Al igual que las versiones anteriores, Android 16 incluye cambios de comportamiento que podrían afectar tu app. Los siguientes cambios se aplican exclusivamente a las apps que tienen como objetivo Android 16 o versiones posteriores. Si tu app está orientada a Android 16 o versiones posteriores, debes modificarla para que admita estos comportamientos, cuando corresponda.
Asegúrate de revisar también la lista de cambios en el comportamiento que afectan a todas las apps que se ejecutan en Android 16, independientemente de targetSdkVersion
de tu app.
Experiencia del usuario y la IU del sistema
Android 16 (nivel de API 36) incluye los siguientes cambios que tienen como objetivo crear una experiencia del usuario más coherente e intuitiva.
Desaparecerá la opción de inhabilitar el formato de borde a borde
Android 15 enforced edge-to-edge for apps targeting Android 15 (API
level 35), but your app could opt-out by setting
R.attr#windowOptOutEdgeToEdgeEnforcement
to true
. For apps
targeting Android 16 (API level 36),
R.attr#windowOptOutEdgeToEdgeEnforcement
is deprecated and disabled, and your
app can't opt-out of going edge-to-edge.
- If your app targets Android 16 (API level 36) and is running on an
Android 15 device,
R.attr#windowOptOutEdgeToEdgeEnforcement
continues to work. - If your app targets Android 16 (API level 36) and is running on an
Android 16 device,
R.attr#windowOptOutEdgeToEdgeEnforcement
is disabled.
For testing in Android 16, ensure your app supports edge-to-edge and
remove any use of R.attr#windowOptOutEdgeToEdgeEnforcement
so that your app
also supports edge-to-edge on an Android 15 device. To support edge-to-edge,
see the Compose and Views guidance.
Se requiere la migración o la exclusión para el gesto atrás predictivo
En el caso de las apps que se segmentan para Android 16 (nivel de API 36) o versiones posteriores y que se ejecutan en un dispositivo con Android 16 o una versión posterior, las animaciones del sistema de atrás predictivo (volver a la pantalla principal, entre tareas y entre actividades) están habilitadas de forma predeterminada.
Además, no se llama a onBackPressed
y ya no se envía KeyEvent.KEYCODE_BACK
.
Si tu app intercepta el evento de atrás y aún no migraste al gesto atrás predictivo, actualiza tu app para que use las APIs de navegación hacia atrás compatibles o inhabilita temporalmente la función configurando el atributo android:enableOnBackInvokedCallback
como false
en la etiqueta <application>
o <activity>
del archivo AndroidManifest.xml
de tu app.
Las APIs de fuentes elegantes dejaron de estar disponibles y se inhabilitaron
Las apps segmentadas para Android 15 (nivel de API 35) tienen el atributo elegantTextHeight
TextView
establecido en true
de forma predeterminada, lo que reemplaza la fuente compacta por una que es mucho más legible. Puedes anular este comportamiento si estableces el atributo elegantTextHeight
en false
.
Android 16 dejó de admitir el atributo elegantTextHeight
, y se ignorará una vez que tu app se oriente a Android 16. Las "fuentes de IU" controladas por estas APIs se descontinuarán, por lo que debes adaptar los diseños para garantizar una renderización de texto coherente y a prueba de futuro en árabe, laosiano, birmano, tamil, gujarati, kannada, malayalam, odia, telugu o tailandés.

elegantTextHeight
para las apps que se segmentan para Android
14 (nivel de API 34) y versiones anteriores, o para las apps que se segmentan para Android 15 (nivel de API 35)
que anularon el valor predeterminado estableciendo el atributo elegantTextHeight
en false
.
elegantTextHeight
para las apps que se segmentan para Android
16 (nivel de API 36) o para las apps que se segmentan para Android 15 (nivel de API 35) que no
anularon el valor predeterminado estableciendo el atributo elegantTextHeight
en false
.Funcionalidad principal
Android 16 (nivel de API 36) incluye los siguientes cambios que modifican o expanden varias capacidades principales del sistema Android.
