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Google launches Pixel VIPs to help you prioritize close connections

Pixel VIPs is a new widget for Pixel phones that organizes your most important contacts with reminders, memos, and communication insights in a single timeline.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar
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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Jun 13, 2025, 1:42 PM EDT
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Google Pixel VIPs showing on Pixel 9 Pro.
Image: Google
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Google’s latest Pixel Drop has introduced a new way to keep your nearest and dearest front and center: Pixel VIPs is a widget-driven feature designed to streamline how you interact with favorite contacts on Pixel devices. Rolling out on June 10, 2025, for Pixel 6 and newer devices, Pixel VIPs consolidates essential contact details—notes, communication history, location updates, and more—into a single, timeline-like interface on your home screen.

Every few months, Google issues a “Pixel Drop” update, bundling new software features, security patches, and improvements for Pixel phone owners. The June 2025 Pixel Drop notably centers on personalization and relationship-focused tools, with Pixel VIPs headline among enhancements like Gboard AI stickers and expanded Satellite SOS capabilities. Historically, smartphones have offered “favorite contacts” shortcuts or speed-dial options, but Pixel VIPs aims for deeper integration: rather than merely pinning a few people for one-tap calling, it introduces a mini “relationship dashboard” into daily life.

At its core, Pixel VIPs is a resizable widget (akin to the favorite contacts widget it replaces) that can hold up to eight contacts. Once you add VIPs via the Contacts app’s “Organize” tab, the widget displays:

  • Communication timeline: Shows when you last called or messaged each VIP, aggregating interactions from Google Messages and WhatsApp into a unified view so you don’t have to toggle between apps.
  • Important dates: Upcoming birthdays, anniversaries, or custom reminders tied to that person appear in sequence, helping you remember celebrations without digging through calendar apps.
  • Personal notes: You can leave memos per contact—gift ideas, shared project reminders, or simply a note about a favorite hobby—so details don’t get buried in separate note-taking apps like Google Keep.
  • Bypass Do Not Disturb: VIP calls and messages can ring through even when DND is on, making sure you don’t miss crucial communications from close contacts.
  • Location and local updates: If both parties opt in, VIPs can share live location, local time, weather, and distance information. This is pitched as especially useful for long-distance relationships or when coordinating meetups.
  • “Things to do together” recommendations: Based on your shared interests or past activities (drawing potentially on calendar events or location history), the widget can suggest activities or events to explore with your VIP contacts. While Google hasn’t fully detailed the recommendation algorithms, the aim is to spark ideas for quality time.

The timeline-like UI arranges these elements in chronological order, so all relevant details about someone are visible at a glance, rather than bouncing between messaging, calendar, maps, and note apps. The widget’s design mirrors the existing favorite contacts widget’s rounded rectangle aesthetic, but is now dynamic and resizable. Permissions must be granted—for example, access to Contacts, location sharing, calendar/reminder integration—before full functionality is unlocked.

In an era where digital clutter grows daily, consolidating contact-related information can feel liberating. Rather than hunting through chat threads for the last time you spoke, or scribbling gift hints in a separate app, Pixel VIPs situates these tidbits front and center. For users juggling busy schedules, remote relationships, or just wanting to be intentional about staying in touch, this widget nudges meaningful interactions. Early impressions suggest that having visible reminders—“Hey, it’s been two weeks since you talked with Aisha”—can spur timely check-ins. Similarly, shared location updates (with consent) can reduce “Where are you?” text chains when meeting up.

The “things to do together” angle also points toward Google’s ambition to move from passive tools to proactive experiences: rather than passively recording data, the system surfaces suggestions to help users create moments with loved ones. While this leans on data (location history, calendar integration, preferences), it demonstrates how relationship management is evolving in the mobile OS.

