I didn't expect Google Wallet to become a daily essential until I started using these features

by · Android Police

I mainly used Google Wallet for one thing: tap-to-pay purchases.

At first, I found most of the extra features in Google Wallet to be unnecessary. I often kept loyalty cards buried in my emails, event tickets saved as screenshots, and transit passes scattered across different apps.

However, my perspective changed as I began to incorporate more everyday items into Google Wallet, rather than just using it as a payment app.

Now, I frequently use it for boarding passes, store memberships, tickets, backup payment cards, and quick-access passes.

I did not anticipate that Google Wallet would become such an integral part of my daily routine, but a few simple features have made it surprisingly hard to stop using.

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Adding tickets and bookings reduced screenshot clutter

One habit I didn’t realize I had until recently was taking screenshots of almost every ticket, QR code, or booking confirmation I received.

I often ended up mixing movie tickets, boarding passes, train reservations, event passes, and hotel bookings into my gallery because I wanted quick access later without having to search through emails at the last minute.

However, managing screenshots over time became surprisingly difficult. Important tickets would get buried among regular photos, and older screenshots would accumulate endlessly.

Finding the right one quickly could become stressful, especially when standing in line trying to scan a code.

To solve this problem, I started saving tickets directly into Google Wallet, which helped to clean up the mess.

Whenever possible, I now use the Add to Google Wallet button from confirmation emails or ticketing apps instead of taking immediate screenshots.

When saved, the ticket is stored alongside all my other items in Wallet, making it much easier to locate later.

The newer Wallet layout lets me star or prioritize passes on the homepage, so important tickets are easier to surface when I need them.

I also appreciate that Google Wallet sometimes automatically highlights relevant passes as the event or trip approaches.

I stopped carrying loyalty cards entirely

One of the first things that made Google Wallet feel genuinely useful was replacing the pile of loyalty and membership cards I constantly forgot I even had.

Before that, some cards were buried inside my physical wallet, while others were in random emails. A few depended on separate apps I never remembered to open while standing at the checkout counter.

As a result, I often skipped using them altogether because pulling them up felt unnecessarily annoying.

Now, whenever I sign up for a loyalty program or membership card, I save it directly into Wallet instead of leaving it scattered elsewhere.

In Google Wallet, I tap the plus icon, select Loyalty card, and search for the store or scan the barcode from an existing card.

Google’s newer Wallet redesign also helps. The app now displays passes in a more organized grid layout instead of a long vertical list, which makes loyalty cards much easier to spot at checkout.

What I like most is that it removes the need to think about where a card is stored.

I no longer dig through screenshots, search old emails for barcodes, or carry extra plastic cards I barely use. Most of the time, I can open Google Wallet and scan the card immediately.

Transit passes made Google Wallet feel effortless

Another feature that made Google Wallet feel far more useful to me was support for transit passes.

Before that, commuting usually involved juggling between separate transit apps, screenshots, QR codes, and sometimes even physical cards, depending on the service I was using.

Having transit passes stored inside Google Wallet simplified the entire process.

Instead of searching through apps or emails while standing near a station gate, I open Google Wallet immediately and access the pass.

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Adding passes is also fairly simple. In Google Wallet, I tap the plus icon, choose Transit pass, and follow the setup instructions for the supported transit system or linked app.

Quick access features made tap-to-pay feel effortless

Setting Google Wallet as my default payment app meant I no longer had to open it manually every single time.

With NFC turned on, I can unlock the device and tap directly at supported terminals without navigating through menus first.

I also started relying more on shortcuts and quick access gestures. Having Wallet accessible from the lock screen or quick settings made payments feel much more natural for grocery shopping, cafés, or transit payments.

Now, reaching for my phone often feels more convenient than pulling out physical cards, especially since most of the other things I need, such as loyalty cards, tickets, and passes, are already saved inside Google Wallet.

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Google Wallet became useful after I stopped using it as just a payment app

I mostly associate Google Wallet with tap-to-pay purchases, but it was much more useful after I started storing everyday items beyond just payment cards.

By replacing loyalty cards, I was able to reduce wallet clutter. Keeping transit passes in the app simplified my commuting, and storing tickets directly in Wallet eliminated my reliance on endless screenshots and buried confirmation emails.

Features like quicker access to tap-to-pay purchases and the new pass organization system made the app feel much more practical for daily use.