Optimización de la programación de trabajo con tarifa fija
Antes de orientarse a Android 16, cuando scheduleAtFixedRate
omitía la ejecución de una tarea debido a que estaba fuera de un ciclo de vida del proceso válido, todas las ejecuciones omitidas se ejecutaban de inmediato cuando la app regresaba a un ciclo de vida válido.
Cuando se orienta a Android 16, se ejecuta de inmediato una ejecución perdida de scheduleAtFixedRate
cuando la app vuelve a un ciclo de vida válido. Se espera que este cambio de comportamiento mejore el rendimiento de la app. Prueba este comportamiento en tu app para verificar si se ve afectada.
También puedes realizar pruebas con el marco de compatibilidad de apps y habilitar la marca de compatibilidad STPE_SKIP_MULTIPLE_MISSED_PERIODIC_TASKS
.
Factores de forma del dispositivo
Android 16 (nivel de API 36) incluye los siguientes cambios para las apps cuando se muestran en dispositivos de pantalla grande.
Diseños adaptables
With Android apps now running on a variety of devices (such as phones, tablets, foldables, desktops, cars, and TVs) and windowing modes on large screens (such as split screen and desktop windowing), developers should build Android apps that adapt to any screen and window size, regardless of device orientation. Paradigms like restricting orientation and resizability are too restrictive in today's multidevice world.
Ignore orientation, resizability, and aspect ratio restrictions
For apps targeting Android 16 (API level 36), Android 16 includes changes to how the system manages orientation, resizability, and aspect ratio restrictions. On displays with smallest width >= 600dp, the restrictions no longer apply. Apps also fill the entire display window, regardless of aspect ratio or a user's preferred orientation, and pillarboxing isn't used.
This change introduces a new standard platform behavior. Android is moving toward a model where apps are expected to adapt to various orientations, display sizes, and aspect ratios. Restrictions like fixed orientation or limited resizability hinder app adaptability, so we recommend making your app adaptive to deliver the best possible user experience.
You can also test this behavior by using the
app compatibility framework and
enabling the UNIVERSAL_RESIZABLE_BY_DEFAULT
compat flag.
Common breaking changes
Ignoring orientation, resizability, and aspect ratio restrictions might impact your app's UI on some devices, especially elements that were designed for small layouts locked in portrait orientation: for example, issues like stretched layouts and off-screen animations and components. Any assumptions about aspect ratio or orientation can cause visual issues with your app. Learn more about how to avoid them and improve your app's adaptive behaviour.
Allowing device rotation results in more activity re-creation, which can result in losing user state if not properly preserved. Learn how to correctly save UI state in Save UI states.
Implementation details
The following manifest attributes and runtime APIs are ignored across large screen devices in full-screen and multi-window modes:
screenOrientation
resizableActivity
minAspectRatio
maxAspectRatio
setRequestedOrientation()
getRequestedOrientation()
The following values for screenOrientation
, setRequestedOrientation()
, and
getRequestedOrientation()
are ignored:
portrait
reversePortrait
sensorPortrait
userPortrait
landscape
reverseLandscape
sensorLandscape
userLandscape
Regarding display resizability, android:resizeableActivity="false"
,
android:minAspectRatio
, and android:maxAspectRatio
have no effect.
For apps targeting Android 16 (API level 36), app orientation, resizability, and aspect ratio constraints are ignored on large screens by default, but every app that isn't fully ready can temporarily override this behavior by opting out (which results in the previous behavior of being placed in compatibility mode).
Exceptions
The Android 16 orientation, resizability, and aspect ratio restrictions don't apply in the following situations:
- Games (based on the
android:appCategory
flag) - Users explicitly opting in to the app's default behavior in aspect ratio settings of the device
- Screens that are smaller than
sw600dp
Opt out temporarily
To opt out a specific activity, declare the
PROPERTY_COMPAT_ALLOW_RESTRICTED_RESIZABILITY
manifest property:
<activity ...>
<property android:name="android.window.PROPERTY_COMPAT_ALLOW_RESTRICTED_RESIZABILITY" android:value="true" />
...
