Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Android Central
Android Central
Technology
Jay Bonggolto

Sideloading apps onto Android phones from random sources won’t be an option starting in 2026

Top Charts in the Play Store on the Galaxy S25 Ultra.

What you need to know

  • Google is requiring developers to verify their identity before their apps hit your phone.
  • This kicks in September 2026, starting with Brazil, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand, where shady apps have been thriving.
  • A new Android Developer Console is coming, with a lighter version for hobbyists and students.

Forget the old days of a free-for-all for side-loading, as Google is shaking things up with how apps get on your Android phone. Starting next year, any app you want to install, especially from outside the Play Store, will have to come from a developer who has gone through a new verification process.

Instead of policing app content, Google is introducing a system that verifies the identity of developers before their apps can be sideloaded or installed on certified devices.

Google wants you to think of it as showing ID at airports rather than getting your bag searched, as per the company's blog post. Starting in September 2026, this verification step will be required in select regions, including Brazil, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand, where Google says scams and malicious apps have been particularly disruptive.

By confirming who’s behind an app, Google hopes to cut down on repeat offenders who try to rebrand and redistribute harmful software. The system doesn’t analyze or restrict what developers publish; it simply ties their work to a verified identity, making it harder for bad actors to slip through.

A new console for creators big and small

(Image credit: Jay Bonggolto / Android Central)

To support this shift, Google is preparing a dedicated Android Developer Console for those distributing apps outside of Google Play, with a lighter version tailored for students and hobbyists who just want to experiment.

The console lets developers create an account, verify their identity, and register app package names. It’s only for those distributing apps outside Google Play, while developers on both platforms can stick with their existing Play Console.

The tech giant has already seen success with identity verification on the Play Store since 2023, which helped cut down on fraudulent apps, financial scams, and malware targeting users.

For most people who only use the Google Play Store, nothing will change. But for those who use third-party app stores or like to download apps directly from a developer's website, this is a significant shift.

This change is bound to stir debate. Some will welcome it as a way to keep users safe from harmful apps, while others may see it as Google edging closer to Apple’s walled-garden approach. For the open-source crowd, the real concern is what this means for smaller developers who can’t — or won’t — go through Google’s verification hoops.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.