Setting up a new phone is like setting up a new apartment: there’s a lot to do and it can be easy to forget a few things along the way. Here at Android Central, we set up a lot of new phones during our device reviews — and of course as we play live-in tech support to our families and friends — and so we’re here to help remind you of some of the smaller tasks to do after your get all your apps downloaded and your Google account logged in on the new device. A new device is a chance for a new start, which makes it the best time for you to get into some better habits concerning your apps and Android use.
So grab a nice soothing beverage, sit down in a comfy chair, and let’s unpack your Android experience.
Check your Do Not Disturb rules
Always forgetting to silence your phone before church or school? Or to turn the volume back up once it’s over? Do Not Disturb’s Automatic rules can silence your phone at 8 AM when mass starts and turn the ringer back on at 9:15 when you’re usually out of church and on your way to the doughnut shop.
DND’s automatic rules are one of Android’s hidden gems, and your automatic rules sometimes follow you from phone to phone with your Google account. You might not need to set up new ones, but if you haven’t set them up, there is no time like the present!
As with most system menus, the Do Not Disturb menu can look a little different depending on your exact phone and software, but the only manufacturer that made things drastically different concerning DND is Samsung. Samsung’s Do Not Disturb menu is the most sparse and the most limited, as you’re limited to one automatic rule — most phones allow several DND rules — and you cannot set a default or timed duration when toggling on DND outside the automatic rule.
How to add a Do Not Disturb rule to most Android phones
- Pull down the notification shade by swiping down from the top edge of the screen.
- Swipe down from the top edge of the screen again to open the Quick Settings.
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By default, Do Not Disturb is usually placed somewhere on the first page of your Quick Settings toggles. Press and hold the Do Not Disturb toggle until the Do Not Disturb menu appears.
- Under Schedule, tap Turn on automatically.
- Tap Add rule.
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Some devices can set DND rules to fire during certain events, but all can set DND rules to fire at specific times. Tap Time to create a time-based rule.
- Name your new rule.
- Tap Add.
- The default rule parameters will be added to the Days, Start time, and End time. Tap Days to edit which days of the week your rule is active.
- Tap the days you do not want your rule active to uncheck them. Any checkmarked or highlighted days are days the rule is active.
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Once you have the desired days sat, tap Done.
- Tap Start time to change the time of day the rule takes effect.
- Tap the hour you want the rule to take place.
- Tap the minute you want the rule to take place. Tip: if you want a minute between the 5-minute increments, hold your finger down and drag it slowly to the minute you want it at.
- (12-hour time only) If you need to change from PM to AM, tap AM.
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Tap OK.
- Tap End time and repeat steps 13-16.
- If you want an alarm to be able to override and end a rule early — such as a super early pre-flight alarm to leave for the airport — tap Alarm can override end time if the toggle is not already active.
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Tap the back arrow in the top left corner to exit the submenu and save the rule.
Back in the main DND menu, you can set more specific rules for what Do Not Disturb does and doesn’t let through in the Exceptions section. You can also set whether notification sound/vibration/icons/dots are suppressed during Do Not Disturb in the Behavior section.
How to set your Do Not Disturb schedule on a Samsung phone
- Pull down the notification shade by swiping down from the top edge of the screen.
- Swipe down from the top edge of the screen again to open the Quick Settings.
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By default, Do Not Disturb is usually placed somewhere on the first page of your Quick Settings toggles. Press and hold the Do Not Disturb toggle until the Do Not Disturb menu appears.
- Tap Turn on as scheduled to edit the schedule.
- Tap the days of the week you do not want your DND schedule to run. Days that are circled and colored are active days, grey days are off days.
- Tap Set schedule edit the start and end time.
- Scroll the hour, minute, and AM/PM to the start time you want.
- Tap End at the top of the time-picking pop-up.
- Scroll the hour, minute, and AM/PM to the end time you want.
- Tap Done.
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Tap the back arrow in the top left corner to exit the submenu and save the changes.
You can tweak what Do Not Disturb mode will and won’t let through — you can set DND to let favorite contacts or repeat callers through in case someone is trying to call you in an emergency — in Allow exceptions. You can state how much notifications are suppressed when using a phone in DND mode under Hide Notifications.
