There are a few places on Android where precise and approximate locations can be determined. These include the home screen, the lock screen, and the system tray. The lock screen is a convenient place to keep track of your current location, as it includes a list of recent calls and messages as well as your current time. The system tray is a convenient place to see information about your current device, such as battery life and storage space.


Google followed in Apple’s footsteps with the introduction of “Precise” and “Approximate” location access in Android 12. Previously, you could restrict an app to use your location only once or only while using the app, but it was still your exact location.

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Precise vs. Approximate

The difference between “Precise” and “Approximate” is pretty self-explanatory. It’s essentially the difference between telling someone your street address versus telling them the city you live in.

“Precise” location uses your phone’s sensors—GPS, mostly—to determine your exact location. At best, it can figure out where you are down to the meter. “Approximate” location uses Wi-Fi and cellular data to locate you within 100 meters.

Technically, this has always been an option in Android, but it was a system-wide switch. That meant sacrificing the functionality of apps that legitimately need your precise location to restrict all apps. Starting in Android 12, individual apps will give you the choice.

Why Does This Matter?

So what’s the big deal about “Precise” and “Approximate,” anyway? Stop and think about the apps that use your location. Weather apps. Shopping apps. Social media apps. Navigation apps. How many of these need to know your exact location?

Sure, Google Maps needs to know your precise location to help you get around, that makes sense. Does a weather app need to know your address to tell you the weather in your city? Not really. Does Instagram need it to show you places nearby? Nope.

There are a lot of situations where a general location is just as useful as an exact street address. That’s the benefit of the “Approximate” location permission. It allows you to say “yes, I live in this area, but that’s all you need to know.”

Will Apps Support It?

The question with new Android features is always: which apps will actually support it? Apps built for Android 12 and above are required to support the feature, but, of course, many apps existed long before Android 12.

“Precise” and “Approximate” are available for apps built for earlier versions of Android, but there are some complications. For example, I can set Instagram’s location access to “Approximate,” but when I try to use a location-based feature, it asks me to enable “Precise.” I shouldn’t need to do that.

The same thing happens with a weather app I use. It asks me to enable “Precise” location, yet the app works perfectly fine if I select “Keep Approximate Location.” As with all new Android features, there’s going to be a break-in period.

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