Android 10 introduced the Live Caption feature, initially for selected Pixel phones, to automatically caption any audio being played. Later, most Android vendors implemented it in Android 10 phones (e.g., Samsung Galaxy S20 and Galaxy Note 20). Google further improved this feature in Android 11.
This Android 11 guide explains what Live Caption is, when you need to use it, how to use it, and how to customise it in Android 11 and Android 10 phones.
Live Caption is a new feature that has been added to phones with Android 10 and up.
When the feature is enabled, the phone automatically detects audio being played and captions them on the phone in real-time. You can use the Live Caption even if the phones audio is being muted.
Live Caption generates real-time caption according to the audio that’s being played. The feature is supported by most Andriod apps but may be unavailable for some media and calling apps.
Live Caption in Android 10 and Android 11 can be used to caption the audio from the following such as:
Anyway, you can use this feature to caption most audios on Android 10 and Android 11.
By default, Live Caption is not enabled in most Android phones. You can turn on (and turn off) it at any time. The captions will only show when speech is detected.
Live Captions in Android 10 and Android 11 can be turned on through 2 ways:
You may follow the following steps to turn on Live Caption (or turn off) on your phone via Settings.
Enter Settings either through the quick settings panel or by tapping on the Settings icon in the apps menu, as shown in the two screenshots below.
In the Settings page, tap on Sound as shown.
In the Sound settings, scroll down to the Live Caption tab and tap on it to enter Live Caption page.
In the Live Caption page, you can turn on/off this feature and change the captions’ settings.
Tap on the switch as shown below to turn Live Caption on.
Tap again to turn it off.
In this page, you can also access the Live Caption settings, as shown above. We will discuss how to customise this feature in the next section (read on).
A faster and easier way to turn on Live Caption is through the volume control panel.
Press down once on the volume up/ down button on your phone to access the volume control panel
The volume control panel will show up next to the volume button on the phone screen. Some Android phones may show the volume control panel horizontally (e.g., Samsung Galaxy S20
).A caption icon will be located at the bottom of the volume panel. Tap on the icon to turn on Live Caption.
Tap on the caption icon again to turn it off.
The following two screenshots show the caption is off and on respectively.
Please note, volume key method only allows you to turn on or turn off this feature. You cannot customise or change settings for this feature.
Live Caption allows users to customise and change what they want to caption in their settings page.
To go to the settings page for Live Caption, please refer to the above step mentioned above.
When the hide profanity option is turned on, profanities detected in the audio will be automatically censored.
The censored profanity will be displayed with an asterisk symbol ‘*’.
When the show’s sound labels option is switched on, music, laughter, or sounds that are detected will be automatically captioned as a sound label.
This option allows users to change the option of turning on Live Captions using the volume button.
When turned off, users can no longer turn on the feature through the volume control panel, as shown in the screenshot above.
Call captioning is an option only available in Pixel phones for now.
This option allows users to caption their calls when Live Caption is turned on. Users can also choose whether they want their calls to be captioned automatically or only when they allow it.
For now, Live Captions in Android only supports the English language.
If you have any questions on using this feature in Android 10 or Android 11, please let us know in the comments section below.
For other Android 11 guides, you may check this page.
If you are still on other versions of Android, you may check these guides:
It is time to enjoy your Android 11!
This post was last modified on December 12, 2020 3:17 am
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View Comments
Live caption on Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ 5G will not appear but work ok in YouTube videos. Need help
have moto g power android v. 11. i use an app called you mail to screen incoming calls and any voice messages i receive. live caption captions both the incoming call and voice messages.
but when i make a phone call(which is what i need live caption for as i am old and hard of hearing)
neither my speech or more importantly the person callings speech there is no caption.
any help appreciated
To use Live Caption for phone calls, you need to enable it in Settings -- Accessibility --Live caption --Use live caption.