Your incoming-call screen might soon stop looking like a boring slab of text and instead turn into something a little more… personal. Google has quietly begun rolling out a feature called Calling Cards to beta users of its Contacts and Phone apps — a way to pin a photo, font and color to a contact so their incoming call fills your whole screen with a styled “card.” If you’ve been keeping an eye on the cross-pollination between iOS and Android UX, this will look familiar — but it’s not an Apple copy; it’s Android doing its own thing.
If you’re on the beta version of Google’s Contacts app and the rollout has reached you, open a contact’s details and you may see a little prompt that reads “Try adding a calling card.” Tap through and you can pick a photo from your gallery or take a new one of the person, then pick a font and color for how their name appears. When that person calls, the calling card “takes over” your screen—big picture, big name, big style. It’s a personal call screen that’s set on your phone for your view, not something that the caller chooses for others to see.
This rollout is limited — it’s showing up for some beta users first — but multiple outlets that track Google’s apps have been spotting the feature in recent days.
This didn’t appear out of nowhere. Journalists who unpack APKs noticed evidence of “Calling Cards” in Google Contacts weeks ago — strings and promo art in app code that hinted at a visual, poster-like incoming-call UI. That APK teardown in July was the first clear sign Google had been working on the idea. In other words: engineering breadcrumbs → teaser text in beta → early public sightings.
Apple’s iOS has a similar-looking feature called Contact Posters, but the direction of control is reversed. On the iPhone, you design the poster you want other people to see when you call them — you control how you appear to the world. Google’s Calling Cards, so far, are local and reactive: you customize how you want a contact to appear on your device when they call you. It’s the mirror-opposite of Apple’s privacy-and-branding-focused approach.
That difference matters: Apple’s model is about letting callers control the image they broadcast (raising different moderation and privacy questions), while Google’s approach is about personalizing your own experience of incoming calls (and keeping changes local to your device). There are trade-offs either way — convenience and expression versus consistency and control.
This isn’t wholly new territory for Android hands: Samsung’s One UI has offered a profile/profile-card feature for a while that behaves similarly, letting you create stylized profile cards and share contact info via QR or profile pages. In other words, Google isn’t inventing a category so much as standardizing it in the Pixel/Google app ecosystem. Expect the UX to look familiar to Galaxy owners.
Why Google might be doing this now
A few reasons line up:
- Visual polish for calls. Incoming-call screens are a high-attention moment; Google has been refreshing call UI across Android (Material 3 expressive elements, redesigned Phone app layouts) and Calling Cards fit that push toward playful, personal visuals.
- A calmer way to copy a good idea. Apple’s Contact Posters got attention — Google’s choice to implement a local-only, contact-by-contact card may be a way to borrow the idea while sidestepping the moderation and abuse questions that come with people broadcasting large images and names publicly.
- OEM parity. With manufacturers like Samsung already offering profile cards, bringing something similar into Google’s apps helps the Pixel experience feel less like a second-class visual experience when users switch between vendor apps.
How to try it, and limits to expect
If you want to test Calling Cards right now, you’ll need to be on the beta versions of Google Contacts (and possibly Phone) and have the update that contains the prompt. The in-app flow should walk you through selecting a photo and styling the name. Because this is rolling out gradually, not everyone will see it even if they’re a beta user; Google typically staggers server-side flags. If you don’t see it, be patient — or keep an eye on beta-release notes from the Play Store.
Also, keep in mind: the current implementation is about how contacts appear to you when they call. There’s no option in the Google beta (as reported) to design your own calling card that other people will see when you call them — at least not yet. That’s the key philosophical split with Apple.
Calling Cards are a modest product change with outsized user-facing impact: they change the one interface we all glance at dozens of times a day. For people who curate their contacts and like visual cues (photographs, color-coded names, bolder fonts), this will feel like a small but meaningful upgrade. For platform watchers, it’s another example of how Apple and Google continue to borrow from and react to each other — and how Android’s strength (fragmentation and OEM diversity) sometimes becomes its weakness (inconsistent experiences) and sometimes its asset (choice and customization).
Right now, Calling Cards are a beta-flagged experiment. If Google decides to ship it broadly, the feature will probably iterate — more styling choices, better sync handling, possibly cross-device controls — depending on how users and partners react. If you enjoy tinkering with how your phone looks and behaves, keep an eye on the Contacts and Phone betas; if you prefer uniformity and predictable behavior, this is one of those optional personalization features you can safely ignore.
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