How to Record a Call on Android
Google has progressively closed Android’s third-party call-recording paths. Some OEMs (Samsung, Xiaomi, Google itself) still ship a native recorder in specific markets. Where no native option exists, the same workarounds that apply to iPhone apply on Android.
Native option
Google’s Phone app on Pixel and a number of Android One devices includes a call-recorder feature, available in many but not all markets. The legality of the feature in your country determines whether it appears in the app. When enabled:
- Open Phone and start or answer a call.
- Tap Record.
- An audible announcement plays to both parties: “This call is now being recorded.”
- Tap Stop recording when finished. Another announcement plays.
Recordings are stored in the Phone app under each contact and on the device’s local storage. Samsung’s built-in Phone app and Xiaomi’s MIUI Phone app offer similar features with similar announcements.
Since Android 10, Google has progressively closed the Accessibility-Service API path that third-party recorders used to use. As of recent Android releases, third-party apps cannot reliably capture both sides of a call without root or platform privileges.
Workarounds
1. Use the OEM’s built-in recorder if available
If your phone is a Pixel, recent Samsung, Xiaomi, OPPO, or similar OEM in a market where recording is legal, the built-in recorder is the best option: high quality, automatic storage, audible notice to the other party.
2. Three-way-call services
The same services that work on iPhone (TapeACall, Rev) work on Android. Same tradeoffs: good quality, possibly an audible announcement, $10–$30/year.
3. Speakerphone plus a second device
Same approach as on iPhone. A second phone, laptop, or recorder picks up both sides acoustically.
4. Google Voice
Same as on iPhone: receive a call through Google Voice, press 4 to record, announcement plays.
5. Hardware recorder
An in-line recorder using a USB-C audio interface can capture call audio at high quality. See hardware recorders.
Where the recording lives and how to export it
- Built-in OEM recorders: typically
/Recordings/Callor under the OEM’s gallery app. Export by file manager or share menu. - Three-way services: service’s cloud.
- Hardware recorder: SD card or internal storage.
Common failure modes
- Built-in recorder option missing. Check that you are in a market where the feature is enabled; check that you are signed in to the same Google account used for setup; check Phone app settings.
- Third-party app captures only your side. Since Android 10 this is the expected outcome for most third-party recorders without platform privileges. Switch to a built-in or three-way option.
- Recording cuts out. Some OEM recorders pause on speakerphone switching or Bluetooth handoff. Test before relying.
Legal reminder
Whether you may record a call — with this platform or any other — depends on the law in every jurisdiction whose participants are on the call. See our jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction directory, the one-party vs. all-party explainer, and our consent script templates. Federal US law and most US states permit a participant to record, but thirteen US states and many countries require all-party consent.