Stuck on an Android 17 beta build and can’t get to the stable release without wiping your Pixel? Google’s July 2026 Pixel update finally fixes that. Testers who stayed on Beta 4 or Beta 4.1 spent the last month unable to receive the automatic update to stable Android 17, and the only obvious escape route wiped all their data. The new build changes that, and this guide walks you through leaving the Android 17 beta with everything intact.

What the July 2026 Pixel update fixes
Android 17 became the stable public release last month, and Google’s official release notes confirm Beta 4.1, from June 1, was the last public beta build before it. The problem: Pixels that stayed enrolled on Beta 4 or Beta 4.1 never got the automatic over-the-air (OTA) update that moves a device from beta to stable. Testers were simply left stuck on beta.
The July 2026 Pixel update, which brings devices to the July security patch level per Google’s Pixel Update Bulletin, delivers that missing OTA at last. According to Android Authority, the build to look for is CP2A.260705.006, and it reaches Pixel 6 and newer, including the Pixel foldables and the Pixel Tablet. Once it installs, your phone is effectively off the beta track, with no data loss.
One important distinction: a separate bootloop bug on Beta 4.1 forced some testers to manually flash a factory image just to get their phones booting again, and that process wipes everything. The July fix does not bring back data for anyone who already went through that. It only helps people still sitting on a beta build who want a clean exit now.
Alongside the OTA fix, the update clears up a handful of smaller bugs:
- A bootloop bug on certain devices
- Apps unexpectedly closing or failing to launch
- Incorrect widget colors
- A Pixel 10 Pro Fold navigation-bar misalignment after folding and unfolding
- A wallpaper display bug
Why opting out on the beta website wipes your Pixel
Here is the trap. Google’s Android Beta for Pixel program states that if you tap “Opt out” on the beta website while your phone is still running a beta build, your device receives an update within about 24 hours that erases all user data and installs the latest stable release. That is by design, and it is exactly the wrong button to press right now.
The no-wipe path is different. Instead of opting out from a beta build, you stay enrolled and simply take the OTA to the final stable release of the version you were testing. Once that stable OTA is installed, your phone has already left the beta with your data intact, and you then have a window (until the next Android version’s beta cycle opens) to opt out on the website safely. This is the mechanism that was broken for Android 17 testers, and the July update is what restores it.
How to exit the Android 17 beta without losing data
- Do not tap “Opt out” on the beta website (g.co/androidbeta) while your Pixel is still on a beta build. That triggers the automatic, data-wiping update within about 24 hours.
- Check for the update. Go to Settings > System > System update. If the July 2026 update to stable Android 17 is listed, download and install it normally. This preserves all your data.
- If the OTA hasn’t arrived yet, sideload it. Download the official OTA package for your exact Pixel model from Google’s OTA images page, then apply it with ADB sideload in recovery mode. This is not the same as fastboot-flashing the full factory image: sideloading the OTA zip keeps your data, while flashing a factory image wipes the device. Make sure you grab the OTA file and use the sideload method, not the factory image.
- Opt out once you’re on stable. After you confirm the phone is on the stable Android 17 build, you can safely visit the beta website and opt out to leave the program fully. Since you’re no longer on a beta build, no wipe follows.
Android Central reached the same conclusion in a first-person account of leaving the program without losing everything, which lines up with these steps.
When will it reach your phone?
The July 2026 Pixel update is rolling out now to Pixel 6 and later. If it isn’t showing under System update yet, give it a few days or use the sideload route above. A fair criticism here: Google left enrolled testers stranded on beta builds for roughly a month with no clean exit, and the only visible option in that window quietly wiped their phones. That is a real cost to the very users who volunteered to test the software.
If you’ve been fighting beta glitches, this is a good moment to land on a stable, wiped-clean-of-beta-bugs device before Google’s next big event. The Pixel 11 is set to debut on August 12 at a Made by Google event in New York City, about five weeks out, and you’ll want a dependable daily driver by then. One honest caveat: the safe opt-out window only stays open until the next Android beta cycle begins, and manual sideloading always carries some user risk, so move to stable while the path is clear.
Sources: Android Authority, Android Central




