How to Enable and Use Pixel's Take a Message Voicemail Feature in India

By

Introduction

Google's Take a Message voicemail feature for Pixel phones has quietly expanded to India, a major new market where it was previously unavailable. This handy tool lets your Google Assistant answer calls on your behalf and transcribe messages in real-time, so you never miss important details even when you can't pick up. Early reports from Reddit users (like SavageSkaram) confirm the feature is appearing on devices like the Pixel 10 Pro XL, often after enrolling in beta programs for the Phone app and Google Play Services. While Google hasn't officially announced this rollout, our APK teardown earlier hinted at an even broader global expansion—and the possibility that non-Pixel phones might eventually get it too. Follow this step-by-step guide to check your eligibility, enable the feature, and start using it today.

How to Enable and Use Pixel's Take a Message Voicemail Feature in India
Source: www.androidauthority.com

What You Need

Step-by-Step Guide

Step 1: Check Your Current Setup

Before diving into beta programs, verify that your Pixel is already running the latest software. Go to Settings > System > System update and install any pending updates. Then, open the Phone app and dial *#*#CHECKIN#*#* (or *#*#4636#*#*) to force a sync with Google's servers. This sometimes triggers the feature without beta enrollment. If you see the “Take a Message” prompt on the call screen after a missed call, you're all set—skip to Step 5. Otherwise, proceed.

Step 2: Join the Google Phone App Beta Program

The Take a Message feature is often pushed to beta testers first. Visit the Google Phone beta sign-up page on your Pixel and tap Join. Wait a few minutes for the beta update to appear in the Play Store. Install it, then open the Phone app and accept any new permissions (microphone, phone, notifications).

Step 3: Enroll in Google Play Services Beta

A server-side switch may be tied to Play Services version. Go to the Google Play Services beta page and join the program. After installation, restart your phone. This step isn't always required, but it increases the likelihood of the feature activating.

Step 4: Toggle the Feature On (If Available)

Once you've updated both apps, look for the Take a Message setting. Open the Phone app, tap the three-dot menu (), and go to Settings > Voicemail > Take a Message. If you see a toggle, enable it. If not, the feature may still be server‑side gated—try waiting 24‑48 hours or using a VPN trick mentioned in the Tips section below.

Step 5: Test the Feature

Ask a friend or use a second phone to call your Pixel. Let it ring until voicemail picks up. The caller should hear Google Assistant say something like “Your call is being answered by the Google Assistant. Please state your name and message after the beep.” After the beep, have them leave a message. On your end, you'll receive a notification with a transcription of the message. Tap it to hear the audio recording or read the text.

Step 6: Customize Your Experience

Go back to Phone > Settings > Voicemail > Take a Message to adjust options: change the greeting, choose whether to silence caller audio during transcription, or set which contacts trigger the feature (e.g., all callers vs. only unknowns). For privacy, you can also require the caller to say their name before the message is recorded.

Tips for Success

With these steps, you should be able to unlock and enjoy Pixel's Take a Message voicemail feature in India. As Google continues its global expansion, more markets and devices will likely follow—so keep an eye out for updates!

Related Articles

Recommended

Discover More

Intel's Vulkan Driver on Linux Adds Experimental Descriptor Heap SupportcPanel's Post-Attack Response: Critical Patches Issued After Ransomware Hits 44,000 ServersNvidia's $300 Million Fiber Bet: What It Means for AI Infrastructure in the USNavigating the Age Verification Minefield: A Guide to Understanding California's Social Media Ban DebateMegaETH's MEGA Token Launches at $2 Billion Market Cap: What You Need to Know