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Google and Apple just made switching from iPhone to Android feel painless

For the first time, moving to Android doesn’t have to mean rebuilding from scratch, with a new Google–Apple pipeline carrying passwords, messages, photos and even eSIM over the wall.

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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May 13, 2026, 11:47 AM EDT
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Three smartphone screens demonstrating data transfer from an iPhone to an Android device. The left screen shows an iPhone “Apps and Data” page where users can select items to transfer, including apps, app data, passwords, accessibility settings, and accounts. The center Android screen displays a progress interface with the message “Copying your data...” and animated graphics while the transfer is in progress. The right Android screen confirms the transfer is complete, listing successfully copied items such as apps, calendars, contacts, files, and home screen layout, with checkmarks beside each category.
Image: Google
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If you have ever tried to move from an iPhone to an Android phone, you probably still remember the mix of excitement and dread. You get the new phone in your hand, but a small voice in your head asks: “Am I really ready to lose half my stuff?” For years, that fear has been one of Apple’s strongest, if unspoken, retention tools.

That’s the anxiety Google and Apple are now jointly trying to kill off.

In a rare moment of cooperation between two of tech’s fiercest rivals, the companies have quietly rebuilt the iOS-to-Android transfer experience almost from the ground up. The result is a new, mostly wireless migration flow that aims to move not just your photos and contacts, but also your passwords, messages, eSIM, and even your home screen layout from iPhone to Android. On paper, it reads less like a simple utility update and more like a political statement: switching sides should no longer be a nightmare.

The most striking shift is how “native” the whole thing now feels on the Apple side. As of iOS 26.3, Apple has added a built-in “Transfer to Android” option right inside Settings, under the same “Transfer or Reset iPhone” menu that previously only pointed people toward moving into Apple’s own ecosystem. You don’t have to hunt down a third-party app, you don’t have to memorize a weird brand name like “Switch to Android,” and you definitely don’t need a cable if you don’t want one. You put your iPhone next to the Android phone, scan a QR code, and the two devices quietly negotiate what needs to move.

On the Android side, Google has done something similar. Its updated setup flow now explicitly advertises that it can wirelessly pull data from an iPhone, not just from an old Android device. During setup, your new phone can display a QR code or show a session ID and passcode that acts as a kind of “digital handshake” between the devices, confirming that they’re talking to the right partner before any data starts flowing. To a user, that translates into a relatively simple decision tree: use a cable if you want the old-school, ultra-reliable route, or skip the cable and let both phones handle the wireless transfer over Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.

What’s new isn’t just the convenience — it’s the breadth of what actually comes across. Google says that in the revamped process your passwords, photos, messages, favorite apps, contacts, and even your home screen layout can now migrate wirelessly from your iPhone to a new Android device. Apple’s support documentation echoes this, listing things like messages, contacts, call history, photos, some apps, wallpaper, and even your phone number as transferable items via the new tool. On top of that, eSIM transfer is supported, which means you can bring over not just who you are digitally, but the phone number that everyone already knows you by.

There is also a deeper piece of plumbing behind the scenes: something Google-related reports and developers have referred to as “AppMigrationKit.” That means you can think of it as a standardized toolkit that helps apps participate in the cross-platform move, lining up data and entitlements so that going from one phone to another doesn’t feel like starting over. Instead of a patchwork of one-off migration tricks, this kit is meant to give developers a more predictable way to say, “yes, this user is the same person; here’s what we can pre-fill for them on Android.”

It’s easy to read all of this as consumer-friendly tech progress, and it is. But there is also a clear regulatory shadow looming over the whole story. Apple is not suddenly feeling generous; it is responding to mounting pressure from European regulators under the EU’s Digital Markets Act and related rules that push gatekeepers to reduce lock-in and make switching platforms actually viable. Allowing users to move data — including credentials and app layouts — to a rival’s operating system is exactly the kind of change regulators have been demanding. Google, for its part, is capitalizing on that pressure to make the “come to Android” pitch more credible than it has ever been.

The timing lines up with that political reality. Over the past year, Android’s beta builds started revealing hints of a more advanced, standardized transfer system, including that “Copy data” screen with options to pair with an iPhone using session IDs and codes. Around the same time, Apple quietly pushed iOS 26.3, with the Transfer to Android option visible in settings worldwide. Google’s own Android team has now gone public, confirming that it “worked with Apple to overhaul the iOS-to-Android transfer process” and promising that the upgraded flow — including eSIM support — will roll out first to Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel devices this year.

For everyday users, none of that regulatory and engineering context really matters. What you notice is that, on day one with your new Android phone, far more of your digital life already feels like “yours.” Your password manager entries follow you without having to export mysterious files or reset every login. Your messages are there, so you’re not asking friends to resend addresses or hunt for old photo attachments. Your home screen doesn’t feel like an empty grid, but something that at least nods to what you were used to on iOS. The emotional tax of switching is lower, which is exactly what Google has wanted for years.

Interestingly, this new transfer process is launching alongside other cross-platform moves that make the Android–iOS relationship feel slightly less hostile. Google is starting to roll out end-to-end encryption for RCS messages across Android and iOS, which means the chat experience between platforms is getting more secure and more modern at the same time as switching between them gets easier. Regulators again are in the background — RCS interoperability is happening under pressure in Europe — but the net effect is that the walls between ecosystems are becoming a little less solid.

That doesn’t mean everything will suddenly be perfect. Some app-specific data still won’t transfer cleanly, especially for services that are deeply tied to Apple-only frameworks or that refuse to participate in the migration kit. Paid apps on iOS usually won’t magically become paid apps on Android; you’ll often be re-downloading and re-subscribing on the other side. And for now, Google has clarified that the overhauled iOS-to-Android flow will first hit Pixel and Samsung Galaxy phones before expanding more broadly, so if you’re using a smaller brand you might be waiting a bit longer for the most seamless version.

Still, the direction of travel is clear: switching phones, especially from iPhone to Android, is evolving from “deeply annoying project” to something closer to signing into a new laptop. You authenticate, you wait, and most of your world appears. The collaboration between Apple and Google on this front doesn’t make them friends, and it doesn’t erase their competition over services, ads, or app stores. But it does signal a subtle cultural shift: in 2026, keeping you locked in by making exits painful is becoming harder to justify, both technically and politically.


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