How to Back Up Your Android Phone (2026)

Your phone holds irreplaceable memories and vital data. This guide covers the best ways to back up your Android device in 2026, from Google Cloud to local storage options, ensuring your digital life remains safe.
Your phone is the guardian of your digital life. It has that video of your child’s first words, the heart warming message from your significant other that never fails to cheer you up, and the latest save from your favorite mobile game. You have invested time in getting it just the way you want, and there are irreplaceable memories onboard. Spending a couple of minutes backing up is a small price to pay to ensure you don’t lose it all.
Here, I'll show you how to back up your Android phone in a few ways, so pick the one that appeals. We have separate guides on how to back up your iPhone and how to back up your computer.
Updated March 2026: I've updated the steps for backing up with Google and information on Google’s subscriptions, added new sections on 2FA codes and passkeys, local backup options, and backing up within apps, and verified the existing steps outlined.
Backing Up to Google
The simplest and easiest backup option is Google’s cloud service, which is built into Android. These screenshots are from the process on a Pixel 10 Pro XL. Your precise route may differ slightly, depending on your phone model.
- Go to Settings, Back up or copy data. You can also get there via Settings, Security and Privacy, System and updates, Backup on most Android phones, or Settings, Accounts and backup for Samsung phones.
- Turn backup on, tick the options you want (Photos & videos, Other device data), then Confirm.
- You should see a Back up now button. Tap it. Remember that backups can take several hours to complete if you haven't backed up before. It’s best to leave your phone plugged into a charger and connected to Wi-Fi overnight.
Managing Backups and Extra Storage
You can find your backups in the Google One app by tapping the Backup section.
It can be a challenge to stay under Google Drive’s free 15 GB of storage, so consider signing up for a plan with Google One. You can get 100 GB for $2 per month or $20 annually, 200 GB for $3 per month or $30 annually, or 2 TB for $10 per month or $100 annually. Once you subscribe, you will see options for even more storage, from 5 TB for $25 per month or $250 annually, all the way up to 30 TB for $150 per month. Storage is also included with all of Google's AI plans. You can share this storage with up to five family members. The Google One app offers more insight and control for your backups on the Storage tab.
Backing Up to Your Windows PC
It is easy to back up files from your Android phone on a Windows PC. Here’s how:
- Plug your phone into a USB port on your desktop or laptop.
- Drag down the notification shade on your phone and look for a notification from Android System that says something like Charging this device via USB, Tap for more options, and press it.
- Look for an option that says File transfer and select it.
- A window should now pop up on your PC, or you can open Windows File Explorer and click your phone listed in the left pane under This PC.
- You can dig into folders and copy and paste any files you want to back up. This isn’t the most user-friendly layout, though. For example, your photos will probably be in a folder labeled DCIM, Camera.
Backing Up to Your Mac
Backing up files from your Android phone on a Mac is also pretty straightforward. Here’s how:
- Install the official Android File Transfer app on your Mac.
- Plug your phone into a USB port on your Mac.
- An Android File Transfer window should open on your Mac, and you will see a list of folders and files on your phone.
- Dig in and copy and paste any files you want to back up. You may have to search to find the files you want. For example, your photos will be in a folder labeled DCIM, Camera.
Backing Up to Your Chromebook
Here is how to back up files from your Android phone on a Chromebook:
- Plug your phone into a USB port on your Chromebook.
- Drag down the notification shade and look for a notification from Android System that says something like Charging this device via USB, Tap for more options and tap it.
- Look for an option that says File transfer and select it.
- The Files app will open on your Chromebook, and you can drag any files you want to copy over.
Backing Up to Another Cloud Service
Maybe you have run out of Google storage, or you prefer another cloud service. There are Android apps for Dropbox, Microsoft’s OneDrive, MEGA, Box, and others. Most of them offer some cloud storage for free, but what you can back up and how you do it differs from app to app.
If you want to automatically sync photos and other files across devices using one of these services, then check out the Autosync app. Whatever service you choose, make sure to keep your cloud storage safe and secure.
Backing Up Locally
Maybe you’d prefer not to use the cloud or Google’s services for your backup. You can always use the methods listed above for Windows or Mac to download files, then manually move them onto a portable hard drive or USB flash drive.
If you have network-attached storage (NAS), there’s likely an app that can automatically back up some of your files when you are connected to home Wi-Fi. You might also consider Syncthing or something like Swift Backup.
Backing Up Within Apps
Messaging apps have their own backup systems built in.
WhatsApp has a built-in backup. Go to Settings, Chats, Chat backup, and choose the frequency you want. I also recommend toggling on End-to-end encrypted backup. Signal doesn’t back up to the cloud, so you have to create a local backup file in Settings, Backups, On-device backups.
Backing Up a Samsung Phone
If you have a Samsung phone, you have additional backup options via Samsung Cloud:
- Go to Settings, Accounts and backup.
- Under Samsung Cloud, tap Back up data. Tick everything you want to back up and tap Back up.
Samsung also offers Temporary Cloud Backup (One UI 6 or later), which stores your backup for up to 30 days for free with no total storage limit (100 GB per file limit). Go to Settings > General Management > Reset.
Source: Wired Robotics