</activity>
If too many parts of your app aren't ready for Android 16, you can opt out completely by applying the same property at the application level:
<application ...>
<property android:name="android.window.PROPERTY_COMPAT_ALLOW_RESTRICTED_RESIZABILITY" android:value="true" />
</application>
Salud y fitness
Android 16 (nivel de API 36) incluye los siguientes cambios relacionados con los datos de actividad física y salud.
Permisos de salud y estado físico
For apps targeting Android 16 (API level 36) or higher,
BODY_SENSORS
permissions use more granular permissions
under android.permissions.health
, which Health Connect
also uses. As of Android 16, any API previously requiring BODY_SENSORS
or BODY_SENSORS_BACKGROUND
requires the corresponding
android.permissions.health
permission instead. This affects the following data
types, APIs, and foreground service types:
HEART_RATE_BPM
from Health Services on Wear OSSensor.TYPE_HEART_RATE
from Android Sensor ManagerheartRateAccuracy
andheartRateBpm
fromProtoLayout
on Wear OSFOREGROUND_SERVICE_TYPE_HEALTH
where the respectiveandroid.permission.health
permission is needed in place ofBODY_SENSORS
If your app uses these APIs, it should request the respective granular permissions:
- For while-in-use monitoring of Heart Rate, SpO2, or Skin Temperature:
request the granular permission under
android.permissions.health
, such asREAD_HEART_RATE
instead ofBODY_SENSORS
. - For background sensor access: request
READ_HEALTH_DATA_IN_BACKGROUND
instead ofBODY_SENSORS_BACKGROUND
.
These permissions are the same as those that guard access to reading data from Health Connect, the Android datastore for health, fitness, and wellness data.
Mobile apps
Mobile apps migrating to use the READ_HEART_RATE
and other granular
permissions must also declare an activity to display
the app's privacy policy. This is the same requirement as Health Connect.
Conectividad
Android 16 (nivel de API 36) incluye los siguientes cambios en la pila de Bluetooth para mejorar la conectividad con dispositivos periféricos.
Nuevos intents para controlar la pérdida de vinculación y los cambios en la encriptación
As part of the Improved bond loss handling, Android 16 also introduces 2 new intents to provide apps with greater awareness of bond loss and encryption changes.
Apps targeting Android 16 can now:
- Receive an
ACTION_KEY_MISSING
intent when remote bond loss is detected, allowing them to provide more informative user feedback and take appropriate actions. - Receive an
ACTION_ENCRYPTION_CHANGE
intent whenever encryption status of the link changes. This includes encryption status change, encryption algorithm change, and encryption key size change. Apps must consider the bond restored if the link is successfully encrypted upon receivingACTION_ENCRYPTION_CHANGE
intent later.
Adapting to varying OEM implementations
While Android 16 introduces these new intents, their implementation and broadcasting can vary across different device manufacturers (OEMs). To ensure your app provides a consistent and reliable experience across all devices, developers should design their bond loss handling to gracefully adapt to these potential variations.
We recommend the following app behaviors:
If the
ACTION_KEY_MISSING
intent is broadcast:The ACL (Asynchronous Connection-Less) link will be disconnected by the system, but the bond information for the device will be retained (as described here).
Your app should use this intent as the primary signal for bond loss detection and guiding the user to confirm the remote device is in range before initiating device forgetting or re-pairing.
If a device disconnects after
ACTION_KEY_MISSING
is received, your app should be cautious about reconnecting, as the device may no longer be bonded with the system.If the
ACTION_KEY_MISSING
intent is NOT broadcast:The ACL link will remain connected, and the bond information for the device will be removed by the system, same to behavior in Android 15.
In this scenario, your app should continue its existing bond loss handling mechanisms as in previous Android releases, to detect and manage bond loss events.
Nueva forma de quitar la vinculación de Bluetooth
All apps targeting Android 16 are now able to unpair bluetooth devices using a
public API in CompanionDeviceManager
. If a companion device is
being managed as a CDM association, then the app can trigger
bluetooth bond removal by using the new removeBond(int)
API
on the associated device. The app can monitor the bond state changes by
listening to the bluetooth device broadcast event
ACTION_BOND_STATE_CHANGED
.
Seguridad
Android 16 (nivel de API 36) incluye los siguientes cambios de seguridad.