Set your default apps
When you get a new Android phone, you’re going to see a lot of “Open with” app selection prompts while you’re going about tasks for the first time and settling into your various apps. These prompts are annoying, but necessary if you haven’t chosen a default app for a task yet. Of course, if you set the default apps all at once in the Settings app, you can skip all those pesky pop-ups in the weeks to come.
How to set your default apps
- Open the Settings app.
- Tap Apps or Apps & notifications (the name may vary by phone).
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Tap Default apps. If you do not see the Default apps option on your screen, you may need to reveal it one of the following ways:
- Tap the app type you wish to assign a default to.
- Tap the app name you wish to be the default.
- Tap the back arrow in the top left corner to exit the submenu and save the change.
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Repeat steps 4-6 as desired with the app types listed.
At the bottom of the default apps list is an Opening links submenu. This submenu can be used to clear the defaults you accidentally set the wrong app to open a certain type of link, like Samsung Browser opening YouTube links instead of YouTube. You shouldn’t need to mess with anything in here, but it’s good to know where it is in case you ever do.
Apply a new system theme
Once upon a time, Android was dark, beautiful place, a dangerous place where bugs and app crashes lurked in the shadows of a charcoal-and-blue Holo UI. Then Material Design came and replaced everything with white. Clean, clear, cruelly-blinding-at-2-AM white.
While Google itself has struggled to get a dark theme right before they bring it back to Android as a whole, manufacturers like Samsung and OnePlus have implemented their own theming systems to give users back control over the appearance of the Android system, and if you own a phone with a theming system available, you should give it a once-over to see if you find a theme you like more than the bright, bland default.
System themes aren’t standardized yet, and so they appear in different places:
- On Samsung phones, a separate Samsung Themes app controls device themes, Always On Display, fonts, icon packs, and wallpapers. If you don’t see Samsung Themes in your app drawer, you can access it from the Wallpaper and themes option in the main Settings menu. A great and growing number of Samsung Themes are paid, and that number will only continue to rise as the One UI update rolls out to more devices.
- For OnePlus, the theme in the Display section of the Settings app, where you can set the system theme, accent color, system font and wallpaper in the Customization section.
- Google doesn’t have a device-wide system theme yet, but they do have a Device theme setting in the Display section of the Settings app that will set the color scheme for the Quick Settings menu and some system pop-ups.
- If all else fails, tap the search bar at the top of your phone and type in “theme”. If there are any theme settings, they should pop up quickly.
If you’re on a device that runs a more “vanilla” take on Android, you might not have any system theme to use, but it’s worth checking for sure. A dark theme may not be everyone’s cup of tea, but on AMOLED phones, hex black themes use less pixels and less power, which can mean the difference between your phone being at 25% or 5% at the end of a long, busy travel day.
Check out your new phone’s gesture shortcuts and navigation options
The navigation bar is going through a few changes here in the Android Pie era, and more manufacturers have been embracing system-based gesture shortcuts over past few years. If you’re setting up a new new phone, you should probably see which ones your phone came with.
Like system themes, system gestures tend to hide in different places on different phones, but if you open the Settings app and type “gesture”, they should appear in short order and tell you which menus they’re hiding in. Look through all of the gesture shortcuts/features your phone has, regardless of what which ones you think you’ll use. You can disable some or all of them if you want, but see what they all do first.
Some of these shortcuts can not only be quite useful in your day-to-day life — like the double-tap to wake the screen — but some can be important settings to remember in an emergency, like the OnePlus 6T’s hidden panic button or the Google Pixel’s quick ringer shut-off. Horror movie cliche aside, you never know when you might need to silence your phone instantly or discreetly dial 9-1-1.
In addition to the gestures, as Google, OnePlus, and other manufacturers have been exploring radical changes to the navigation bar — or the complete replacement of the nav bar with gestures from the bottom edge of the screen — so make sure you know what the navigation controls for your new phone can actually do and whether a more traditional nav bar option is available.
