Expanded device tracking on the Find Hub website

Google has expanded what the Find Hub website can track. Before this update, the web version could only locate phones, tablets, and Wear OS watches. Now it also supports tags and compatible headphones, including devices like the Pixel Buds Pro 2.

That changes the practical use of the service in a pretty meaningful way. If your earbuds are missing, you no longer need to reach for your Android phone first. You can open the Find Hub website from a laptop and track them there.

New Find Hub website features for remote device control

Ring a tracker remotely

The updated Find Hub website now lets you ring a personal tracker from the web. That makes it easier to find an item when you know it is nearby but not exactly where you left it.

Mark a device as lost

You can also flag a device as lost directly from the website. This brings an important device recovery option to the desktop experience instead of keeping it limited to mobile.

Rename devices from the web

Google has added the ability to rename a device through the Find Hub website as well. It is a small change, but it helps keep tracked items organized, especially if you manage multiple devices or accessories.

Remove a device without using your phone

The website can now also remove a device remotely, which means you can manage your tracked hardware without touching your smartphone.

Material 3 redesign makes Find Hub feel more polished

Google has refreshed the desktop experience with Material 3 design elements. The result is a cleaner and more polished layout.

And that visual update is not just for desktop users. Even when the Find Hub website is opened on a smartphone, the experience is designed to feel familiar rather than awkward or stripped down. It stays close to the native app, which helps keep navigation simple and predictable.

Consistent Find Hub experience across web and Android

The options on the website mirror what the Android app already offers. That consistency matters because it reduces friction. You are not learning two different systems depending on which screen happens to be in front of you.

Instead, tracking devices through the mobile app and the website feels aligned. If you have used one, the other should feel immediately recognizable.

Why broader web access to Find Hub matters

You may not always have your phone nearby

The usefulness of this update comes down to a very simple reality: people lose devices at inconvenient times. And when that happens, your phone may not be with you.

Being able to open a browser on a laptop or another smartphone and quickly locate a tag in a bag or a pair of headphones left at the office makes the service more flexible in real-world situations.

More ways to locate tags and headphones

The addition of tag and headphone tracking makes the Find Hub website more than just a backup option for major devices. It now covers smaller, easy-to-misplace items that people often need to find fast.

That gives the web version a more complete role in the overall Find Hub experience.

People tab and broader Find Hub additions

Google has also added a People tab to the website. This makes it easier to view and manage shared location access in one place.

The broader Find Hub system has also recently gained integration with the Messages app, along with a luggage-tracking feature for airline travel. These additions show that Google is continuing to build out the platform beyond basic device location.

Find Hub website updates at a glance

 

Feature

 

 

What it does

 

 

Tag tracking

 

 

Lets you locate tags from the website

 

 

Headphone tracking

 

 

Supports compatible headphones, including Pixel Buds Pro 2

 

 

Remote ring

 

 

Lets you ring a personal tracker from the web

 

 

Lost mode tools

 

 

Lets you flag a device as lost

 

 

Device renaming

 

 

Lets you rename tracked devices online

 

 

Remote removal

 

 

Lets you remove a device without using your phone

 

 

People tab

 

 

Lets you view and manage shared location access

 

 

Material 3 redesign

 

 

Gives the site a cleaner, more polished look