Apple Adopts RCS: Seamless Communication between Android and iPhone Devices

Texting between iPhone and Pixel devices just got a whole lot better with RCS messaging.

With Apple’s adoption of RCS, blurry images and broken group chats can be a thing of the past.

A woman wearing a light blue collared shirt holds a blue Google Pixel phone with a matching case. Her nails are painted a similar light blue, and she is looking down at the phone. The back of the phone, with its distinctive camera bar and Google 'G' logo, is visible.
A woman wearing a light blue collared shirt holds a blue Google Pixel phone with a matching case. Her nails are painted a similar light blue, and she is looking down at the phone. The back of the phone, with its distinctive camera bar and Google 'G' logo, is visible.
Key Takeaways
  1. For years, texting between Apple’s iPhone and Android devices has been anything but smooth – blurry videos, problems with group chats, and other issues
  2. Now, Apple is set to adopt Rich Communication Services (RCS), the industry text messaging standard
  3. That means everyone with RCS turned on will be able to easily share high-quality photos and videos, create and name group chats, and react to texts with emoji
When half your friends use iPhones and the other half use Pixel or other Android devices, something as simple as planning a birthday party used to lead to communication issues.

Among them: blurry videos and emoji reactions replaced by vague texts that just say “Jo liked your message.”

Thankfully, those issues are a thing of the past. Apple’s iOS 18 release included Rich Communication Services (RCS), the industry text messaging standard. And that means texting friends and family is smoother and clearer even if they have a different operating system on their device. With RCS, iPhone and Android users are able to easily share their favorite high-quality videos and photos, name their group chat or add people, and react to texts with emoji.

Now that’s something to celebrate. 

RCS vs. SMS: Limited file sizes and small, blurry images

Over 1 billion Android users already enjoy the benefits of RCS messaging. But until Apple decided to join the party, your iPhone friends had to use SMS (Short Message Service) and MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service) when texting anyone not on iMessage.

Both SMS and MMS limit file sizes, so images and videos from Pixel users would show up small or blurry on iPhones. And if someone replied with an emoji from a Pixel phone, all they’d see was text letting them know that someone reacted to their message. 

If there was a group chat going among iPhone users, and a Pixel user joined it, the entire chain would shift to SMS messaging. That meant features normally available on the iPhone would vanish.

Thankfully, Apple’s decision is a first step toward solving this problem.

“With RCS, iPhone and Android users are able to easily share their favorite high-quality videos, name their group chat or add people, and react to texts with emoji.”
Improving messaging for everyone

Now, everyone is able to enjoy the benefits of RCS messaging – no matter who’s in your group chats and what kind of devices they use.  

Here are the top three benefits you get from Apple’s RCS messaging adoption:

1. High-resolution media sharing

Ever received a blurry photo or video from a friend or family member who has a different operating system on their phone? With RCS enabled, high-resolution media comes through more clearly – whether it’s a family portrait or the game-winning goal at your child’s soccer game.

2. Enhanced group chats
That group chat you have going with your neighbours, the parents at your child’s school, or your college friends gets a whole lot better. Finally, you can seamlessly share updates, in any format, whether it’s a picture of a lost dog in the neighbourhood or news about parent-teacher conferences.

Too busy to respond in detail to every message? Let your emoji do the talking without worrying about them being turned into those strange “loved an image” text reactions. 

In group chats, you’re able to take control by adding and removing new people, changing the name, and leaving the chain when you want to. 

3. Typing indicators and read receipts

Imagine this scenario: The window for buying concert tickets is quickly closing, and you want to know if you can count on your friend to join you. Now iPhone and Android get read receipts (when you’ve turned them on in one-on-one messaging) that confirm your friend knows you need an answer ASAP. Additionally, typing indicators appear, letting you know your friend is responding.

How do I enable RCS messaging?

If you have access to your device:

  1. On your device, open Google Messages
  2. At the top right, tap your Profile picture or Initial > Messages settings > RCS chats.
  3. Turn RCS chats on or off.
Two balloons in the shape of text bubbles. The balloon on the top left of the image is in green with the words, "A new era of texting has begun." The balloon on the bottom right of the image is in blue with the confetti emoji.
A new era of better texting

If you own a Pixel, you won’t have to do anything to enjoy the benefits of RCS. The same amazing experience you already have when texting with fellow Android aficionados will simply extend to those with iPhones. 

Your friends and family with Apple devices can enable RCS messaging in their settings. And once they do, you’ll all be able to experience a new era of better texting.

Frequently asked questions

RCS (Rich Communication Services) is the modern, upgraded version of traditional SMS/MMS text messaging. It allows you to send messages over Wi-Fi or mobile data, share high-resolution photos and videos, see when the other person is typing, and get "read" receipts when they’ve seen your message.
Yes! With the release of iOS 18, iPhones now support RCS. This means the barrier between Android and iPhone is finally broken—you can now share high-quality media, get delivery/read receipts, and see typing indicators when chatting with iPhone users directly from your Google Pixel's native Messages app.

Your privacy is a priority. When you use Google Messages to chat with another person using Google Messages, your 1-on-1 and group conversations are End-to-End Encrypted (E2EE) by default. This means no one—not even Google or your carrier—can read them.

Please note: While RCS offers improved security over standard SMS, End-to-End Encryption is currently only supported between Google Messages users and does not yet extend to chats with iPhone users.

RCS uses your Wi-Fi or mobile data connection rather than your carrier's standard SMS/text message allowance. As long as you are connected to Wi-Fi or have an active mobile data plan, you won't incur standard SMS charges. If you lose internet connection, Google Messages can seamlessly fall back to sending a standard SMS (which would use your carrier's SMS pack).
Google Messages makes it visually clear. If you are using RCS, the send button and chat bubbles will be dark blue, and the text input box will say "RCS message." If the message goes through as a traditional SMS/MMS, the bubbles will be light blue, and the box will say "Text message."
Open the Google Messages app, tap your profile picture or icon in the top right corner, select Messages settings, tap RCS chats, and simply toggle the "Turn on RCS chats" button on or off.

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