You’re installing and uninstalling your Android apps wrong

phone showing android archived apps

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

It’s so easy to go on the Play Store today, pick a new Android app, install it, try it out, and if it doesn’t work out as intended, tap to uninstall. That’s the familiar path we’ve all taken for years now; it’s so simple that we don’t give it a second thought each time we’re looking for a new app or game or trying a cool new service. But that’s not the only way anymore.

Android now offers a few more options both when installing and uninstalling apps. Since most of the apps I use are permanent fixtures on my phone, the only time I really need to install or uninstall an app is when I’m trying something new. Most people probably fall in the same category: You’ve got your preferred music streaming service, social media apps, productivity tools, and more; everything is already chosen. So when you need to try out something new, I recommend you use these tricks instead.

Do you uninstall or archive apps?

43 votes

Install new apps in Private Space (or on a second user profile)

android 15 pixel private space distracting apps instagram threads

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

A new app doesn’t earn its full privileges on my phone until I know it’s useful to me and will stay long-term. So when I want to try a new app or service, I don’t go to the Play Store and install it immediately. Instead, I go to my Pixel 10’s Private Space and install it there.

Private Space segregates apps and games into a standalone area on your Pixel where they don’t have many privileges. They don’t run in the background or have access to anything else on your phone, so they can’t track you across apps. This lets me assess how well a new app behaves, all the permissions it requests, and whether or not it does what it’s supposed to. Weeding out duds and bad apps is easy this way. Plus, it’s perfect for apps I only need temporarily, like the bus app of a city I’m traveling to.

I treat Private Space like the lobby to my phone. Any app that surfaces tons of ads, requires subscriptions for something I’m not willing to pay for, is full of bugs, or doesn’t actually do what I thought it would, gets dumped and uninstalled. If an app is good enough, it earns the right to graduate to my main phone. Unfortunately, there’s no easy way to transfer it with all its data yet, so I have to uninstall, reinstall, and oftentimes set it up from scratch again, but that’s a small price to pay.

If your phone doesn’t have Private Space or a feature like it, you can still use Android’s multiple users and keep the second one as a temporary test area for new apps before installing them for your main user.

And for those who want to take things up a notch and gain much more control over how they install their apps, there are plenty of excellent tools that can help. The one I’m currently testing is Installer X, which works better with downloaded APKs and supports split APKs, permission choosing, auto-deleting of the APK after it’s installed, app flags, and more. But it does require Shizuku/root to work.

Don’t uninstall apps, just archive

phone showing android app archiving and uninstalling

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

With many Android flagships starting at 128GB of storage for years now and my tendency to shoot tons of photos, my phone’s storage often fills up very fast. Uninstalling apps I don’t always need is a habit I got into to save as much storage as I can. The local French doctor telehealth app, the bus app I only use when I travel to specific towns around France, my secondary hiking app, a streaming service that only carries the rights to one temporary football competition, and so on. I’d even uninstall the Ikea app sometimes because I only visit the store once a year or so. Why would I keep all these apps on my phone with their data, background permissions, continuous updates, and potential notifications? No need.

Then, Android 15 introduced the option to archive apps. Archiving removes the app from my phone but saves it with all of its data to my Google account so that I can restore it with all of its data in a few seconds. If I’m signed in before archiving, the app gets restored with my account already signed in; all my settings or preferences get restored, too. Even my permission and notification channel choices get restored back to exactly how I set them up.

That’s an excellent feature for apps that I don’t need all year long or all the time. Seasonal apps or apps I only turn to in specific situations get the archive treatment on my phone. That means they’re not taking up previous internal storage, but I know they’re only a tap away and exactly like I want them. App archiving is one of the coolest and most useful Android features, honestly, and I wonder if people are using it as much as they should.

And there you have it — two new ways in which you can install, try, and temporarily remove apps and games.

Thank you for being part of our community. Read our Comment Policy before posting.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

These two apps are all I need to keep my productivity high

Andy Walker / Android Authority I’m all about productivity, trying to get as much done in the least amount of time. As an Editor here at Android Authority and someone who is involved in all sorts of projects outside of work, I have a lot of tasks to handle on a daily basis, and I

How GPT-5 Codex Handles Complex Coding Tasks & Real-Time Apps

How good is GPT-5 Codex, really? Imagine a tool so advanced it can generate functional code for complex applications in mere minutes, yet intuitive enough to seamlessly integrate into your existing development workflow. Bold claims like these have surrounded the latest iteration of OpenAI’s Codex, sparking both excitement and skepticism in the developer community. Is

Do Cameras Need App Ecosystems?

Cameras still act like they’re living in 2008: closed boxes that capture files and little else. Meanwhile, smartphones became cultural powerhouses by embracing apps, and the gap is only getting wider. Smartphones changed what photography means, and not in a subtle way. They didn’t just put decent cameras in everyone’s pocket. They redefined the act

Installing this one app unlocked heaps of new content on my Fire TV Stick

As an owner of the latest-generation Fire TV Stick, I find Amazon’s Appstore the easiest way to install apps, especially after installing a VPN. However, after a while, it began to show its limitations in terms of specialized add-ons and accessing content that Amazon doesn’t officially support. I needed a customizable solution that unlocks my

Dating apps, booze and clubbing

Emma SaundersCulture reporter Marc Brenner Amelia Kenworthy, who starred in Amazon Prime show Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, is playing Emma on stage You’re in a sweaty nightclub in Essex. You’re hammered. And your pushy best friend is trying to sort out your love life. It’s Jane Austen’s Emma, but not as

Chrome is Google’s first iPhone app with Liquid Glass

With the launch of iOS 26 earlier this week, Google Chrome 141 rolled out with Liquid Glass tweaks on iPhone and iPad. As a reminder, Chrome for iOS has a pretty different interface and experience from the Android version. Beyond getting the bottom address bar in October 2023 (vs. July 2025), there’s a unique Tab

4 free apps I thought I could live without, until I paired them with NotebookLM

I’ve cycled through dozens of free tools in my life, from design apps and image editors to productivity trackers and random open-source projects I thought would change my life. But most of them end up half-forgotten because they’re either too limited to get much use out of or too clunky to master. Instead of tossing