1) Rich, modern messaging: Messages for Android supports RCS for high-resolution photos and videos, group chats, typing indicators, read receipts, and file sharing. It falls back to SMS/MMS when RCS isn’t available, providing a consistent, chat-like experience across carriers and older devices while improving media quality and interaction.
2) Seamless cross-device access: Messages for web and account synchronization let you send and receive texts from a desktop or laptop browser with real-time syncing. Conversations, attachments, and search stay consistent across devices, enabling easier typing, file transfer, message management, and productivity for both personal and work use.
3) Smart organization and safety: Built-in spam protection, powerful search, message archiving, scheduled messages, and predictive Smart Reply save time and reduce clutter. Messages integrates with Google features for suggested actions and supports end-to-end encryption for eligible RCS chats, improving privacy and making messaging more convenient and secure.
1) Privacy and data handling: Messages may transmit metadata and, if spam protection or cloud backup is enabled, message snippets or content to Google’s servers. This raises privacy concerns for users who prefer end-to-end encryption, since RCS encryption is not universally applied and backups are not end-to-end encrypted without extra steps.
2) RCS fragmentation and interoperability: Rich Communication Services (RCS) features depend on carrier, device, and recipient support. When one party lacks RCS, Messages falls back to SMS/MMS, losing read receipts, typing indicators, enhanced media quality, and group chat reliability. This inconsistent behavior disrupts user experience across different networks and older phones.
3) Limited customization and advanced features: Compared with third-party SMS apps, Messages offers fewer personalization options—limited themes, bubble styles, and per-contact customization. Power users may miss advanced features like extensive scheduling, message templates, granular notification controls, automation, and richer widget support, reducing flexibility for users wanting more control over messaging experience.