AirDrop on Android: Here's the Full List of Phones That Support Quick Share With iPhones
For years, sending files from an Android phone to an iPhone usually meant relying on WhatsApp, Google Drive, or random sharing links. That's slowly changing. At its Android Show ahead of Google I/O 2026, Google shared a broader roadmap for AirDrop interoperability through Quick Share.

The feature itself isn't entirely new. Google first introduced AirDrop support via Quick Share on the Pixel 10 series, later expanding it to the Pixel 9 lineup and Samsung's Galaxy S26 series. More Galaxy devices recently gained support through the One UI 8.5 beta as well.
More Android Brands Are Joining In
Google now says several more Android brands are preparing to enable AirDrop compatibility through Quick Share. Oppo, OnePlus, Vivo, Xiaomi, and Honor are all expected to roll out support later this year.

Google also confirmed the devices that already support the feature. The current list includes the Galaxy S26 series, Pixel 10 series, Pixel 9 series, Pixel 8a (weirdly enough, the vanilla Pixel 8 and 8 Pro aren’t getting AirDrop support, at least for now), Oppo Find X9 series, Oppo Find N6, and Vivo X300 Ultra.
If you're using one of these phones, you can already send files directly to iPhones, iPads, and Macs without needing third-party apps.
These Phones Are Getting Support Next
The upcoming compatibility list is much larger. Google says AirDrop support is coming to the Galaxy S25 series, Galaxy S24 series, Z Fold7, Z Flip7, Z Fold6, Z Flip6, Z TriFold, Oppo Find X8 series, OnePlus 15, Honor Magic V6, and Honor Magic 8 Pro.
There's still one important detail missing though. Google hasn't shared exact rollout dates yet. So while support is confirmed for many devices, availability will likely depend on brand-specific software updates and regional rollouts.
What Happens If Your Phone Isn't Supported
Google also introduced a fallback option for phones that won't get native AirDrop compatibility.
Starting now, Quick Share can generate QR codes on any Android phone, letting users share files with iOS devices through the cloud. It's not true peer-to-peer AirDrop, but it removes a lot of the friction that usually comes with Android-to-iPhone sharing.
Another update could end up mattering even more for daily users. Google says third-party Android apps like WhatsApp will soon support Quick Share integration as well. In markets like India, where WhatsApp is already the default file-sharing app for many people, that change could end up being far more useful in everyday use.


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