The services won't be split for too much longer, though, as people in the US and UK will be able to send and request cash through the actual Google Pay app "within the next few months." So, beyond the new naming scheme and Android Pay redesign, not a great deal is changing on day one. ![]() Not yet, anyway.įor that, you still have to use Google Wallet, which is now called Google Pay Send to keep it on-brand, if a bit awkwardly. Unexpectedly, Google Pay doesn't actually include Google Wallet functionality, meaning you can't use it to send or request money. The Cards tab, on the other hand, is more a catalog of your payment cards, gift cards, loyalty schemes and offers. The app still does everything you'd expect it to, though there's a new Home tab that puts recent transactions, nearby stores and rewards in one place. And so today, Android Pay becomes Google Pay. After a fictional, Highlander-style battle, it was Google Pay that emerged victorious, taking on a new name to define this united brand. ![]() Google recently admitted that Android Pay and Google Wallet probably didn't need to exist as two different services.
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