It seems that Google is rolling back one of its most contentious interface changes on Pixel phones. In a recent APK teardown of the latest Android System Intelligence Canary build, it seems like the Live Caption toggle is going back to its old, one-tap home right beneath that volume slider — a move that would be a welcome reversion after months of users complaining about some pointless friction.
The change is notable because Live Caption, which automatically creates on-device captions for almost any audio or video in near real time, is something you’ll frequently want right away. In a more recent beta cycle, Google pushed the toggle into the expanded volume menu that you can get to by tapping on the three-dot icon, making a quick toggle require at least two extra taps if you own a Pixel. This move slowed access, especially if you are navigating calls, videos, or noisy surroundings.

Why Position Is Important For Accessibility
Live Caption, which debuted with Android 10, is a game-changer in accessibility for the deaf and hard of hearing — or indeed anyone who fancies silent playback. More than 1.5 billion people have some level of hearing loss, according to the World Health Organization, so reducing taps and time-to-toggle isn’t just a nicety — it’s a priority for accessibility.
There’s a mainstream aspect, too: Pixel users depend on the physical volume buttons to summon those quick controls in the heat of battle — on a train, in a meeting, or while juggling other tasks with one hand. It might sound academic, but the takeaway is pretty simple: The further and more complicated an interaction is, the more error-prone and slow it becomes to do. A single, predictable location beneath the slider reduces cognitive load and increases the chances you’ll actually use the feature.
What the APK Teardown Reveals About Live Caption
Strings and flags in Android System Intelligence Canary (build 2509) indicate the return of a Live Caption toggle button in the main volume panel. Testers running the Canary build now find the toggle returns below the slider again without requiring them to open up the expanded sheet, which reflects what it was like prior to the design change. As with all these teardowns, features that we find behind flags are not a promise of future release and may be pulled or further baked before they ship, so temper your excitement accordingly.
That prospective about-face also brings Pixels in line with the wider (and previously present on Pixel) behavior for Android. For many non-Pixel devices, Live Caption has simply been an on/off toggle in the volume panel ever since, so Google’s previous split on Pixels was an outlier. Once again, this consistent placement helps avoid confusion when users switch phones or share tips between device manufacturers.

If And When Could Pixel Users Expect The Change
Since the tweak is housed within Android System Intelligence, a piece that can be updated by Google without requiring a full OS update, that also means it can get pushed out on the sly thanks to server-side flags or even through something like a Play System Update. But today’s evidence comes from a Canary build that was meant for testing purposes, so the broader release could still be weeks or months down the line. It could arrive with an upcoming Android 16 beta, a Pixel Feature Drop, or quietly flip on at some point in the background when Google feels it has polished it up to its standards.
Google has recently relied on modular system components to change the UI affordances without necessarily requiring a full firmware update. That approach enables the company to iterate quickly on quality-of-life fixes like this, while ensuring risky changes are always gated behind feature flags until they’re empirically proven at scale.
What It Means for Everyday Use and One‑Handed Access
If that change sticks, activating captions will once again be as easy as tapping the volume rocker and flipping a switch without any additional panel or buried control. That’s a win in one-handed use, and for when you need silent comprehension pronto — to begin with a video in a quiet room or nab some dialogue whilst lugging gear across an airport.
Until the wider rollout goes live, Live Caption is still accessible on Pixels from the expanded volume sheet and in Settings > Accessibility. Power users could also include Live Caption in Quick Settings tiles on some builds, but the move back to the original volume menu would provide a more straightforward way in.
The broader lesson is philosophical: small interface choices can have oversized effects on accessibility and delight. Placing Live Caption back in the volume slider is an admission that the quickest way there could also be the best way there — especially for a feature that has been all about audio accessibility and immediacy for everyone.
