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How to use Quick Share on Android

Sending a large video does not have to mean using cloud storage. Quick Share moves files directly between nearby devices.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jul 18, 2026, 4:47 AM EDT
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Illustration of Quick Share connecting an Android phone, Windows PC and tablet to share photos and videos.
Image: Google
SHARE

Sharing a photo with someone nearby should not feel like a technical exercise. Yet for years, Android users often had to choose between sending a compressed image through a messaging app, uploading files to the cloud, or digging through cables and adapters.

Quick Share is Google’s answer to that problem. Built into Android, it lets you send photos, videos, documents, links and other files directly to nearby devices with a few taps. It is Android’s closest equivalent to Apple’s AirDrop, although Quick Share also works across Chromebooks and Windows PCs.

The feature began as Nearby Share before Google combined it with Samsung’s own Quick Share system in 2024. The goal was straightforward: create one sharing method that works across more of the Android ecosystem instead of making users think about which manufacturer made the phone on the other side. Google says Quick Share is available on Android devices, Chromebooks and selected Windows PCs through the Quick Share app.

The name is slightly misleading if you assume it is simply a faster version of Bluetooth. Bluetooth helps nearby devices find one another, but Quick Share uses a combination of wireless technologies to establish a direct connection and move the file. Google’s Nearby Connections documentation describes a system that can use Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and other peer-to-peer technologies, even when the devices are not connected to the internet.

That is why Quick Share can be useful in places where mobile data or Wi-Fi access is poor. On a plane, in a crowded venue or while travelling abroad, you can still send a file directly from one nearby device to another. You do not need to upload it first, and the transfer does not have to pass through a messaging service.

The basic experience is deliberately familiar. Open a photo, video, document or webpage, tap the Share icon, and select Quick Share. Android then looks for nearby devices that are available to receive content. Tap the device you want, and the recipient will usually see a notification asking whether to accept the transfer.

The other person still has control. Quick Share does not give the sender remote access to the phone, and a normal transfer requires the recipient to approve it. Once the connection is finished, the two devices are not permanently paired or synced.

Before sending anything, it is worth checking a few basics. Both devices should have Bluetooth turned on, and the receiving phone should be unlocked. The devices also need to be reasonably close together. If the recipient does not appear in the list, the most likely cause is that their Quick Share visibility setting does not allow the sender to see them.

Those visibility settings are one of the more important parts of Quick Share. Android generally gives you three choices: your own devices, your contacts, or everyone for 10 minutes. The first option makes the phone visible to other devices signed in to the same Google Account. Contacts can discover the phone when it is nearby and the screen is on and unlocked. “Everyone for 10 minutes” is useful when you are sharing with someone who is not in your contacts, but it automatically returns to the previous setting after the ten-minute window.

You can find these controls by opening Settings and searching for “Quick Share.” On some phones, Quick Share also appears as a tile in the Quick Settings panel. The exact wording can vary slightly between Pixel phones, Samsung Galaxy devices and other Android models, but the underlying process is much the same.

To send a file, open it in the relevant app and tap Share. Choose Quick Share, wait for the nearby device list to appear, and select the intended recipient. The recipient accepts the request, and the transfer begins. You can share more than one file at a time, although simultaneous transfers to multiple devices depend on the phone model. On some devices, additional transfers are queued rather than happening at exactly the same time.

Quick Share is not limited to photos. It can handle videos, PDFs, documents, webpages, links and, on selected Android devices, copied content from the clipboard. That makes it useful for small everyday tasks, such as sending a restaurant address to a friend, moving a large video to another phone, or transferring a document from a phone to a Chromebook.

There is also a QR-code option for situations where the nearby device does not appear. From the Quick Share screen, select the QR-code option and show the code to the recipient. They can scan it with their phone’s camera, after which the sharing process begins. This can be less awkward than asking someone to change several visibility settings in the middle of a conversation.

Moving files between Android and Windows takes a little more preparation. On a Windows PC, you need Google’s Quick Share app, while Samsung PCs use Samsung’s version from the Microsoft Store. Once installed, you can drag a file into the Quick Share window, choose the Android device, and wait for the recipient to accept. Files received on Windows are saved in a Quick Share folder inside Downloads.

For the smoothest experience, Google recommends signing in to the Windows app and choosing a sensible visibility setting, such as Contacts or Your devices. Windows transfers also require Bluetooth and Wi-Fi or Ethernet, and the devices should be on the same network and within roughly five metres of each other. If a computer cannot find the phone, checking visibility, Bluetooth and network settings is usually the best place to start.

Quick Share is particularly convenient between devices that belong to the same person. If your Android phone and tablet use the same Google Account, they can recognise each other more easily, and transfers between your own devices may be accepted automatically. That turns Quick Share into a simple alternative to cloud storage for moving a file from one personal device to another.

It is not perfect. Menus differ between manufacturers, visibility settings can be difficult to find, and older or heavily customised Android devices may behave differently. Nearby sharing can also be affected by Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Location settings, battery restrictions or corporate network policies. When a device refuses to appear, turning Quick Share off and on, unlocking both screens, bringing the devices closer together and temporarily selecting “Everyone for 10 minutes” often resolves the problem.

Still, the appeal of Quick Share is its lack of ceremony. There is no need to create a shared folder, send yourself an email, or install a separate file-transfer app. For Android users, it is one of those features that becomes most useful when you stop thinking about it: select the file, choose the nearby device, approve the transfer and get on with the conversation.


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