Android and iPhone users may be jealously protective of their phone platform of choice, but secretly, both camps know there are some features that other phones have that theirs don’t. Google now seems to be addressing one underperforming area, improving Google Wallet so it can do better at something the iPhone does brilliantly: digital maps and boarding passes.
Both Apple Wallet and the equivalent on Android phones, Google Wallet, are good at hosting digital versions of credit and debit cards. But the iPhone version has always been stronger for passes — it’s no coincidence that it was originally called Passbook.
Because it’s been done for longer, apps for airlines, theaters, concert halls, and others routinely include a button designed to add them to a wallet where they’re easy to find.
Now it seems the passes that slip so easily into the iPhone Wallet app could just as easily slip into Google Wallet. writer for Android Mishaal Rahman announced on X that files in the .pkpass format used by Apple can now be imported into Google Wallet.
And 9to5Google followed up by saying that other users have confirmed they’ve been able to do the same, though it doesn’t appear to be available to everyone yet.
When it becomes more widespread, it will be a significant increase in benefits. Those websites and apps with buttons inviting users to click to add passes to Apple Wallet too often didn’t include an equivalent for downloading to Google Wallet.
As one Reddit user says, “For a few years Google didn’t have its own digital ticketing system, so while I can now download movie and train tickets in Google Wallet format, before the only option was Apple’s pkpass format. And there are still some places that offer just a digital ticket format for Apple since it’s been around a lot longer.”
Since Google offers the same compatibility, Android users should be able to click on the same Apple Wallet link and add the pass to their Android phone.
There are third-party apps that could have the same effect, but an official way to do it with Google is welcome.
What’s not yet clear is whether Google will be able to offer the same versatility as Apple, where you can update your boarding pass if, for example, your seat on the plane changes.