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Android backups are getting pickier for you, in a good way

New per-app switches would let you exclude noisy or sensitive apps.

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Android 16 logo on Google Pixel 6a kept on the edge of a table.
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What’s happened? Google is building more granular controls for Android backups in a recent Play Services beta. Instead of treating every app’s data as one lump, the new view shows each app’s footprint and lets you include or exclude it.

  • Spotted by Android Authority in their APK teardown of Play Services 25.44.32 beta, the setting lists apps by data size so the biggest storage users sit at the top.
  • Individual switches let you choose which apps’ data get saved or skipped.
  • The feature isn’t available yet in this release, and it’s still under development.

This is important because: Per-app control gives you a say in what lands in Google’s cloud. If an app feels too noisy or you’re protecting sensitive info, you can tune your backup instead of accepting an all-or-nothing approach.

  • Exclude specific apps to keep certain data off Google’s servers.
  • Drop the heaviest apps to stay under your Google One cap.
  • Smaller backups cut upload time and use less data on limited connections.
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Why should I care? Not every app’s data deserves space. Clear choices help you keep the essentials, skip the clutter, and make restores simpler when you switch phones or recover from a loss.

  • Trim the largest backups first.
  • Reducing heavy apps helps you avoid hitting your storage limit.
  • Leaner uploads finish faster on slower or metered networks.

Okay, so what’s next? It’s still in development, so expect changes before a wider rollout. The direction is promising, with more control and a cleaner view of what each app costs in space.

  • Watch upcoming Google Play Services updates for per-app backup controls.
  • When it arrives, review the biggest data users first, then revisit the list every few months.
  • If storage is tight now, prune backups of apps that already sync to the cloud, like mail or notes.
  • Keep automatic backups on so a lost or broken phone doesn’t turn into a bigger problem.
Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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