Android’s new notification rules could finally tame your alert overload. Early code in Android 17 points to a more capable way to manage how and when your phone interrupts you, especially if constant pings have started to feel overwhelming.
The system, spotted in Android 17 Beta 3 by Android Authority, shows you’ll be able to set custom behaviors for notifications based on specific apps or even individual contacts. Instead of muting everything, you’ll be able to decide what deserves attention and what can stay quiet in the background.
Android already has an edge in notification management. This upgrade builds on that lead by making alerts feel more tailored to your daily habits.
Five actions reshape how alerts behave
At the center of the system are five actions you can assign to notifications, each changing how alerts appear and interrupt you.
These include Silence, Block, Silence and Bundle, Highlight, and Highlight and Alert. Together, they give you control over both visibility and urgency, which current settings don’t fully offer.
That opens up practical use cases that go beyond simple muting. You could bundle less important updates from social apps while keeping work messages front and center, or block certain alerts entirely without affecting others. The flexibility feels intentional and grounded in real habits.
Why contact-level control stands out
The bigger shift is how this extends beyond apps to individual people. Right now, Android lets you adjust app behavior, but it doesn’t fully separate how different contacts are handled within the same space.
Strings of code also indicate you’ll be able to search and select contacts when building rules, then apply specific behaviors to them. That means you could silence one person’s calls without muting everyone else, which solves a common frustration.

There’s also a hint of prioritization. Highlighted alerts may appear more prominently or rise to the top, helping important messages stand out without constant manual sorting.
Early feature, but clear direction
There are still unknowns. Google hasn’t confirmed this for Android 17, and features found in early code don’t always make it to release. The teardown itself makes that clear.
Even so, the signs point to broader availability if it ships. The same strings appear in leaked One UI 9 builds, suggesting Samsung devices could support it as well.
If this rolls out, the benefit is practical. You’ll spend less time managing noise and more time focusing on what actually matters, which is exactly where notification systems need to go next.

