Google Drive on Android is getting a genuinely useful upgrade: the app can now scan multiple pages in one go, automatically identify and separate them, and even catch duplicates so you do not accidentally re-scan the same sheet twice. It is the kind of update that sounds small on paper but saves real time in the moments that matter, whether you are digitizing a stack of receipts, a few pages from a contract, or a chapter from a book.
The timing matters too. Google says the feature is already available now for both Rapid Release and Scheduled Release domains, and it is open to all Google Workspace customers, Workspace Individual subscribers, and personal Google account users. There is one important catch: Google says the new multi-page scanning experience is limited to Android devices with 8GB or more of RAM.
That hardware requirement tells you a lot about where Google is heading with the feature. This is not just a simple camera tweak tucked into Google Drive; it is a more ambitious scanning workflow that needs enough device memory to handle page detection, separation, and duplicate prevention quickly and smoothly. In practice, that should make the feature feel less like a clunky document capture tool and more like a fast, modern batch scanner built right into the Drive app.
For anyone who has used Google Drive scanning before, the appeal is easy to understand. The older flow was fine for single pages, but multi-page documents still required a more manual rhythm: capture, adjust, add another page, repeat. Google’s updated scanner aims to remove some of that friction by spotting multiple pages in the camera view at once, which makes scanning feel closer to laying documents under a flatbed scanner than tapping through each page one by one.
That is especially handy for people who live in document-heavy workflows. Think students scanning lecture notes, small business owners digitizing receipts, or office workers snapping expense forms while moving between meetings. In each case, the win is not just speed; it is also consistency, because the app is doing more of the organization work automatically instead of leaving that cleanup for later.
Google also frames the update as part of the broader Google Drive scanning experience on Android, which still includes the familiar document capture tools users already know. The difference now is that the scanner is better at handling a batch of pages in one session, which makes Drive feel less like a storage app with a scanning add-on and more like a practical mobile digitization tool.
This is the kind of feature that rarely gets dramatic headlines but often earns daily loyalty. If Google keeps improving Drive’s scanner this way, it strengthens a quiet but important part of the Android and Workspace ecosystem: turning a phone into a fast document intake device without making users download a separate scanner app.
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