Many of the best features of Android 13 are enabled by default, but some are hidden away in menus, just waiting to be activated. These new features and changes can affect your day-to-day life, so we recommend changing these Android 13 settings immediately.
We show you how to access and change these new features. Android phones with Android 13 installed have these features, so if you’ve updated one of the best Samsung phones to One Ui 5 over December, you can find and change these new settings.
1. Change your app language settings
While many popular apps work fine in any language, some are optimized for certain languages, resulting in inaccurate translations. To the joy of multilingual Android users, per-app language options solve this problem. This feature allows you to fine-tune your language settings by allowing individual apps to run in a different language from the rest of your phone.
To enable this setting, head to the App Info page of an app and tap the Language button.


Only apps with the necessary resource files include this feature. The app developer is responsible for providing this file, so it may be some time before your favorite app supports per-app language settings.
2. Use button navigation to enable Google Assistant
Android has shifted toward gesture navigation as default instead of the three-button navigation bar. However, those who prefer the old setup are receiving a feature just for them. Android 13 now lets you activate Google Assistant by long pressing the Home button.
Here’s how to enable this setting:
-
Open
Settings
. -
Enter
3-button navigation
in the search bar. -
Tap the
Settings
button next to the 3-button navigation option. -
Toggle the
Hold Home for Assistant
slider to the
on
position.
3. Disable the lock screen’s double-line clock
Android 12 changed the lock screen’s clock to an enormous double-line display when there were no notifications to display, obscuring your lock screen. Android 13 introduced a setting to tuck it nicely in the upper-left corner of your screen. It’s the same size and location as if you had a notification on your screen.
-
Open
Settings
. -
Enter “double-line clock”
in the search bar. -
In the search results, toggle the
Double-line clock
slider to the
off
position.
4. Control smart home devices without unlocking your phone
Android 13 removes the need to unlock your phone to use your smart home devices. When your phone is locked, you can tap the Google Home icon in the lower-left corner of your screen to access your devices.


But it’s off by default, you’ll need to head into your Settings menu to enable it.
-
Open
Settings
. -
Enter
Control from locked device
in the search bar. -
In the search results, toggle the
Control from locked device
slider to the
on
position.
Just like per-app language settings, this feature requires app support to function. It may be some time before your smart home app supports this feature.
5. Enable Dark mode at bedtime
Android’s Dark theme could previously be scheduled to turn on at a custom time or at sunset, and Android 13 adds functionality to schedule it for a custom bedtime as set in the Digital Wellbeing app.
-
Open
Settings
. -
Enter
Dark theme
in the search bar. -
Tap
Schedule
in the search results. -
Tap
Schedule
in the Dark theme menu. -
Tap
Turns on at bedtime
in the pop-up menu.
6. Update your vibration intensity
Depending on your phone, you may find its vibration setting to be too loud or too quiet. In Android 13, you can change the vibration intensity for notifications, alarms, and media.
If your phone’s vibration setting is too loud or too quiet, Android 13 includes an option to adjust the intensity of media, notification, and alarm vibrations independently.
-
Open
Settings
. -
Enter
Use vibration & haptics
in the search bar. -
Tap
Use vibration & haptics
in the search results. -
Move the
Alarm vibration
slider to change the intensity of your notifications and alarms. -
Move the
Media
vibration
slider to change the intensity of your media.
7. Enable the QR code Quick Settings tile
Scanning a QR code can be done through your camera app, but a new quick setting tile allows you to open a scanner with a swipe and a tap. This scanner is also faster than the camera app. This dedicated scanner is so fast you may miss the scanner UI.
If you’ve added a Quick Setting tile before, follow the same steps to add the QR Code scanner tile. For those unfamiliar with adding Quick Settings tiles, here’s how to add them:
- Swipe down twice from the top of your screen.
-
Tap the
pencil
icon
underneath your Quick Settings tiles. -
Scroll down to find the
Scan QR code
tile. -
Tap and hold to drag the tile into the top section.
-
Close the window.
Get the best Android 13 experience possible
For the best Android 13 experience, you’ll want to pick up the Pixel 7 or Pixel 7 Pro. These were the first phones to ship with Android 13 out of the box and are the best way to experience Android 13 without any added extras.
-
Source: Google
Google Pixel 7
Google didn’t reinvent the wheel with the Pixel 7, but it didn’t need to. With improved cameras, the next-gen Tensor G2 chipset, and Google’s wonderfully feature-filled software, the Pixel 7 earns its price tag handily again this year.
-
Source: Google
Google Pixel 7 Pro
Google’s Pixel 7 Pro refines the Pixel experience after the 6 Pro’s initial stumbles last year, improving stability and taking the camera prowess to new levels with image fusing and 4K60fps video on all cameras. 30W fast charging and Pixel’s addictive features like automatic Call screening and Pixel recorder help make the Pixel 7 Pro an alluring phone even as an iterative update.