One of the most frustrating moments of waiting at the airport is when the luggage carousel gradually becomes empty and your suitcase never comes out. Running to the lost luggage counter after waiting for a long time, filling out long forms, and being sent to the door with “let us call you” messages is one of the most classic scenes of travel stress. Google steps in at this point and radically changes this process with the new “location sharing” feature it added to Android’s Find Hub application.
Thanks to this feature, which became available with the March 2026 Pixel Drop update, you can directly share the instant location of a Find Hub compatible tracking tag you placed in your luggage with contracted airlines through a secure connection. Airline personnel can also track the location of the suitcase via this connection. Turkish Airlines is among more than 10 global airlines that support this feature.
Choose a correct tracking tag first
To benefit from this feature, your luggage must have a Bluetooth tracking tag compatible with the Find Hub network. Moto Tag, Chipolo and similar Find Hub supported tags do this job. Additionally, some luggage brands, such as Samsonite and July, produce luggage models that have Find Hub technology directly embedded into them; So you may not have to buy labels separately. To use the application, your phone must have Android 6 or above, but Android 9 and above is recommended for the Find Hub network to work at its full capacity.
Step by step: Share your location with the airline
What you need to do when your luggage is not found is quite simple.
1. Open the Find Hub app. Go to the main screen and select the tracking tag inside your luggage from the device or item list.
2. Tap the “Share item location” button. The application will generate a unique and secure URL for you. Confirm the instructions that appear on the screen and copy the link to your clipboard.
3. Forward this link to the airline. Paste this link into the airline’s mobile app, website, or directly to the staff at the lost luggage desk. Staff can track the current location of your luggage by opening the link from their Android, iOS or desktop computer.
Don’t worry about privacy
Frankly, sharing location information with a third party may sound a little scary when you first hear about it. Google has been very meticulous about this. First of all, no one can see where your luggage is until you create the link; No autoplan sharing takes place in the background. The link automatically expires after seven days. When the phone detects that the suitcase has been returned to you, sharing is automatically disabled. You can stop sharing via Find Hub at any time without waiting for any of these; You have complete control.
Which airlines support it?
Airlines that currently support this feature include Ajet, Air India, China Airlines, Lufthansa Group (Lufthansa, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines and Swiss International Airlines), Saudia Airlines, Scandinavian Airlines and Turkish Airlines. Qantas will also join this list soon. In addition, Google collaborated with SITA and Reunitus companies and integrated this technology into the aviation industry’s two most common baggage tracking systems, WorldTracer and NetTracer; In this way, a system-compatible infrastructure has been created in hundreds of airlines and thousands of airports.
Losing luggage remains one of the most annoying experiences of travel, but this new feature from Find Hub at least makes the process more transparent and solution-oriented. A particularly powerful tool for those using luggage tracking tags; Being able to provide a concrete location link instead of having a “trust it or not” debate with the airline staff makes a big difference. The fact that Turkish Airlines is among the supported airlines makes this feature very practical, especially for those who travel frequently from Türkiye.
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