How to restore your apps and settings to a new Android phone
Whether you're upgrading to a new device or are resetting your phone, it's incredibly easy to restore your apps and settings. Google automatically backs up information like contacts, calendar entries, call logs, texts, Do Not Disturb settings, and more to the cloud, allowing you to pick up from where you left off. Here's how you can restore your apps and settings when moving to a new Android phone.
How to enable the Android backup service
Before we get started with restoring data, you have to make sure that the backup service is running on your current phone. Here's how you can get started:
Now that you've enabled the Android backup service, your system settings and app data will be automatically saved to Drive. When you're switching to a new phone, you can rely on the service to restore your settings, apps, and associated data.
Note: The menu layout may not look exactly as above on your phone, but any phone running Nougat and above should have an equivalent of Backup & reset. If you're on a Samsung phone running One UI, use the search box in settings for backup and you should see this setting.
How to restore apps and settings on a new Android phone
Restoring apps is straightforward, and you'll be able to do so during the initial configuration. If you're using the Google Now or Pixel Launcher, your home screen background, icon and widget layout, as well as the folder structure, is now saved to the cloud, allowing you to restore your settings to a new handset and retain your home screen layout.
That's it! Once the initial setup is completed, apps and settings will be restored in the background.
Where does all the app data get stored? Google backs up the app data to Drive, allocating 25MB for each individual app. Data used by the backup system doesn't count toward your storage quota. Also, developers can choose to select what app data gets stored in the cloud, and you can opt-out of the service at any time through your device settings.
Your privacy
Gathering data and sending it off to a remote server means it's outside the app sandbox and reliant on Google — as well as the people who made your phone — to do the right things. That may not always be the case, as phone manufacturers have a lot of leeway when they make an Android-powered phone. Google's thoughts on the issue:
Google provides plenty of documentation on how to use the Backup service, so developers have the means to be cautious and do the right thing with sensitive data. Don't let this scare you away from using the service, but you do need to be aware.
The ability to restore apps and settings is available on all current phones running Android 6.0 and above, and the process itself is identical regardless of the manufacturer. It doesn't matter if you're using a Samsung, LG, Xiaomi, Nokia, or Motorola phone; you'll see the same steps when restoring your settings and data to your new phone.
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