Retrain Google Assistant’s Voice Match and turn on OK Google to wake/unlock
While Google Assistant is now part of the initial setup process on many new phones, I also know that people tend to skip the Voice Match section. Whether your new phone just imported your previous voice model or you skipped it because you initially set up your phone in a noisy environment — like a busy carrier store — you should find a quiet room and retrain Voice Match on your new phone.
We can also take this time to ensure that saying “OK Google” will wake up your phone if the screen’s off and unlock your phone if it’s locked, two problems that pop up from new users in Android subreddits with impressive frequency.
How to retrain Google Assistant Voice Match
- Open the main Google app, one of the pre-installed apps on your phone.
- Tap More.
- Tap Settings.
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Under Google Assistant, tap Settings.
- Tap Assistant.
- Scroll down and tap Phone.
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Tap Voice model.
- Tap retrain voice model.
- Tap I agree.
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Say “OK Google” and “Hey Google” as prompted on screen.
With the voice model saved, we can now see if the settings needed for Google Assistant to wake and unlock your phone are enabled. If either toggle is grey, tap it to turn it blue.
- Access with Voice Match is the setting that will wake your phone if you say Ok Google with the screen off.
- Unlock with Voice Match is the setting that will unlock your phone when you say OK Google. When turning this setting on, you will be required to put in your password/PIN/fingerprint and acknowledge that Voice unlocking is less secure than a PIN or password because voices can sound similar.
Turn on automatic backups for Google Photos
Google Photos free photo backups are amazing and free and help us keep treasured memories of beloved family members and pets and you need to turn on free backups right now so you don’t forget to do it later!
How to turn on Google Photos automatic backups
- Open the Google Photos app.
- Tap Allow to allow Google Photos to see and back up your photos and videos.
- The Back up & sync enrollment window will appear. By default it is set to upload only on Wi-Fi at the free high-quality resolution — which will be more than enough for the vast majority of users. If you want to change either of these settings, tap Change settings.
- If you want to have photos upload at original quality — which will count against your Google Drive/Google One storage limit — tap Original.
- If you want to upload photos for backup even when you’re on mobile data, tap Use cellular data to back up.
- Tap the back arrow in the top left corner.
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Tap Confirm.
If you want to come back and change these settings later, we’ve got you covered.
Purge your app list
When you set up a new phone, by default Google Play allow yous to install every app your old phone had from Google Play on your new phone. It can be a major pain to try and weed through this list during initial setup, but while we’re getting this phone squared away for years of future use, now is the time to do some spring cleaning in the app drawer.
This may take a little time, and if you still have your old phone, pull it out and go through the two phones side by side and use the following guidelines to help you weed out old or unneeded apps.
- When was the last time I used this app? The Google Play Store’s My apps & games section can sort the Installed tab by Last Used. Open this view on your old phone and see when the last time you used an app was. If you haven’t used the app in the last six months and it isn’t a basic utility app like Barcode Scanner, you can probably uninstall it.
- Do I still need this app for anything? We pick up apps for all sorts of reasons: trying new games or downloading an app for a specific event or activity like a cross-country move or a business conference or a vacation. If you no longer use a service or need the app for last year’s iKKiCON panel guide and map, you no longer need its app cluttering your phone.
- Do I have multiple apps that do the same thing? Redundancy for the most important apps on your phone makes sense, and really, you should have at least two keyboards, text messagers, and email apps in case a catastrophic bug renders your usual app inoperable, but you don’t need five weather apps installed unless you’re a storm chaser or an app reviewer.
Once you’ve trimmed town your apps, it’s time to set the ones you’re keeping where you want them on your home screen.
Set up your new home screen
First and foremost, your phone came with a default wallpaper set on it. If Google didn’t restore the wallpaper from your previous phone while it was transferring your contacts and app data, do yourself a favor right now and go grab a new wallpaper. It’s one small step towards turning the bland default home screen into something more personal, and it can help your phone feel more like yours.
