
Google Wallet discreetly revealed and finished its major Android overhaul at I/O 2026. Additionally, end users will soon face new features for Google Pay and Wallet developers.
This means that Google Pay now lets users verify desktop purchases right from their Android phones using fingerprint or face unlock and no more SMS codes or checkout redirects.
The new homepage offers “dynamic quick access to your favourites,” according to the official description. Google emphasizes how time-sensitive content, such as boarding passes, has a “new updated visual design” that covers the whole screen. Lastly, a “comprehensive, highly searchable hub for everything in Wallet, including detailed transaction information” is provided by the “View more” floating action button.
The Google Wallet redesign, which will be introduced, has a tiled homepage with a multi-column grid, dynamic quick access to starred essential items, a searchable hub with a floating action button, live travel tracking with lock screen progress bars, and a direct receipt API for developers.
All Android users should now be able to access the revamp, which has been gradually released over the past few weeks. In order to “alert users to any urgent, time-sensitive changes,” Google also acknowledged live updates for event tickets and flights.
A “dedicated API that will allow you to share digital receipts directly into Google Wallet” will be made available to developers.
Throughout the post-purchase lifecycle, this will greatly lower support friction and allow you to keep your consumers informed.
Not to be overlooked is “contactless loyalty enrolment,” in which users receive an invitation to sign up for a loyalty program after tapping if they haven’t already.
In addition, according to Google, Uber and Intuit (TurboTax) are also employing digital ID verification to “securely request the user to share the specific attributes of their ID as needed.”


The last option is “Cross-device Payment Verification for Google Pay.” Customers may “complete online transactions seamlessly and securely using Google Pay Device Tokens,” which are intended for desktop purchases and serve as a substitute for “additional redirects and one-time passwords that can disrupt the checkout flow.”
Desktop users will be required to verify on their mobile device by either scanning a QR code or receiving a secure push message.
After that, they can use a biometric to unlock their phone, such as a fingerprint, face unlock, or PIN on a reliable Android device, to authorize the payment.
This aids in “addressing MFA and regional requirements such as the Strong Customer Authentication (SCA) requirements of the EU and the UK.”
The redesigned app and payment tools are present in the rolling-out phase, and users are advised to just update Google Wallet and Google Play services on their Android devices to see the changes.

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