The Google Photos floating bottom bar is now widely rolling out on Android, replacing the solid navigation bar that used to sit docked at the very bottom of the screen with a compact, pill-shaped element that floats above your photos. It is an official, already-shipping change, and because the rollout is server-side, most people will see it without updating anything.

What the new Google Photos floating bottom bar looks like
Instead of a full-width bar stretched across the bottom edge, the three main tabs — Photos, Collections, and Create — now live inside a single rounded pill. Sitting to its right is a separate circular button that handles Search and the Gemini-powered “Ask Photos.” The pill takes up roughly a third of the space the old bar did, so your images are now visible around and even beneath it rather than being cut off by a solid strip.
There is a practical upside beyond looks. These buttons stay put as a floating element while you scroll, so they no longer vanish the way some earlier bottom-bar versions did when you were partway down a long timeline. If you found yourself scrolling back up just to reach the tabs, that annoyance is gone.
The date indicator moved, and you can move it back
Google also relocated the date and day label. It now shows up as its own small floating pill at the top of the screen while you scroll, rather than being anchored inside the photo grid. If you preferred the old placement, it is an easy fix: open the three-dot menu, go to “Photos view” settings, and turn on “Show dates in grid.” That is the only user-facing toggle here — everything else arrives automatically.
One thing worth noting from the user’s side: this exact floating-bar design already landed on iOS back in February 2026, so Android users are getting it a few months later despite Photos being a Google-made app on Google’s own platform. The floating-toolbar look also already appears in other Google apps like Chat and Finance, so this fits a wider Material 3 push across the company’s suite — much like the recent Google Messages Chat Themes refresh.
When will you see it?
The redesign is tied to Google Photos app version 7.82 and is described as widely rolling out now, not a limited test. Since it is a server-side switch, there is no APK update to chase — the new layout simply appears when the flag reaches your account. If it has not shown up yet, force-stopping the app from Android’s App Info screen and reopening it can sometimes nudge it into place.
Sources: 9to5Google, Android Authority



