Even with an abundant choice of dedicated news apps and social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook, many users prefer Google News to consume the latest stories and trending topics on iPhones and the top Android phones. A recent Material You makeover also makes the Google News Android app better than ever for reading short articles on the go. However, the default Google News settings and customization options might not be set up right for everyone.

Here are the best Google News tips to improve your reading experience on a small screen.

1. Customize notification settings in Google News

Google News might bombard you with dozens of alerts throughout the day. Before you get tired and turn off notifications for Google News (and eventually miss breaking news), you can customize notification settings as per your preference.

  1. Open Google News on your Android phone.
  2. Tap the circular account picture in the upper-right corner.
  3. Tap News settings.
  4. Select Notifications under the Alerts menu.
  5. Use the slider to lower the number of notifications.

You can also disable other notification types, such as breaking news, headlines, daily briefing, daily top story, sports, and more. If you don't want to head to the Google News settings all the time, you can make the same changes from the Google News info menu. Follow these steps:

  1. Long tap on the Google News app icon.
  2. Tap the i button to open the app info menu.
  3. Open Notifications.
  4. Use Google News notification categories to personalize your experience.
    check-notifications

2. Change your region of interest

Maybe you want to know what's happening in U.K. politics or how the current economic situation is shaping up in Sri Lanka. Google News lets you check news from up to two language and region pairs. Here's how you can set it up.

  1. Open News settings in Google News (refer to the steps above).
  2. Go to the General menu and tap Languages & regions of interest.
  3. Google News suggests some language and region pairs to add to your account. Tap Add a language and region to check more options.
  4. Select the radio button beside a language and region. You will see news from both regions in your Google News feed.

You also have an option to change the primary language and region for your Google News account.

3. Disable video autoplay in the Google News feed

The default video autoplay behavior in Google News can be distracting at times. You have an option to disable it or keep autoplay enabled on Wi-Fi only.

  1. Open News settings in Google News (check the steps in the first section).
  2. Scroll down and tap Autoplay videos.
  3. Select the radio button beside Wi-Fi only or Disabled.

4. Check full coverage of a story

If you want to catch full coverage by leading media houses on a specific news story, you can easily do so on Google News.

  1. Start reading any story in Google News.
  2. Tap the Full Coverage option.
  3. Google News brings the same story from other media sources to read.

You can also tap the Google News icon beside a news story to bring full coverage, so there's no need to open the story first.

5. Follow topics and save stories

Your routine may revolve around busy mornings, and you might not have adequate time to catch all the important stories first thing in the day. You can save stories or topics that you wish to read at a later time.

  1. Open a news story in Google News.
  2. Tap the Save icon at the bottom (it looks like a ribbon).
    add-story-ribbon
  3. Go back to the homescreen and open the Following tab.
  4. Scroll down to check your saved stories in chronological order.

You can follow specific topics and media sources from the same menu.

If you no longer want to see stories from a specific website or publisher, you can hide its current and upcoming stories from your Google News feed.

  1. Open Google News and find any stories you wish to hide.
  2. Tap the three-dot menu beside each story.
  3. Select Hide all stories from a publication from the following menu.

You can manage your source preferences by going to Google News settings and using the Sources & topics you see less of menu.

7. Enable data saver mode

When browsing Google News feed on a limited data plan, you can disable autoplay videos (check the third trick) and enable data saver mode to apply some breaks to internet usage.

  1. Go to Google News settings (refer to the first trick).
  2. Scroll down to Data Saver mode.
  3. Select the radio button beside Enabled.

8. Enable mini cards in Google News

If you aren't a fan of Google News' latest bigger and bolder stories look, you can revert to the familiar mini cards to browse more stories without too much scrolling.

  1. Open Google News settings (check the first trick).
  2. Enable the Mini cards toggle and go back to the homescreen to check out the new look in action.

9. Check all stories from a publication

Google News allows you to check the full-day coverage from your preferred publication in the app.

  1. Launch Google News on your phone.
  2. Check the publication name and tap the three-dot menu beside a story.
  3. Select Go to publication website.
  4. Check the full coverage in different categories. You can tap the star icon in the upper-right corner to add the publication as your favorite source. You can check it later from the Following tab.

10. Add your favorite source on the homescreen

If you use an Android device, you can add any source as a shortcut on the homescreen. You don't need to open Google News every time to check publication coverage.

  1. Open Google News and go to the Following tab.
  2. Find a source and tap the three-dot menu in the upper-right corner.
  3. Select Add to Home screen.
  4. The system creates a 1 x 1 widget to add to the homescreen.

You can now tap the source shortcut on the homescreen to read stories and articles in Google News.

News is only the first draft of history

Google News also offers one of the most useful Android widgets that you can place on your homescreen. You can use it to check full story coverage and glance over your morning briefings without opening the app. Once you ace Google News, it's time to make the jump to a paper-free life.