
States across the US are slowly rolling out support for adding your driver’s license or ID to the Google Wallet app on Android.
Update 10/11
How to add your state ID on Android
- Open the Google Wallet app on Android 9+
- Tap the “Add to Wallet” button in the bottom-right corner
- Choose “ID” and then “Driver’s license or state ID”
- Select your state and follow the instructions
The process involves taking a picture of the front and back of your physical card, as well as a short video of yourself for verification: a “photo from this video will be submitted to your ID issuer.”
Once approved, the ID will appear below the carousel of payment methods alongside other passes. The order can be rearranged, while you can remotely remove the ID online if your phone is missing: myaccount.google.com > Personal Info > Manage IDs.
Related: Google Wallet Material 3 Expressive redesign widely rolling out
What Google Wallet state IDs are supported
- Arizona (Rolled out October 2023)
- [New] Arkansas (Rolled out October 2025)
- California (Rolled out August 2024)
- Colorado (Rolled out October 2023)
- Georgia (Rolled out October 2023)
- Iowa (Rolled out June 2025)
- Maryland (Rolled out December 2022)
- Montana (Rolled out August 2025)
- New Mexico (Rolled out December 2024)
- North Dakota (Rolled out October 2025)
Where state IDs are coming next
Google previously said to expect support in the following places:
Where you can use state IDs
The primary place you can use this digital ID is at TSA checkpoints in some US airports. There are two ways to do so, starting with tapping your phone at the NFC terminal. You then review the information that will be shared with the TSA and authenticate with device unlock. There’s also a QR code method that requires opening the ID in Google Wallet.
Officially, you still have to carry the physical ID card at all times.
Some apps, like from car rental services, are beginning to accept digital IDs for identity and age verification. On mobile, if an app or website requests your age, it’s as simple as confirming (and authenticating) that you want to share this information with a system-level prompt/sheet. On desktop web, the experience involves scanning a QR code.
Google wants to make it possible to do that “without any possibility to link back to a user’s personal identity” through what it calls Zero-Knowledge Proof. This technology will be open-sourced for anyone to use.
Looking ahead, the IDs can be used at DMVs in Arizona, Georgia, Maryland, and New Mexico as part of “improved and streamlined customer experiences.”
Google is also working on letting you use digital IDs to “recover Amazon accounts, access online health services with CVS and MyChart by Epic,…
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