Messaging is one of the most used forms of communication in the world. In the US, texting through your carrier is the most used form of messaging. Since texting is used for so much communication, you may need to print some text messages from a pleasant conversation you want to remember or if you need to use text messages as evidence in a court case. There isn’t a built-in feature to print text messages on your affordable Android phone, but you can use a workaround to print images of your texts.

The most natural place to print your Android text messages is from the phone you texted on. Google Messages does not include a way to print texts from within the app. The best workaround is to take screenshots of the messages you want to print and print them from your mobile phone.

Check your printer. Your texts should be printed and ready to share.

If printing texts from your phone is too difficult, print them from your computer.

You now have two options to print messages:

Either method should allow you to print your messages quickly and easily.

You can also back up your Android SMS messages at once and save that backup in an easily accessed location. This way, you can revisit old texts reliably, search texts, and print what you want from the comfort of your computer. It’s one of the best options if you have a lot of texts to go through and not a lot of time.

Do you need to print text messages for legal purposes, such as court evidence? The above methods should work fine for legal purposes. However, we have a couple of bits of advice for this situation:

Printing texts from your computer or your Android phone is easy. If you need to print messages that you deleted, it may be pertinent to know how to find and retrieve deleted texts on an Android phone. You may also want to activate the Rich Communications Services (RCS) protocol on Google Messages to enjoy features similar to what you find on iMessage and WhatsApp.

If you own a shiny new Samsung Galaxy S24 flagship, you have even better texting features at your fingertips, including live translation of messages.

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Maybe if we start telling people the brain is an app they will start using it!