Bloqueo de la versión de MediaStore
For apps targeting Android 16 or higher, MediaStore#getVersion()
will now
be unique to each app. This eliminates identifying properties from the version
string to prevent abuse and usage for fingerprinting techniques. Apps shouldn't
make any assumptions around the format of this version. Apps should already
handle version changes when using this API and in most cases shouldn't need to
change their current behavior, unless the developer has attempted to infer
additional information that is beyond the intended scope of this API.
Intents más seguros
La función Safer Intents es una iniciativa de seguridad de varias fases diseñada para mejorar la seguridad del mecanismo de resolución de intents de Android. El objetivo es proteger las apps de acciones maliciosas agregando verificaciones durante el procesamiento de intents y filtrando los intents que no cumplen con criterios específicos.
En Android 15, la función se enfocó en la app de envío. Ahora, con Android 16, el control se traslada a la app de recepción, lo que permite que los desarrolladores habiliten la resolución estricta de intents con el manifiesto de su app.
Se implementarán dos cambios clave:
Los intents explícitos deben coincidir con el filtro de intents del componente de destino: Si un intent segmenta explícitamente un componente, debe coincidir con el filtro de intents de ese componente.
Los intents sin una acción no pueden coincidir con ningún filtro de intents: Los intents que no tienen una acción especificada no deben resolverse en ningún filtro de intents.
Estos cambios solo se aplican cuando hay varias apps involucradas y no afectan el control de intents dentro de una sola app.
Impacto
La naturaleza de habilitación significa que los desarrolladores deben habilitarlo explícitamente en el manifiesto de su app para que surta efecto. Como resultado, el impacto de la función se limitará a las apps cuyos desarrolladores cumplan con los siguientes requisitos:
- Conocer la función Safer Intents y sus beneficios
- Elegir de forma activa incorporar prácticas más estrictas de control de intents en sus apps
Este enfoque de aceptación minimiza el riesgo de interrumpir las apps existentes que pueden depender del comportamiento actual de resolución de intents menos seguro.
Si bien el impacto inicial en Android 16 puede ser limitado, la iniciativa Safer Intents tiene una hoja de ruta para lograr un impacto más amplio en futuras versiones de Android. El plan es, eventualmente, hacer que la resolución estricta de la intención sea el comportamiento predeterminado.
La función Safer Intents tiene el potencial de mejorar significativamente la seguridad del ecosistema de Android, ya que dificulta que las apps maliciosas exploten vulnerabilidades en el mecanismo de resolución de intents.
Sin embargo, la transición a la exclusión voluntaria y la aplicación obligatoria deben administrarse con cuidado para abordar posibles problemas de compatibilidad con las apps existentes.
Implementación
Los desarrolladores deben habilitar explícitamente la coincidencia de intents más estricta con el atributo intentMatchingFlags
en el manifiesto de su app.
Este es un ejemplo en el que la función es opcional para toda la app, pero está inhabilitada o rechazada en un receptor:
<application android:intentMatchingFlags="enforceIntentFilter">
<receiver android:name=".MyBroadcastReceiver" android:exported="true" android:intentMatchingFlags="none">
<intent-filter>
<action android:name="com.example.MY_CUSTOM_ACTION" />
</intent-filter>
<intent-filter>
<action android:name="com.example.MY_ANOTHER_CUSTOM_ACTION" />
</intent-filter>
</receiver>
</application>
Más información sobre las marcas compatibles:
Nombre de la marca | Descripción |
---|---|
enforceIntentFilter | Aplica una coincidencia más estricta para los intents entrantes |
ninguno | Inhabilita todas las reglas especiales de coincidencia para las intents entrantes. Cuando se especifican varias marcas, los valores en conflicto se resuelven dándole prioridad a la marca "none". |
allowNullAction | Relaja las reglas de coincidencia para permitir que coincidan las intenciones sin una acción. Esta marca se debe usar junto con "enforceIntentFilter" para lograr un comportamiento específico. |
Pruebas y depuración
Cuando la aplicación de la política esté activa, las apps deberían funcionar correctamente si el llamador del intent completó el intent de forma adecuada.
