Android App Design — Material Design in Production
Android is a different design universe from iOS. Material Design language, back-button behavior, system-level navigation, Samsung vs Pixel variations — these shape how apps look and feel on Google Play. This library focuses on Android implementations specifically, so you're not squinting at an iOS screenshot and mentally translating it.
What You'll See in Each Android Product Entry
Each product entry documents how a brand adapts its experience for Android users: when they use bottom sheets instead of modals, how they handle the navigation drawer pattern, when they lean into Material Design vs. use a custom visual system. You'll see full flows for onboarding, account upgrades, checkout, and dozens of other moments, captured directly from the live Android app.
For Android-First and Cross-Platform Teams
Whether you're designing Android-first or cross-platform, this library helps you make informed platform decisions backed by what successful apps actually ship — not just what design blogs speculate about.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do the Android product pages differ from iOS ones?
Android product pages capture the actual Google Play version of each app, showing Material Design patterns, back-button behavior, and Android-specific UI elements that differ from iOS counterparts.
Can I compare the same brand's Android and iOS apps?
Yes. For brands that publish on both platforms, you can cross-reference the Android and iOS versions to study how they adapt their design language per platform.
Are Material Design 3 implementations represented?
Yes. The library covers apps that follow classic Material, Material Design 3, and those with fully custom Android design systems — so you can study a range of approaches.
Which Android brands are most popular in the library?
Commonly browsed Android products include apps from categories like fintech (Revolut, Chime), food delivery (DoorDash, Uber Eats), productivity (Notion, Asana), and social (Instagram, TikTok).