Any feature that surfaces personal notes, location, and communication history raises privacy questions. Google’s implementation requires explicit opt-in for permissions:

  • Location sharing: Both you and the VIP must agree to share live location; it does not auto-enable. Users can revoke sharing at any time.
  • Data storage: Notes and reminders are stored locally on the device (within the Contacts/Pixel system); Google states these do not sync to servers unless the user backs up contacts via their Google Account. It’s prudent for users to verify privacy settings in Contacts and Google Account backup preferences.
  • Bypassing DND: While useful, it may have edge cases—e.g., if your phone is silenced, unexpected alerts could occur. Users can choose which contacts are VIPs to control whose notifications break through.
  • Third-party integration: Since WhatsApp messages are surfaced in the timeline, Pixel VIPs must request SMS/MMS or notification access; Google’s documentation advises that only metadata (timestamps, sender identifiers) is used, not message contents beyond what’s needed for “last interaction” display. Still, privacy-conscious users should review app permissions under Settings.
  • Recommendations: The “things to do together” suggestions may tap into calendar entries or location history; users should be able to disable specific recommendation sources if they prefer minimal data use.

Google’s blog emphasizes transparency and granular controls: users can remove a VIP at any time, disable particular data-sharing facets, or remove the widget entirely. However, as with any convenience feature that aggregates personal data, users should periodically review privacy dashboards and ensure they’re comfortable with the permissions granted.

Apple’s iOS has long had “Favorites” in Phone and Contacts, and “Emergency Bypass” for allowing certain contacts to ring through Focus modes. However, iOS doesn’t bundle notes or shared location/time/weather into a single widget on the home screen. Some third-party apps offer relationship management (e.g., dedicated apps for remembering birthdays or anniversaries), but they often require manual entry across apps. Pixel VIPs’ tight OS integration and widget-based design set it apart by consolidating these elements natively.

On Android more broadly, OEM skins sometimes offer contact shortcuts or “Edge panels” (in Samsung), but not a unified timeline widget that aggregates cross-app data. Pixel VIPs thus position Pixel phones as catering to users seeking deeper personalization and relationship-focused conveniences. Of course, users tied to other ecosystems may find limited reach; Pixel VIPs currently integrates with Google Messages and WhatsApp, but not, say, Signal or Telegram—though notification-based metadata might still surface “last interaction” if permitted.

Tips for setting up and making the most of Pixel VIPs

  1. Select genuinely close contacts: Limit VIPs to those whose updates you truly want—family members, close friends, key collaborators—to avoid notification fatigue.
  2. Customize notes thoughtfully: Use the memo feature to jot down meaningful details (e.g., “Loves gardening, ask about new plants”), birthday gift hints, or project deadlines. Consistent use ensures you leverage the timeline effectively over time.
  3. Manage permissions: After adding VIPs, review permission requests in Settings—location sharing, notification access for WhatsApp messages, and calendar integration. Only enable what you need.
  4. Schedule review sessions: Periodically glance at the widget to spot upcoming anniversaries or check time-zone differences before scheduling calls, especially if you have long-distance VIPs.
  5. Use “Bypass DND” sparingly: Reserve this for emergency contacts or truly vital relationships to maintain the sanctity of focus or sleep modes.
  6. Evaluate recommendations: Try the “things to do together” suggestions, but pair with your own local insights; if recommendations feel off, adjust or disable the relevant data source (e.g., calendar integration).
  7. Be mindful of battery: If live location sharing is active for extended periods, monitor battery impact and disable when not needed.
  8. Stay updated: Keep an eye on subsequent Pixel Drop releases, as Google may refine UI placements or add integrations (e.g., more messaging apps) based on feedback.

Pixel VIPs began rolling out on June 10, 2025, with the June Pixel Drop update for Pixel 6, 6 Pro, and newer models. Because activation is server-side, some users may need to wait a few days post-update before seeing the “Pixel VIPs” option in Contacts > Organize. To check manually: update to the latest Android 16 build, open Google Contacts, tap “Organize,” and look for “Pixel VIPs.” If it’s not visible immediately, ensure your device is online and synced, then revisit after 24–48 hours.

Keep your Google Messages and WhatsApp apps updated to ensure seamless integration for communication history. If you rely on other messaging platforms, watch for potential future support or workarounds via notification access APIs. For enterprises or families using managed devices, administrators should review policy implications, especially around location sharing.


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