What’s happened? Google is testing a new Contacts Picker in development builds of Android 17. According to Android Authority, the new Contact Picker lets you choose which contacts to share with an app instead of giving access to your whole contact list.
- The new Contact Picker lets you choose specific contacts and even which fields (phone number, email, etc.) to share.
- The data shared is a one-time snapshot, so if you change a contact later, the app won’t automatically see those updates.
- It works like the Photo Picker: a system screen pops up, and you simply choose the contacts you want to share.

This is important because: Until now, users have faced an all-or-nothing choice with apps getting full contacts permission or nothing at all. That allowed apps to collect far more data than they needed. The new Contact Picker in Android 17 stops that by design.
- Apps can ask for only specific fields, like a phone number or email, so developers cannot justify blanket access to birthdays, addresses, and extras when they only need one detail.
- However, the new picker’s existence will not delete the old model right away.
Why should I care? If you are tired of permissions that feel like handing over your entire contact list just for one feature, this is a big win.
- Less accidental oversharing: If an app only needs to message one friend, you can now share only one contact number and nothing else.
- Fewer privacy surprises: Apps will no longer automatically know when a contact’s info changes and quietly harvest your entire contact list to build a profile.
OK, what’s next? The feature is still behind a flag in Android 17 builds, but there’s a catch; apps targeting older Android versions can keep using the old permission model to request full access. So your privacy win will depend on whether:
- Developers start using the new picker instead of the old permission model.
- Google enforces the new Contact Picker via Play Store policy.
Android has been pushing for privacy and safety with multiple changes across the ecosystem – from giving a safer way to sideload apps from unverified developers, to letting you remotely uninstall Android apps, to new alerts that flag apps draining too much battery.