For a while, Google couldn’t make up its mind about payments. Android Pay, Google Pay, Google Pay Send. It was all one big overlap.
Then in 2022, Google finally hit reset and brought back Google Wallet. It wasn’t a rebranding for the sake of it.
Google was changing direction. Pay became a feature, Wallet became the platform, and the aim was to cover everything you’d normally keep in a real wallet.
Basically, a direct answer to Apple Wallet. And the pace of new additions shows they’re serious.
That little Save to phone button is quietly taking over everything your leather wallet once did.
Travel and transit
Boarding passes might feel like old news, but they’re the perfect example of a smart pass. First, it’s not static. It’s a living object.
Your pass in Wallet updates automatically if your gate shifts, saving you from obsessively checking airport screens.
Moreover, Google’s pushing it further. As of 2025, Google added real-time train updates. Save a ticket from partners like Indian Railways or Canada’s Via Rail, and your pass will flag whether your train is on time or delayed.
Health and insurance
Here’s the important one. These are the cards you absolutely don’t want disappearing when you need them.
Nobody wants to load an insurance app on bad Wi-Fi. That’s why insurers are jumping in.
Health insurance providers like Collective Health already let members save their ID cards to their phone’s wallet for offline access.
It’s the same for auto insurance. Companies like Skippy will now email you a link after you buy a policy. You tap it, and your proof of insurance is saved securely in your Google Wallet, ready to be pulled up even if you have no signal.
Everything else
This is my favorite part, because it finally fixes the junk-drawer problem.
What about your library card? Your gym tag? Your kid’s karate club badge? None of these places has a tech team.
Google’s fix is clever AI. Add a photo takes a picture of the card, and Google’s AI reads the barcode or QR code and turns it into a proper Wallet pass.
It’s the universal backup plan that makes sure even the smallest cards make it into Google Wallet.
The last anchor of the leather wallet is gone
The only thing still anchoring your leather wallet is your driver’s license. The endgame is already in motion, and it’s no longer a future concept because the rollout has begun.
As of late 2025, Google Wallet has rolled out support for mobile driver’s licenses (mDLs) in a growing list of states, including Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Iowa, Maryland, Montana, and New Mexico.
The digital ID stored in Wallet is built to meet federal verification standards and is already approved at certain TSA checkpoints.
Google is pushing further with a beta that turns your US passport into a digital ID. It’s not a replacement for the physical document at borders, but it works for airport security and other domestic checks.
This is the final keystone. When your official ID lives alongside your payment cards, car keys, hotel keys, insurance cards, and tickets, it’s hard to see what role the physical wallet has left.
Google Wallet passports do not replace a physical passport for international border crossings, but are useful for TSA and domestic identity verification.
How it actually works
So what’s powering this massive rollout? It’s not wizardry, and it’s not a room full of Googlers manually adding every pass.
It all comes down to the Google Wallet API. Google provides it for free, and everyone else — United, Ticketmaster, hotel booking systems, Humana — uses it to create Wallet passes on their end.
Any developer can use this toolkit to put that Save to Google Wallet button in their own app or confirmation email.
It’s a win-win. The airline gets to put its brand in prime real estate on your phone and send you live updates.
Google gets to populate its Wallet with millions of passes from every industry on Earth, making its app indispensable.
And that’s why it all feels so quiet. There’s no big campaign behind it, just countless small integrations spreading everywhere at once.
Google Wallet finally lives up to its name
Recall the old process of looking for a digital pass via emails and airline apps. You’re scrolling, stressed, and holding up the line. Now imagine the opposite.
You book a flight, and the pass lands in your Google Wallet on its own. Head to the airport, and you get a live status update.
Security asks for ID, and you tap your phone. After you land, your rental car unlocks with a tap from any phone that supports Ultra-wideband.
When you get to the hotel, that same tap opens your room door. That simple Save to phone option was the starting point.
We thought it was for tickets. It turned out to be the foundation of a fully digital wallet. The name Google Wallet now fits perfectly.


