Imagine you’re hiking a long, quiet ridge, your phone’s bars are gone, and the nearest Wi-Fi is a long day’s walk away. Google wants Find Hub to be a place your family can still check in on — even when the network can’t. New digging through the Find Hub app for Android suggests the company is close to turning on satellite-based location sharing: not a continuous background tracker, but a way to ping trusted contacts from off-grid spots.
Google rebranded its old Find My Device system to Find Hub earlier this year and said satellite connectivity was coming; the feature has now been hinted at inside the app’s code, according to reporting from Android Authority and follow-ups from Android Police. The code strings suggest a manual, limited set of location “pings” over satellite — something closer to dropping a pin for a few minutes at a time than handing someone live tracking.
That’s useful and potentially life-saving in true off-grid emergencies, but it’s not a replacement for the Emergency SOS satellite tools already shipping on a handful of phones (Pixel 9 series and some Samsung Galaxy S25 variants, for example). Those tools are focused on contacting emergency services and can also share location data — Find Hub’s satellite sharing looks aimed more at person-to-trusted-person updates.
The discovery was classic app archaeology: researchers examined the latest Find Hub APK and found strings referencing satellite location sharing, ping counts and timing. Android Authority reported seeing language that implies a manual “share my location via satellite” option and a countdown or remaining-pings indicator — the app appears ready to show you how many pings you have left and to throttle them to, for example, one every 15 minutes. That cadence would make sense for low-bandwidth satellite links where you can’t continuously stream location data.
Android Police and other outlets that checked the same build noted the same signs: Set-up flows, strings about “location pings,” and UI references that look like they’re waiting for a server-side switch to turn the feature on. In short, the plumbing seems in place; Google just hasn’t flipped the publicly visible switch yet.
How it looks like it will work (based on the code)
From the available evidence, the flow should be something like this:
- You pick a trusted contact (you already control who can see you in Find Hub and via Google Maps). The same sharing permissions that govern Find Hub’s People tab are expected to apply.
- When you’re out of cellular/Wi-Fi coverage, you open the Find Hub app and select the satellite share option. The app will send discrete location “pings” to the chosen contacts rather than continuously streaming your position.
- Pings look to be rate-limited (Android Authority’s read of the strings points at one ping every ~15 minutes) and the UI will reportedly tell you how many pings you have left within whatever window Google imposes. That makes sense for conserving satellite link time and avoiding accidental continuous tracking.
That manual model is important: it preserves a user’s intentionality. The ping-every-15-minutes metaphor is closer to using a satellite messenger or pressing a location button in an off-grid chat thread than to letting an app constantly broadcast your whereabouts.
Find Hub already gives users tools to decide who can see them (you can manage people sharing in both the Find Hub app and Google Maps), and the new satellite option appears to honor that same trust model. Expect to see controls inside the app showing active shares and the ability to stop sharing at any point. Google’s public documentation on Find Hub and device sharing covers the basic permissions flows that would be expected to govern satellite pings as well.
That said, Google hasn’t published a public explained-policy about how many pings you’ll get, whether there will be region locks, or whether carriers or Google partners will limit access. Those are the details that will matter a lot in practice.
What we still don’t know
There are some big open questions:
- Which phones will support it? The code hints don’t spell out hardware requirements. Satellite functionality has historically required modem support and often new radio firmware, so it may be limited to newer devices. Google hasn’t published a compatibility list for the Find Hub satellite feature.
- Will it cost money? Google’s Pixel Satellite SOS was free for an initial trial period in past rollouts, but later moved to a subscription model in some cases; whether Find Hub satellite pings will be free, carrier-subsidized, or paid is unclear.
- Will it be regional? Satellite services (and the regulatory landscape around emergency communications) vary by country; Google may roll the tool out regionally. No global rollout announcement has been made.
How this sits next to Emergency SOS
It’s important to separate two ideas that both use satellite radio: (A) Emergency SOS — a dedicated system built to contact emergency services and route your distress message to first-responders, and (B) person-to-person satellite sharing, which looks like what Find Hub is preparing. Google’s Pixel 9 line and certain Samsung phones already have satellite SOS/messaging partnerships (often carrier-enabled) for emergencies; Find Hub’s upgrade is likely aimed at letting people share location with trusted contacts when there’s no network, not at replacing SOS services. In short, one is for getting help from emergency services; the other is for keeping your family and friends informed when you’re off the grid.
Satellite coverage for basic location updates would make the Find Hub network genuinely useful for outdoorsy people, remote workers, and anyone who spends time in places with spotty cellular reception. The manual ping model also reduces the privacy concerns that come with always-on tracking. If Google can make it work broadly and keep the pricing model consumer-friendly, it’s a practical step toward safer, more connected off-grid experiences.
The code is in place, the UI is waiting, and the concept is solid: Find Hub looks poised to let you share discrete location pings by satellite to the people you trust, likely at a conservative cadence (think once every ~15 minutes) and under explicit user control. Google has not yet flipped the switch, and key details — device compatibility, regional availability, cost and exact limits — remain unannounced. Keep an eye on official Google channels for a full rollout and the fine print; until then, this looks like a welcome addition to Android’s safety toolkit.
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