What you need to know
- Android 17 is finally bringing seamless app handoff to Android with a new feature called Continue On.
- Continue On can transfer app activity from a phone to a tablet almost instantly, including articles, notes, emails, and even specific webpages or documents.
- Google designed the system to work both ways eventually, but Android 17 is starting with phone-to-tablet handoff first.
Google is finally giving Android users something Apple fans have bragged about for years: seamless app handoff between devices. With Android 17, Google is introducing a new feature called “Continue On,” and it’s shaping up to be one of the platform’s most practical upgrades in a long time.
The company said in a blog post that the framework, running on Android 17 (API Level 37), securely connects a “sending device,” where your activity originates, and a “receiving device” that pulls the exact state of that app. While the system is built to be completely bidirectional, Google is prioritizing mobile-to-tablet transitions right out of the gate.
So, if you are using an app on your phone, your tablet’s taskbar will pop up a suggestion for that app. Tap it, and the app picks up right where you left off. For example, if you’re reading an article, writing a note, or checking an email on your phone, your tablet can pick up that same task almost immediately. In supported cases, Android can even reopen the same webpage or document you were on.
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Later, Google has plans for a tablet-to-phone handoff, but it hasn’t released a timeline for that yet. Note that both devices need to support the feature, and the same app generally needs to be installed across devices for native handoff to work properly.
(Image credit: Google)
Smart web fallback
The system will also be getting fallback support from Google. If the receiving device doesn’t have the app installed, Android may be able to continue the session via the web instead.
The company had teased cross-device handoff earlier in the Android 17 beta cycle, but it’s becoming much more official now.
This push also fits into Google’s larger Android strategy for 2026. Android 17 has been focused on multitasking, large-screen devices, and ecosystem features. Google has already rolled out new app bubble tools, tablet-focused improvements, enhanced desktop-style features, and tighter cross-device experiences across the beta program.
Google says Continue On will start testing with Android 17 RC1, the first release candidate build of the platform. The stable Android 17 rollout is expected later this year, probably with the next wave of flagship Android phones and tablets.
Android Central’s Take
Continue On is one of those Android features that should’ve existed years ago. Users are already hopping between phones, tablets, foldables, and Chromebooks all day, so finally making Android feel like a connected ecosystem is a win for users. That said, Apple made this kind of seamless handoff feel normal almost a decade ago now, and Android users have been left relying on clunky workarounds ever since. So while I’m happy that Google is finally playing catch-up, the real challenge is now ensuring that Continue On doesn’t join the long list of promising Android features that quietly disappear because developers ignore them or Google loses interest six months down the line.

