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The setting that saves you time: activate automatic app updates on Android

Activating this option in the Play Store will allow you to forget about updating your phone's apps because the process will be done automatically

The setting that saves you time activate automatic app updates on Android
Time to Read 3 Min

Between notifications, photos, messages, and those "just in case" apps you installed once, your Android can become a silent mini-chaos if you don't give it a little maintenance. The good news is that there's a way to keep things more organized without having to check on it every day: you can have the system keep your apps up to date in the background, and you'll only find out when everything is ready.

Enable automatic updates in Google Play

The most direct way is within the Play Store, not in the system's "Settings." To enable it, open the Google Play Store, tap your profile picture (top right) and go to Settings; then go to Network preferences and finally to Auto-update apps.

There, Android lets you choose the behavior that suits you best: update with Wi-Fi or mobile data, update with a mobile data limit, update only over Wi-Fi, or simply not update apps automatically if you prefer full control.

If you ask me which option is the most sensible for most people, “Wi-Fi only” is usually the favorite: it avoids surprises with your data plan and, incidentally, reduces large updates when you're out and about.

An important detail is that this setting applies “generally,” meaning to all your apps managed by the Play Store (those you install from there). And yes, it sounds boring, but it's one of those things you do once and forget about.

Automatically update only your key apps

Not everyone wants everything to be updated all the time. Sometimes there are apps that change the interface, break a function, or are simply too large (hello, games). For those cases, the Play Store allows you to activate automatic updates per app, so you can say: “WhatsApp and banking, always up to date; the rest, I'll see.”

How do you do it? Go to the Google Play Store, tap your profile, go to Manage device and apps, and then to Manage; Find the app you're interested in and go to its details page. There, tap the "More" menu (the typical options icon) and enable Auto-update.From that moment on, when a new version is available, that app will update automatically.

This approach is great if you want to maintain maximum security in sensitive apps (messaging, email, authenticators) without turning your phone into a constant download machine.

What to do if they don't update?

Even if you have everything configured correctly, there are two typical reasons why apps don't update "when you want." One is because the Play Store updates at specific times (to avoid draining battery or data) or because your network choice limits it. If you chose “Wi-Fi only,” don’t expect any magic with mobile data: until you connect to a Wi-Fi network, updates shouldn’t download. Another practical tip is that if you use mobile data and still want automatic updates, consider the “Update with a mobile data limit” option (when available on your phone), as it gives you a middle ground between convenience and data usage control. And if you notice that an app never updates, go to its page in the Play Store. When there’s an update pending, you’ll usually see the “Update” button, or the auto-update option toggled on/off to confirm that it’s working.

This news has been tken from authentic news syndicates and agencies and only the wordings has been changed keeping the menaing intact. We have not done personal research yet and do not guarantee the complete genuinity and request you to verify from other sources too.

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