Anyone who has stood at a baggage carousel watching bags circle endlessly — except theirs — knows the particular dread that comes with realizing their luggage might be gone. It is a frustration that hundreds of millions of air travelers around the world share every single year, and it has long been one of the most persistent pain points in modern travel. Now, Google is stepping in with a meaningful fix for Android users, and it is one that has been a long time coming.
On March 3, 2026, Google announced a new “share item location” feature inside its Find Hub app, part of its broader March Android feature rollout. The feature allows travelers to generate a secure, shareable link tied to a Find Hub-compatible Bluetooth tracker tag attached to their luggage, and hand that link over directly to a participating airline. The airline can then see the bag’s real-time location as it updates, without needing access to the user’s personal data, device, or broader account. It is a deceptively simple solution to a problem that has plagued air travel for decades, and the scale of the rollout suggests Google is serious about making it work.
To understand why this matters, it helps to look at the numbers. According to SITA’s 2025 Baggage IT Insights report, around 33.4 million bags were mishandled globally in 2024, even as global air traffic rose by 8.2 percent. That works out to roughly 6.3 mishandled bags per every 1,000 passengers — down from 6.9 the year prior, but still an enormous volume by any measure. Lost luggage issues cost the airline industry an estimated $2 billion or more annually, and international routes are statistically five times more likely to lose your bag than domestic ones. Transfer mishandling — meaning bags that go missing when connecting between flights — is the single biggest culprit, accounting for 41 percent of all cases. For travelers, the math is sobering: your suitcase is most at risk precisely when your journey is most complex.
The way Google’s new feature works is straightforward in practice. When a bag goes missing, a traveler opens the Find Hub app, selects the tracker attached to their luggage, and taps “share item location.” The app generates a unique, secure URL. The traveler then copies that link and submits it to their airline, either through the carrier’s mobile app or website. Airline staff can then see the tag’s location on a map as it updates in real time. The traveler remains in complete control throughout — they can revoke access immediately at any point, and links automatically expire after seven days. Sharing also shuts off automatically the moment Find Hub detects that the item has been reunited with the owner.
Privacy was a core consideration in the design. The Find Hub network encrypts device location data, and the link-based system means the airline sees only what the traveler has chosen to share — nothing more. For travelers who have always been wary of handing over any kind of digital access to a third party, the combination of time-limited links, manual revocation, and automatic deactivation provides a reasonable layer of assurance.
What makes the launch particularly significant is the depth of the airline partnerships Google has assembled at launch. More than 10 major global carriers are already on board, including Air India, China Airlines, the Lufthansa Group (which covers Lufthansa, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, and Swiss International Airlines), Ajet, Saudia Airlines, Scandinavian Airlines, and Turkish Airlines. Qantas has been confirmed as a future addition. But perhaps more important than any individual airline partnership is the backend integration. Google has worked with both SITA and Reunitus to connect Find Hub directly into WorldTracer and NetTracer, the two dominant baggage-tracing systems used across the aviation industry. These platforms collectively power baggage recovery operations for hundreds of airlines at thousands of airports worldwide. By plugging into these systems rather than requiring each airline to build its own custom integration, Google has effectively made the feature available at scale from day one.
That backend infrastructure piece cannot be overstated. It is one thing to partner with ten airlines; it is another thing entirely to integrate with the systems those airlines, and hundreds more, already rely on daily. The SITA WorldTracer system in particular is the closest thing aviation has to a universal standard for lost-bag reporting and recovery. If a passenger’s bag goes missing on a code-share route operated by a carrier not yet directly partnered with Google, there is now at least a pathway for Find Hub location data to surface within the broader recovery workflow.
Google is also extending Find Hub deeper into the physical products travelers carry. A partnership with Samsonite will see Find Hub technology embedded directly into compatible Samsonite suitcases, meaning those bags come ready to pair with the Find Hub network straight out of the box — no separate tracker tag purchase required. For travelers who have not yet invested in a standalone Bluetooth tracker, that lowers the barrier to entry considerably.
It is worth stepping back and acknowledging that Google is not the first to this party. Apple launched a comparable “Share Item Location” feature for AirTags and the Find My network in 2024, partnering with major carriers including United, Delta, and British Airways. The results have been striking. SITA, which integrated Apple’s feature into WorldTracer, reported a 90 percent reduction in permanently lost bags for passengers who enabled location sharing via an AirTag — along with a 26 percent reduction in the time required to recover delayed baggage. Those numbers are remarkable enough that the aviation industry has essentially validated the entire concept: consumer-grade Bluetooth trackers, when connected to airline baggage systems, work. Now Google is extending that same capability to the more than three billion active Android devices around the world.
The timing matters because Android users have historically had a rougher ride with tracker-based location networks than iPhone users. Google relaunched its Find My Device network in 2024 — rebranded as Find Hub — and early reviews were mixed at best. Reliability was inconsistent, and the network lacked features like offline Bluetooth finding and out-of-range alerts that competitors had offered for years. By late 2025, though, hands-on reports were far more positive, with reviewers noting that Find Hub had reached rough parity with Apple AirTags and Samsung’s SmartTag 2 in terms of real-world location accuracy. The luggage-sharing feature is arriving at a moment when the underlying network has matured enough to actually support it credibly.
The feature is part of a broader March 2026 expansion of Find Hub’s capabilities. Alongside the luggage-sharing update, Google also rolled out real-time location sharing directly within Google Messages — going beyond the existing static location pin that Google Maps already supports — and brought Find Hub support to Pixel Watches. Taken together, these updates signal that Google is treating Find Hub as a serious, long-term platform rather than a checkbox feature designed to match Apple’s headline specs.
For the average traveler, the practical upshot is this: if you own an Android phone and you attach a compatible Find Hub tracker tag to your checked bag, you now have a direct line of communication with your airline if that bag goes missing. No more standing helplessly at a baggage claim counter, filling out a property irregularity report with no information beyond “my bag is black and has a pink ribbon on the handle.” No more waiting days for a callback that may never come. You can open an app, generate a link, and hand the airline a real-time map of exactly where your bag is sitting — whether it is on the wrong carousel at the same airport or still sitting on a tarmac in a connecting city.
Roughly 66 percent of mishandled bags are already reunited with their owners within 48 hours, according to SITA’s data. The question has always been what happens to the other third — and to the smaller subset that never comes back at all. If Apple’s early numbers are any indication of what Google can replicate at scale, the gap between “mishandled” and “permanently lost” should narrow significantly for Android users who take advantage of the feature. Given that air travel volumes are only continuing to grow, and that transfer-based mishandling remains stubbornly prevalent, any technology that compresses the recovery window has real value — not just for passengers, but for airlines trying to manage the operational and reputational cost of lost bags.
It has taken a few years for Google’s tracker network to reach a point where a feature like this could be built reliably on top of it. But the infrastructure is now in place, the airline partnerships are live, and the integration with the industry’s core baggage systems is real. For anyone who has ever watched that last bag slide off the carousel while theirs remained somewhere over a time zone they already left, this is a feature that cannot roll out to enough devices fast enough.
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