Skip to main content

Android Instant Apps and Progressive Web Apps load instantly on your phone

Instant Apps hit Google Play Store, where you can try them before you download

Sundar Pichai stands in front of a Google logo at Google I/O 2021.
This story is part of our complete Google I/O coverage

instant apps
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Pretty much every company has an app, these days. Want a new camera? Get one through B&H’s app. Hoping to avoid the meter maid’s wrath? Check your balance through a parking app. Apps provide a decent experience for the most part, but there’s one big problem with them: They’re often unnecessary. Most of the time, a website is just as good.

But since apps show no sign of decline, Google developed a workaround. It’s called Android Instant Apps, and it launched in the Play Store, Google’s App Store for Android, on October 19.

Recommended Videos

Instant Apps download small, runnable partitions that start much faster than full-blown apps. When you tap an Instant App URL, the app opens in seconds as the rest of the website downloads in the background. It offers the app experience even for those you don’t want to have installed on your device.

The Play Store’s implementation lets you try apps before you download them. In the app listings of developers who’ve taken advantage, a Try It Now button launches the Instant Apps version of the app.

Google took the wraps off Instant Apps last year, at I/O 2016, and formally announced an Instant Apps software development kit (SDK) at a session on Google’s Mountain View, California, campus in May.

Developers have to upgrade their existing apps to implement Android Instant App’s features, but it’s well worth the effort.

Ellie Powers, Google Play product manager, said that the company’s partners, which include HotPads, Jet, the New York Times, Vimeo, and One Football, have launched 50 instant apps so far, and that some have seen double-digit increases in purchases and videos watched as a result.

“As a developer, you won’t need to build a new, separate app,” Powers wrote in a blog post. “It’s the same Android APIs, the same project, the same source code. You’ll simply update your existing Android app to take advantage of Instant Apps functionality. In fact, it can take less than a day to get up and running for some developers, though the effort involved will vary depending on how your app is structured.”

Instant Apps go hand-in-hand with Google’s Progressive Web Apps (PWA) effort. In the coming months, users will be able to add a link to PWAs — web apps that behave like native apps, in essence — to their devices’ home screens, app drawers, settings menus, and notifications. They’re under 1MB in size, and about 10 to 20 times smaller than the average Android app.

As of October 2017, Instant App are available on the “latest Android devices” in more than 40 countries. They’re only compatible with phon s and tablets that support Google Play Services, which rules out customized devices like Amazon’s Fire HD tablets. But Google says it’ll work to expand compatibility in the coming months.

Update: Added news of Instant Apps on Google Play. 

Julian Chokkattu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
Gmail app’s latest updates are all about reading less, doing more
Updated Summary Cards in Gmail.

The Gmail experience on mobile devices is about to get better for a lot of users. Remember Summary Cards, a feature that picks up useful information from an email and presents it in the form of a neat card atop an email?

So far, summary cards have provided details related to package tracking or viewing order details picked up from the information present in an email. Now, Google is adding contextual action buttons to these summary cards.

Read more
Android phones have started receiving crucial anti-theft features
Android Theft Detection on Pixel 9.

At Google I/O earlier this year, a trio of safety features were announced to keep Android devices safe in events like theft, locking the device, and setting up new guardrails so that the phone won’t accept a fresh setup in the hands of a bad actor.

Some of these changes were supposed to arrive in the same window as Android 15’s public release, which is right around the corner. But according to Mishaal Rahman and 9to5Google, they’ve already started appearing to users in the U.S. following a test in Brazil.

Read more
Arc Search, one of my favorite iPhone apps, is now on Android
Screenshots of the Arc Search app on Android.

Earlier this year, Arc Search became one of my favorite iPhone apps in recent memory. It's a browser app that's wicked fast, has a very clean interface, and has an unbelievably good AI feature. Today, Arc Search's developers (The Browser Company) have announced that the app is finally coming to Android.

Starting tomorrow, October 4, you can head to the Google Play Store and download Arc Search on any Android device running Android 13 or later. The app is still in open beta, and not every feature from the iOS app is currently available. Regardless, it's still exciting to see one of this year's best iPhone apps officially land on Android.

Read more