05.31.26

How to review and manage app permissions on your Android phone

Your Android phone knows where you go, who you talk to, what you search for, and what you look at. Every app you install can potentially tap into that data—which is exactly why reviewing your app permissions on a regular basis is one of the most important things you can do to protect your privacy and security.

Why do Android app permissions matter?

Every time you install an app, it requests access to features on your device—your camera, microphone, contacts, location, storage, and more. Some of those permissions are necessary for the app to work. But many apps ask for access they don’t actually need, using those permissions to harvest your data, serve aggressive ads, or worse.

The threat is very real. According to Kaspersky’s 2025 mobile threat report, over 14 million malware and adware attacks targeting Android devices were blocked in 2025 alone, with Google Play Protect identifying 27 million malicious sideloaded apps throughout the year. Many of those malicious apps used excessive permissions as their primary method for stealing data. Reviewing what your apps can access is your first line of defense.

How to review permissions for a single app

This method lets you see exactly what access a specific app has:

  1. Open Settings
  2. Tap Apps
  3. Select the app you want to check (tap “See all apps” if needed)
  4. Tap Permissions
  5. For each permission, choose one of the following:
    • Allow — full access at all times
    • Allow only while using the app — access only when the app is open
    • Ask every time — the app will prompt you each time it needs access
    • Don’t allow — blocks access entirely

How to review permissions by category using Permission Manager

This approach shows you every app that shares the same type of access:

  1. Open Settings
  2. Tap Security & Privacy (or Privacy on some devices)
  3. Tap Permission Manager
  4. Tap a permission type—Camera, Location, Microphone, Contacts, etc.
  5. You’ll see all apps grouped by their access level
  6. Tap any app to change its permission

Permission Manager is the fastest way to spot apps that have access they shouldn’t.

Turn on auto-reset for unused apps

Android can automatically revoke permissions for apps you haven’t opened in a while—a great safety net for apps you install and forget about:

  • Go to Settings > Apps > [App Name] > Permissions
  • Enable “Remove permissions if app is unused”
  • Android will automatically strip permissions from dormant apps, reducing your exposure without any effort on your part

Smart permission settings for Android users

Tighten up these key areas for stronger privacy:

  • Location: Avoid granting “All the time” access unless absolutely necessary. Navigation and weather apps may need it—most others don’t.
  • Camera and Microphone: Use the Quick Settings toggles in your notification shade to globally disable camera and mic access when you’re not actively using them.
  • Nearby Devices and Bluetooth: Deny access for apps that don’t need to connect to external hardware.
  • Files and Storage: Only grant broad storage access to apps that genuinely need it, like file managers or photo editors.

Android gives you granular control over what every app on your phone can access—but only if you take the time to use it. Spend five minutes in Permission Manager, turn on auto-reset for unused apps, and make it a monthly habit to audit your permissions. A few taps now can prevent a serious privacy headache later.