I know that one of the most stressful things about moving to a new phone is often re-learning where all your stuff moved to, so let’s put your favorite apps exactly where we want them right now so we know where everything is. Before you start dragging and dropping apps between your app drawer, dock, and home screen though, let’s answer a few questions about your home screen and the pre-installed launcher that runs it first:
- Is the grid a good size for your new phone’s screen? Phones have ballooned in size over the last five years, and yet the home screen grid on many default launchers is still only 4×5. If your new phone is a tall drink of awesome, wouldn’t you benefit from a home screen grid with more room for apps and widgets?
- Do you like the way your app shortcuts look? Pre-installed apps can have quite different icons even between different generation devices from the same manufacturer. If you’re not a fan of the way the app shortcuts look on your new phone — maybe the icons are too small, maybe they look too similar to other apps you use, maybe the labels are hard to read — would you like to replace them with something that looks better?
- Does the app drawer arrange apps the way you want? Most Android launchers use A-Z sorting, like Samsung’s Custom sorting and several pre-made folders that turn your app drawer into something of a treasure hunt. Does the app drawer’s sorting and layout make sense to you? Can you find any app in 8 seconds or less?
- Can you get this launcher set up to your liking? While launchers from manufacturers are getting more flexible, there’s still a lot of things on them you simply can’t change. If your new phone’s launcher doesn’t have a feature you’re used to, or has a unchangeable feature you don’t like, it may be time to consider alternatives.
Quickdrawer on Action Launcher (left), automatic app arrangement on Smart Launcher 5 (right)
If the answer to any of these questions is no, consider switching to a different launcher. It’s easy to install a third-party launcher from Google Play that will allow you to increase the size of the app grid, change the size and labels for your app shortcuts, apply icon packs that make your apps look more familiar — or at least more consistent — and allow you to get your app drawer and launcher settings exactly the way you want them.
If hassling with all of this is something you’d prefer to avoid on your next phone, one of the best reasons to go with a third-party launcher is that most third-party launchers allow you to back up your launcher layout and settings, meaning when you move to your next phone, you can restore a backup from your previous phone and skip 90% of this hassle.
Check out our favorite launchers for Android
Getting your launcher arranged just the way you like might feel like frivolous window-dressing, but it can alleviate a great deal of tension as you figure out new settings and features on your new phone, and it also helps establish a sense of ownership.
This isn’t just another Android phone; this is your phone.
Set custom ringtones and text tones for your favorite contacts
The sounds that your phone make are important, since they’re the aspect of your phone that everyone around you will know, laugh at, and possibly hate. If you like the ringtones and text tones that came with your phone, that’s fine, but if you’d rather get something with a little more life and personality to you, there are a multitude of ways to add custom sounds to your phone, and they’re getting easier all the time.
Our favorite ways to add custom ringtones to your Android phone
No matter how awesome your ringtone, having the same one go off anytime anyone calls you ever can get old faster than ever as telemarketers and spam robocalls reach new, infuriating levels. We can keep a single ringtone from wearing out its welcome and increase your ringtone’s functionality by setting contact-specific ringtones.
By giving each of your most-used contacts a special ringtone, you can tell who is calling without having to scramble across the room and grab your phone off the charger. This is useful at all times but especially during work hours, when answering personal calls can earn you a reprimand but missing a client call could slow down your progress.
How to set a contact-specific ringtone
- Open Google’s Contacts app, which comes pre-installed on most Android phones. If you have two Contacts app shortcuts in your app drawer that look identical, follow the Google Play link listed in the previous sentence to the app listing.
- Tap the contact you wish to assign a contact to.
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Tap the three-dot menu icon in the top right corner of the contact page.
- Tap Set ringtone.
- Tap the ringtone you want to assign to your contact.
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Tap OK.
Setting a custom notification tone when your closest contacts reply to your conversation can be just as useful as contact-specific ringtones or even more so, depending on how frequently your friends text you. While custom contact/conversation text tones are finally starting to really conform to a standard method, there’s still just enough variation that you’ll want to check out our detailed how-to, which takes you through the steps on each of the major SMS apps.
How to set custom text tones for your contacts on Android
Feeling more at home in your new phone yet?
It’ll take time to settle in on your new phone, but with these basics covered, you should be able to finish unpacking the rest of your apps in short order and get back to the joys of exploring your beautiful new Android.
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