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Home Android

These simple Google Docs hacks fixed the friction of writing on my phone

May 17, 2026
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For someone who writes for a living, text editors are among the most important tools you need.

Today, it’s hard to talk about text editors without speaking about Google Docs, which is among the most-used word processing apps you will find today.

Like many in my field, my default behavior before writing an article is to open Google Docs on my desktop and begin putting thoughts into words.

When I have to step away from the desk for an extended duration, I quickly glance over the Google Docs app on Android to see if the words make sense and read coherently.

However, I’ve long been hesitant to go from just viewing a document on my Android phone to getting into full-blown writing mode.

The shrunken display area is one bottleneck, but as I learned several years ago, you couldn’t easily locate all the tools you’d typically find in the desktop version of Docs.

Fast-forward to 2026, and Google Docs has received heaps of upgrades, not to mention support for Gemini, which has cemented the app’s dominance in the marketplace.

But are these upgrades worth ditching the desktop experience and switching to the Google Docs Android app?


6 hidden Google Docs features you didn’t know could save you hours

Stop using Google Docs like a caveman

Gboard is the secret sauce

Smartphone screen featuring the Gboard keyboard, a text bubble with highlighted text, and a floating Undo button. Credit: Lucas Gouveia / Android Police

It’s hard to talk about Google Docs without Gboard, especially on Android. The default Android keyboard has a suite of features that appear specifically tailored for an app like Docs, though they work just as well across other apps.

One such handy feature is the versatile clipboard, which lets you view multiple copied items and also pin them within Gboard’s Clipboard page for later use.

Rather than manually copying and pasting from apps or other documents, you can navigate to the clipboard and only copy what’s required.

Shortcuts and gestures do the heavy lifting

A Google Docs template open on a phone with the Google Docs logo overlayed on top and a green and purple wavy background Credit: Google Play Store

For people who use Android tablets and foldables, Google Docs gets even better with all that extra real estate.

However, on a standard slab-style smartphone, you get only one screen, though smartphone screens are, on average, much larger than they were a decade ago.

Pairing a Bluetooth keyboard or mouse to your Android smartphone seems impractical, and I’d be lying if I said I haven’t tried that setup before. But they’re not for everyone.

Thankfully, shortcuts and gestures on Google Docs have come a long way today, so much so that you barely feel the friction you used to a decade or so ago.

One of my favorite shortcuts/gestures in Google Docs is using the space bar as a cursor. Simply long-press the space bar and move right or left character by character, like you would on a desktop.

A screenshot displaying the toggles in the Glide typing menu within Gboard settings
A screenshot showing Gboard’s Text editing interface with Google Docs open

Glide typing toggles and Text editing on Gboard

A similar glide-based gesture exists to remove words, achieved by simply holding the delete/backspace key and swiping left. You can find these toggles by navigating to Settings > Glide typing in Gboard.

It’s worth noting that non-Google keyboards like Microsoft’s SwiftKey and Samsung Keyboard also offer comparable, if not similar, gesture-based features to enhance the typing experience on your smartphone.

Gboard also provides a handy Text editing tool (pictured above) for a more conventional approach to editing.

Google Docs is finally made for mobile

A smartphone with Google Docs logo, microphone icon, comment bubble, and gear icon, on a blue background Credit: Lucas Gouveia / Android Police

If you used the Google Docs mobile app several years ago and gave up on it, as I did, you will be surprised to find how much of the app is now finally mobile-centric, rather than being a shrunken-down version of the desktop app.

The toolbar is easy to access as it lives right above the keyboard. This gives you access to font sizes, colors, page setup, and other formatting options, all within the reach of your thumb.

These improvements make it seem like Google finally took the mobile app seriously, whereas it would previously serve as a “lite” version of the real thing.

For the tools that aren’t immediately accessible on or just above the keyboard, the three-dot menu in the upper-right corner handles pretty much every other aspect of the Docs mobile experience, including Find and replace, the word count indicator, and more.

Gemini takes things up a notch

Google Docs icons floating around Gemini logo.

While Google has been relatively slow to bring Gemini features to the Docs mobile app, we are now at a point where Gemini can do much of the heavy lifting.

Features like Help me write allow you to refine drafts or create new ones from scratch using Gemini. Recent additions to the app let users set custom rules for Help me write to follow, bringing even more power to Docs’ smartphone experience.

While I haven’t found much use for Help me write, there’s no denying it is one of the Docs app’s most popular features, having been around for over a couple of years now.

The ability to include files and context from other apps like Gmail and Drive without ever leaving Docs is another big plus.

While these features are promising, it’s important to note that most of Google Docs’ Gemini functionality requires a paid subscription, thereby restricting access to free users.

However, Google has a history of making some of its paid tools available to free users in due time, so we wouldn’t be surprised if some Gemini features in Docs follow a similar path in the future.

Things will only get better

A blue cursor pointing at a stack of floating Google Docs icons Credit: Lucas Gouveia / Android Police

Over a decade ago, Google decided to shutter Quickoffice and focus more on Docs, Sheets, and Slides as standalone products. The journey since then for Docs (and other Workspace apps) has been nothing short of incredible.

Smart Canvas, in particular, was a revolutionary upgrade for the Docs experience. It gave mobile users instant access to building blocks, smart chips, and other collaboration-oriented tools without ever needing to switch apps.

While Gemini’s inclusion has been a game-changer for Docs, recent developments suggest it’s about to get even better.

Highlights from the recently concluded The Android Show include the mention of Rambler for Gboard, essentially a supercharged version of the existing voice typing experience.

Rambler will be able to make lists and remove filler words while you’re speaking, and even recognize when you switch between multiple languages.

A feature like this would be a boon for multilingual speakers who may switch between multiple languages while using voice typing.

However, Rambler in Gboard isn’t expected to roll out until later this summer, so you will have to wait.

Nevertheless, some of these shortcuts and gestures have shown me that Google Docs on Android is far from an app for viewing and making minor edits, and can easily serve as a professional word-processing app, on par with its desktop counterpart.

A major friction point for me in the past has been Docs’ inability to replicate the desktop version’s functionality properly. But thanks to the upgrades introduced over the years, especially courtesy of Gboard and Google Gemini, those gaps appear to have been filled.

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