Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

You can now adjust how your caller card looks for calls on Android phones

Google phone app now lets you customize how your caller card appears to others

Add as a preferred source on Google
Android 17 on a phone.
DigitalTrends/Google

Android phones are getting a fun and personal way to customize how you appear on calls thanks to a new feature rolling out in the Google Phone app. Known as Calling Cards, this option lets Android users design and share a personalized visual identity that appears during phone calls. Instead of a simple caller ID or small profile picture, users can now set a full-screen image along with custom fonts and colors that define exactly how their calls look to others.

Once the feature becomes available, Android users will see a prompt at the top of the Phone app’s Home tab inviting them to “Create your calling card.” Tapping that prompt takes you through a straightforward setup where you link your Google account, choose a photo from your camera roll or Google Photos, and then adjust stylistic elements like font width, weight, roundedness, and color. You can also decide whether your custom calling card is visible to just your contacts or to everyone you call.

This new customization builds on earlier versions of Calling Cards

That feature allowed you to personalize the visuals for incoming calls from other people, similar to Contact Posters on the iOS platform. While Google has previously offered full-screen images for specific contacts, this update lets you define what others see when you place a call, adding a layer of personal expression to an otherwise standard communication interface.

For many Android users, this marks a small but meaningful shift in how calling looks and feels. Standard caller IDs have long been limited to static elements – usually just a number or thumbnail image – that offer little visual context or personality. With Calling Cards, users can now make calls feel more like digital business cards, blending images, typography, and color into a unified calling experience. Especially for frequent callers, creators, or anyone who wants their phone to reflect their identity more clearly, this adds a new degree of personalization.

The rollout is beginning with the latest beta versions of the Google Phone app

Also, it may expand gradually via app updates or server-side switches. While the feature relies on your device using Google’s default Phone app – which is standard on Google Pixel and many other Android handsets – not all Android phones may support it immediately. Still, as it becomes more widely available, more people will be able to enjoy customized visuals on both outgoing and incoming calls.

Looking ahead, this personalization could extend further to include animated elements, contextual backgrounds based on caller information, or even dynamic visuals linked to AI features in future versions of Android. For now, however, it gives users a simple and stylish way to make phone calls feel more personal – and uniquely theirs.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
The iPhone 18 Pro just leaked through a factory drop test, and Apple cannot be thrilled
Next Pro iPhone just fell out of Apple's secret vault
iPhone 18 Pro revealed in a massive leak

Most iPhone leaks are predictable. You'll see a case show up or an early leak showcase the mold of the upcoming iPhones. But the leak this time around is a bigger deal, since it has basically just revealed the device as it's being tested.

A new post from leaker Ice Universe claims to show the iPhone 18 Pro undergoing a drop test. The clip itself is short, but it gives us a proper look at an unreleased Pro iPhone in a controlled test environment. This reveals that it is durable enough to handle a basic fall, though the thickness is still surprising, and the weight is still unknown.

Read more
Leaked cases give us the clearest look yet at Samsung’s upcoming foldables
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Samsung's annual Unpacked event is just around the corner, and the company is set to take the wraps off its new foldables in July. We are expecting the Galaxy Z Fold 8, the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide that will compete directly with the iPhone Fold, and the Galaxy Z Flip 8 to take center stage. Ahead of the big day, a fresh batch of leaked cases, courtesy of Android Headlines, has given us our best look at these phones.

What do the cases tell us about the Fold 8 and Fold 8 Wide?

Read more
I tried a hidden video trick in iOS 27, and it saved me a ton of frustration
Better quality, smaller file size, and no status bar. iOS 27's video frame feature beats screenshots on every count.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

If you've ever been on vacation and chose to record video instead of taking photos only to avoid missing the fun moments, thinking you’d pause and take screenshots later, you might have ended up questioning your decision later. 

You see, the process involves multiple steps, starting from hunting for the right frame, pausing, and taking a screenshot. If it doesn’t look good, you go back to the video, pause somewhere else, and try taking another screenshot. You see where I’m going with this?

Read more