Sin embargo, las intents bloqueadas activarán mensajes de registro de advertencia, como "Intent does not match component's intent filter:"
y "Access blocked:"
, con la etiqueta "PackageManager."
. Esto indica un posible problema que podría afectar la app y requiere atención.
Filtro de Logcat:
tag=:PackageManager & (message:"Intent does not match component's intent filter:" | message: "Access blocked:")
Filtrado de llamadas al sistema de la GPU
To harden the Mali GPU surface, Mali GPU IOCTLs that have been deprecated or are intended solely for GPU development have been blocked in production builds. Additionally, IOCTLs used for GPU profiling have been restricted to the shell process or debuggable applications. Refer to the SAC update for more details on the platform-level policy.
This change takes place on Pixel devices using the Mali GPU (Pixel 6-9). Arm
has provided official categorization of their IOCTLs in
Documentation/ioctl-categories.rst
of their r54p2 release. This
list will continue to be maintained in future driver releases.
This change does not impact supported graphics APIs (including Vulkan and OpenGL), and is not expected to impact developers or existing applications. GPU profiling tools such as the Streamline Performance Analyzer and the Android GPU Inspector won't be affected.
Testing
If you see a SELinux denial similar to the following, it is likely your application has been impacted by this change:
06-30 10:47:18.617 20360 20360 W roidJUnitRunner: type=1400 audit(0.0:85): avc: denied { ioctl }
for path="/dev/mali0" dev="tmpfs" ino=1188 ioctlcmd=0x8023
scontext=u:r:untrusted_app_25:s0:c512,c768 tcontext=u:object_r:gpu_device:s0 tclass=chr_file
permissive=0 app=com.google.android.selinux.pts
If your application needs to use blocked IOCTLs, please file a bug and assign it to android-partner-security@google.com.
FAQ
Does this policy change apply to all OEMs? This change will be opt-in, but available to any OEMs who would like to use this hardening method. Instructions for implementing the change can be found in the implementation documentation.
Is it mandatory to make changes in the OEM codebase to implement this, or does it come with a new AOSP release by default? The platform-level change will come with a new AOSP release by default. Vendors may opt-in to this change in their codebase if they would like to apply it.
Are SoCs responsible for keeping the IOCTL list up to date? For example, if my device uses an ARM Mali GPU, would I need to reach out to ARM for any of the changes? Individual SoCs must update their IOCTL lists per device upon driver release. For example, ARM will update their published IOCTL list upon driver updates. However, OEMs should make sure that they incorporate the updates in their SEPolicy, and add any selected custom IOCTLs to the lists as needed.
Does this change apply to all Pixel in-market devices automatically, or is a user action required to toggle something to apply this change? This change applies to all Pixel in-market devices using the Mali GPU (Pixel 6-9). No user action is required to apply this change.
Will use of this policy impact the performance of the kernel driver? This policy was tested on the Mali GPU using GFXBench, and no measurable change to GPU performance was observed.
Is it necessary for the IOCTL list to align with the current userspace and kernel driver versions? Yes, the list of allowed IOCTLs must be synchronized with the IOCTLs supported by both the userspace and kernel drivers. If the IOCTLs in the user space or kernel driver are updated, the SEPolicy IOCTL list must be updated to match.
ARM has categorized IOCTLs as 'restricted' / 'instrumentation', but we want to use some of them in production use-cases, and/or deny others. Individual OEMs/SoCs are responsible for deciding on how to categorize the IOCTLs they use, based on the configuration of their userspace Mali libraries. ARM's list can be used to help decide on these, but each OEM/SoC's use-case may be different.
Privacidad
Android 16 (nivel de API 36) incluye los siguientes cambios relacionados con la privacidad.
Permiso de red local
Devices on the LAN can be accessed by any app that has the INTERNET
permission.
This makes it easy for apps to connect to local devices but it also has privacy
implications such as forming a fingerprint of the user, and being a proxy for
location.
The Local Network Protections project aims to protect the user's privacy by gating access to the local network behind a new runtime permission.
