Google Messages adds ‘Tap to Draft’ for safer smart replies

Google Messages adds ‘Tap to Draft’ for safer smart replies
(Representative Image)
Google has begun rolling out a new behavior for Smart Replies in its Messages app that gives users a crucial extra step before a reply is sent — a change that could save many Android users from an all-too-familiar moment of embarrassment. As reported by 9to5Goole, the new feature, called "Tap to draft," changes what happens when you tap one of the AI-suggested reply chips that appear above the compose field. Rather than immediately dispatching the message to your contact, the selected reply is now placed into the text box as a draft, where you can review it, edit it, or simply confirm before hitting send.Previously, tapping a Smart Reply sent it instantly — a design choice that led some users to disable the feature entirely just to avoid misfires. The new behavior closes that gap by enforcing a deliberate send action.The feature is opt-in for now. Users can enable it by heading to Settings > Suggestions & Actions inside the Google Messages app and selecting "Tap to draft" under the Suggestions menu. The default behavior remains "Tap to send," meaning nothing changes automatically unless you make the switch.The rollout accompanies the latest stable release of Google Messages for Android, version 20260522_00_RC00.
The feature was first spotted in testing back in March 2026, making this a wider public availability after roughly three months of preview.The change is a small but meaningful acknowledgment that AI-powered suggestions, however convenient, need guardrails — especially in a messaging app where an errant reply can cause real confusion. It also adds Google Messages to the growing list of apps reconsidering how aggressively AI shortcuts are applied to actions with real-world consequences.

How it works

  • Suggested Smart Replies appear as usual at the bottom of the chat.
  • Tapping a reply now drafts it into the message field instead of sending it immediately.
  • Users can edit, add context, or simply press send if the suggestion fits.
This small tweak reduces the risk of awkward or accidental one-word responses, especially in professional or sensitive conversations.

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