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Home » Android is changing the rules for sideloading, but they won’t hinder your phone upgrade
Technology

Android is changing the rules for sideloading, but they won’t hinder your phone upgrade

By dailyguardian.aeMarch 29, 20263 Mins Read
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Starting August 2026, Google is tightening the screws on sideloading. If you want to install apps from unverified sources, you will have to go through a new “advanced flow” that feels like a full security drill. This includes enabling developer mode, manually reviewing security warnings, restarting your phone to cut off any shady remote access, and then waiting a mandatory 24-hour cooldown before proceeding. The idea behind this is to slow you down just enough to spot a scam before it sinks its teeth in. Once you have completed the process, you will not have to repeat it every time. It is Google’s way of saying, “Go ahead and sideload, but do it carefully.”

Your next upgrade remains completely unaffected

According to Google’s Chief Product Explainer, Matthew Forsythe, this new system is designed to follow you, not slow you down. Once you complete the “advanced flow” on your current Android phone, those permissions can be carried over during the setup of your next device. So, you do the heavy lifting once, and your future phone remembers it, which makes the whole thing far less annoying than it initially sounds.

He also cleared up a few finer details that matter if you actually dabble in sideloading. For starters, installs via Android Debug Bridge (ADB) are not subject to the 24-hour waiting period. There is no shortcut command to skip the timer, so if you are trying to install something during that window, ADB becomes your only route. It’s about keeping the main process tightly controlled.

There is also a catch when it comes to updates. If you install apps from unverified sources, you need to keep the advanced flow active to update them later. Even if you choose the temporary seven-day bypass, that access expires, and you will have to go through the process again if you want to keep those apps updated. As Forsythe points out, this setup is clearly meant for testing or short-term use, not for building a permanent library of sideloaded apps.

The good news is that developer mode does not have to stay on forever. You only need it to get through the initial setup. Once that is done, you can switch it off and use your phone normally. That is a big relief, especially since some banking and security-sensitive apps tend to act up when developer mode is enabled. In short, Google is adding friction where it matters, while ensuring your everyday experience does not take a hit.

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