Release plan
This change will be deployed between two releases, 25Q2 and TBD respectively. It is imperative that developers follow this guidance for 25Q2 and share feedback because these protections will be enforced at a later Android release. Moreover, they will need to update scenarios which depend on implicit local network access by using the following guidance and prepare for user rejection and revocation of the new permission.
Impact
At the current stage, LNP is an opt-in feature which means only the apps that opt in will be affected. The goal of the opt-in phase is for app developers to understand which parts of their app depend on implicit local network access such that they can prepare to permission guard them for the next release.
Apps will be affected if they access the user's local network using:
- Direct or library use of raw sockets on local network addresses (e.g. mDNS or SSDP service discovery protocol)
- Use of framework level classes that access the local network (e.g. NsdManager)
Traffic to and from a local network address requires local network access permission. The following table lists some common cases:
App Low Level Network Operation | Local Network Permission Required |
---|---|
Making an outgoing TCP connection | yes |
Accepting incoming TCP connections | yes |
Sending a UDP unicast, multicast, broadcast | yes |
Receiving an incoming UDP unicast, multicast, broadcast | yes |
These restrictions are implemented deep in the networking stack, and thus they apply to all networking APIs. This includes sockets created in native or managed code, networking libraries like Cronet and OkHttp, and any APIs implemented on top of those. Trying to resolve services on the local network (i.e. those with a .local suffix) will require local network permission.
Exceptions to the rules above:
- If a device's DNS server is on a local network, traffic to or from it (at port 53) doesn't require local network access permission.
- Applications using Output Switcher as their in-app picker won't need local network permissions (more guidance to come in 2025Q4).
Developer Guidance (Opt-in)
To opt into local network restrictions, do the following:
- Flash the device to a build with 25Q2 Beta 3 or later.
- Install the app to be tested.
Toggle the Appcompat flag in adb:
adb shell am compat enable RESTRICT_LOCAL_NETWORK <package_name>
Reboot The device
Now your app's access to the local network is restricted and any attempt to access the local network will lead to socket errors. If you are using APIs that perform local network operations outside of your app process (ex: NsdManager), they won't be impacted during the opt-in phase.
To restore access, you must grant your app permission to NEARBY_WIFI_DEVICES
.
- Ensure the app declares the
NEARBY_WIFI_DEVICES
permission in its manifest. - Go to Settings > Apps > [Application Name] > Permissions > Nearby devices > Allow.
Now your app's access to the local network should be restored and all your scenarios should work as they did prior to opting the app in.
Once enforcement for local network protection begins, here is how the app network traffic will be impacted.
Permission | Outbound LAN Request | Outbound/Inbound Internet Request | Inbound LAN Request |
---|---|---|---|
Granted | Works | Works | Works |
Not Granted | Fails | Works | Fails |
Use the following command to toggle-off the App-Compat flag
adb shell am compat disable RESTRICT_LOCAL_NETWORK <package_name>
Errors
Errors arising from these restrictions will be returned to the calling socket whenever it invokes send or a send variant to a local network address.
Example errors:
sendto failed: EPERM (Operation not permitted)
sendto failed: ECONNABORTED (Operation not permitted)
Local Network Definition
A local network in this project refers to an IP network that utilizes a broadcast-capable network interface, such as Wi-Fi or Ethernet, but excludes cellular (WWAN) or VPN connections.
The following are considered local networks:
IPv4:
- 169.254.0.0/16 // Link Local
- 100.64.0.0/10 // CGNAT
- 10.0.0.0/8 // RFC1918
- 172.16.0.0/12 // RFC1918
- 192.168.0.0/16 // RFC1918
IPv6:
- Link-local
- Directly-connected routes
- Stub networks like Thread
- Multiple-subnets (TBD)
Additionally, both multicast addresses (224.0.0.0/4, ff00::/8) and the IPv4 broadcast address (255.255.255.255) are classified as local network addresses.
Fotos propiedad de la app
When prompted for photo and video permissions by an app targeting SDK 36 or higher on devices running Android 16 or higher, users who choose to limit access to selected media will see any photos owned by the app pre-selected in the photo picker. Users can deselect any of these pre-selected items, which will revoke the app's access to those photos and videos.