Skip to main content

Google Photos just made it easier to share one-off photos and videos

Google Photos offers various sharing options such as live albums, shared libraries, and shared albums, but what if you want to quickly share a single image that you’ve just shot?

With Google apparently only now realizing that there isn’t a fast or simple way to do it from within Photos, the web giant has just launched a new feature that lets you fire off a photo or video rather like you might in a messaging app.

Explaining the new chat-like feature in a blog post, Janvi Shah, product manager at Google Photos, wrote: “You’ve always been able to share individual photos through the app by creating an album for a single photo and sharing the link. But we’ve heard from some of you that this could be a simpler experience, so now when you share one-off photos and videos, you’ll have the option to add them to an ongoing, private conversation in the app.”

Janvi said the new messaging feature creates a single place to discover the moments you’ve shared with your friends and family, and where you can keep a conversation going should the content that you send prompt an exchange.

The new messaging option lets you “like” photos and videos, and offer up comments about anything that comes to mind, and in just a few taps you can add the content to your own gallery.

Not a replacement

As if to stop everyone rolling their eyes and mumbling under their breath, “Oh no, not another doomed messaging app from Google,” (think Allo and Spaces, among others), Shah adds in her post: “This feature isn’t designed to replace the chat apps you already use, but we do hope it improves sharing memories with your friends and family in Google Photos.”

In other words, don’t think of it as a messaging app. Think of it as a feature within Google Photos that makes it easier to share content and talk about it … a bit like a messaging app.

However you use it, Google will be hoping the feature will keep you in its Photos app for longer, removing the need to hop into another app to send content to friends and family. You can use it by selecting a photo, hitting the share button, and then selecting someone from the row of contacts under where it says, “Share in Google Photos.”

The new feature is rolling out gradually in the coming days for Android, iOS, and web.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
A new Android 15 update just launched. Here’s everything that’s new
Android 15 logo on a Google Pixel 8.

Less than a month ago, Google formally announced Android 15 and released the first developer preview for the software update. Now, Google is rolling out Android 15 Developer Preview 2 — and with it — a few new features that weren't in Developer Preview 1.

So, what's new in this second developer preview? Here are the biggest things to keep an eye out for.
New satellite connectivity features

Read more
A new Google Pixel 8a leak just revealed three huge upgrades
The Google Pixel 7a in a person's hand.

We're likely just a couple of months away from Google's next big smartphone release — the Google Pixel 8a. Thanks to a new report revealing a few of the Pixel 8a's possible specifications, it looks like Google's next budget phone should give us some big hardware upgrades.

We'll start with the chipset. According to the report from Android Authority, the Pixel 8a will be powered by Google's Tensor G3 chip. This has been the assumed chip of choice for the Pixel 8a, but it's still reassuring to have it reiterated in this report. Although not the best mobile platform out there, the Tensor G3 proved to be a significant upgrade over the Tensor G2 (the chip inside the Google Pixel 7a) when it debuted in the Google Pixel 8 and Google Pixel 8 Pro last October.

Read more
The Google Pixel 8a’s release just got a lot closer
Possible renders showing the Google Pixel 8a.

Google Pixel fans, it's almost time to open up your wallets. Rumors and leaks regarding the Google Pixel 8a have been floating around online for months, and now the phone has taken a big step closer to its official release.

On March 18, Google submitted four new smartphone models to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Getting FCC approval is required of smartphone companies before they can sell a smartphone in the U.S., and it's usually one of the last big leaks we see for a phone before its official unveiling. In this case, the four model numbers submitted by Google include G8HHN, G6GPR, G576D, and GKV4X.

Read more