6 Android automation features already on your phone that most people do not know exist

by · Android Police

If you're deep into the Android ecosystem, you may think that automation requires apps like Tasker or complicated routines, perhaps even our spend-tweaking settings.

While Android supports all of those functions, you'd be surprised to know that many of the most useful automations are already built into the operating system and don't require manual intervention.

The issue is that most of these automations are buried deep inside the settings menu, and you might not even be aware of them.

Over the last few years, I've spent a lot of time digging these out, enabling them, and eliminating a surprising amount of daily frustrations and annoyances.

These features might not be headlining elements on their own, but they all save time by making your phone react to your habits instead of manual intervention.

I turned on these hidden Android settings, and now my phone literally runs itself

Automated restrictions mean I don't need to bother with self-control

Posts By  Dhruv Bhutani

Adaptive Battery learns which apps deserve your phone's resources

Unused apps stop wasting resources

One of the most useful automations on Android happens entirely behind the scenes, and I would say that this is perhaps one of my favorite automations.

Adaptive battery studies how you use your phone, and it identifies which apps are important to your daily routine.

For the apps that you open constantly, there are no changes, but the apps that stay untouched in your app drawer for weeks are the ones that are targeted.

Adaptive battery tweaks the app setting so that it uses fewer resources in the background.

The overall benefit is that you don't have to manually restrict applications or spend time hunting for battery-draining apps. Android automatically decides where the battery resources should go based on your usage patterns.

My favorite aspect is that it gets better over time. The longer you use the device, the smarter the system becomes by learning your usage patterns.

Eventually, your phone starts prioritizing using the apps that actually matter to you in everyday use while reducing power consumption from the apps that you've installed and forgotten about.

It's one of the easiest ways to improve your battery life and is a must-switch-on feature for practically everyone.

Rules is Android's most overlooked automation tool

Custom actions for home and work

Like Adaptive Battery, Google's rules feature is one of Android's most overlooked and underrated automation tools.

A mainstay of Pixel phones and most other Android phones, Rules allow your phone to automatically perform actions when you arrive at or leave a specific location.

For example, you can configure your phone to switch to silent mode whenever you arrive at your office and switch over to a custom profile when you get back home.

In my case, I've set it to switch over to the Do Not Disturb mode as soon as I arrive home.

It's a simple feature, but it eliminates one of the most common smartphone friction points, which is remembering when to change sound settings.

Instead of relying on memory or getting frustrated that you did not make the switch on your own, the phone handles it automatically based on wherever you are.

Inactive Tabs separates what I actually need

The automation every tab hoarder needs

I'm a compulsive tab hoarder, and if you're anything like me, your Chrome tabs probably look like a massive collection of unfinished articles, shopping research, and random internet rabbit holes that you went down.

This isn't a traditional automation, but it's still one of my favorites.

Chrome's inactive tabs feature automates the cleanup process for you. Rather than forcing you to manually review hundreds of open tabs, Chrome identifies pages that haven't been used in as little as seven days or as much as 21 days and automatically moves them into a separate section.

The beauty of the system is that the tabs aren't deleted or closed automatically. You could still go into this inactive section and reopen a tab if you want.

Meanwhile, Chrome automatically closes those tabs after three months if you still haven't taken action.

For anyone who treats their browser tabs like bookmarks, this is one of the most useful automations Google has added in recent years.

Android can create a distraction-free work environment for you

An automatic productivity mode

Most people think of digital well-being as a collection of screen time reports, and yes, it offers you all of that, but there's more under the hood. My favorite feature is digital well-being automations.

For example, Focus mode allows you to temporarily pause distracting apps, but you don't have to activate it manually every day. Instead, Android can automatically enable Focus Mode during specific hours.

During my workday, when I'm doing research, in the middle of a writing session, or trying to stay productive, it switches on its own on schedule. When configured, social media and distracting notifications become unavailable until the schedule ends.

If you struggle with willpower and distractions like me, this is one of the most useful additions. You don't have to make any decisions. The phone automatically makes those decisions for you and creates a productivity-focused environment.

Bedtime Mode helps me put down my phone

My favorite nightly automation

While focused modes and digital well-being take care of your productivity during the day, there's another aspect of well-being that you need to be aware of.

Most people already know that they should stop staring at bright screens before going to bed. It makes it difficult for you to fall asleep, but the problem is remembering to make all the necessary adjustments that you have to do every single night.

Moreover, often I just don't feel like toggling through multiple settings.

Android's Bedtime Mode automates the entire process for me. At a scheduled time, the phone enables Do Not Disturb, reduces visual distractions, and mutes notifications.

It will even switch the display to grayscale to reduce blue light exposure.

The result is a phone that becomes less stimulating as bedtime approaches and more conducive to just going to bed.

Like other automations on this list, instead of relying on self-discipline, the device encourages healthier nighttime habits on its own, and it is one of my favorite automations.

Live Captions make any audio easier to access

Read what you can't listen to

Another underrated feature that isn't a classic automation, but I still prefer to classify it as one, is the ability to create subtitles for almost anything.

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Live Caption remains one of the most impressive accessibility features Google has ever shipped.

When enabled, Android can automatically generate captions for videos, podcasts, voice messages, or even video calls, basically any audio content playing on your device.

You don't need to request transcripts or hope that your favorite content creator has provided captions. The phone handles the entire process locally and generates text in real time.

I found a lot of practical uses for it when I'm watching videos in public or if I want to see a voice note without headphones on.

I can enable the live captions and get access to that information without having to scramble for headphones or play the content out loud in public.

It solves a simple problem that you don't even think about until you actually need it.

Small automations that quickly add up

While Android offers a range of complex automation features, some of my favorites are actually the simplest ones.

Most of the tools on this list don't require custom workflows or a lot of time configuring rules. They're already built into Android and can be as simple as a single toggle.

While individually these features might not save you too much time or effort, collectively they make your phone feel smarter and more tuned to the way that you use your device.

That is precisely what good automation should do. It shouldn't be giving you more homework. Instead, it should be doing the work for you.