a feature that works on the watch today may soon depend on account status too.

The app already hints at it

The strongest evidence is the language Google appears to be building into the app. The new messages point to a future where unsigned users get a countdown and a prompt to connect Personal Safety to a Google account.

That makes this look more like an incoming policy change than a vague possibility.

There is at least one practical upside. Fall Detection settings can sync across devices once the watch is connected to an account, which makes the feature easier to manage over time, even if it also deepens Google’s ecosystem tie-in.

Why the change stands out

This matters because Fall Detection is part of the basic value of a smartwatch, especially for people buying one for an older relative or anyone who wants emergency help with as little friction as possible.

Requiring sign-in changes that equation. Most Pixel Watch buyers probably won’t care, because they’re already signed in during setup.

But for people who liked the lighter-touch option, this would remove one of the more accommodating parts of the current experience.

What to watch for next

Nothing here confirms that Google has already flipped the switch. This comes from teardown findings, and work-in-progress code doesn’t always ship.

Still, the messaging appears far enough along that Pixel Watch owners should be ready for this to become official unless Google changes course.

The remaining question is timing. Google still hasn’t shown how long the grace period would last or when enforcement would begin.

Until that changes, the safest read is that Fall Detection may soon become another Pixel Watch feature that works best, or only, once you’re signed in.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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