Android‘s Find Hub now lets you share your lost luggage’s precise location directly with airlines. The feature arrives just as holiday travel hits its peak and bags inevitably go missing. You generate a secure link from a compatible tracker tag and paste it into an airline’s baggage claim form. More than 10 major global carriers including Lufthansa, Air India, and Scandinavian Airlines already accept these links. It puts location control in your hands instead of forcing you to wait for airport staff to conduct manual searches.
How the Find Hub location sharing works
The feature creates a secure bridge between your tracker and the airline’s baggage system. When you mark a bag as lost in the Find Hub app, it generates an encrypted URL that points to your item’s real-time location.
That link acts as a temporary key. Paste it into an airline’s lost luggage form and their staff can pull up your bag’s position on a map using the same tracing tools they already work with daily. The airline never gains permanent access to your tracker or its history. The link expires after seven days and deactivates immediately once your phone detects the bag is nearby again. Google keeps the underlying location data encrypted end to end.
Step by step guide to sharing your bag’s location
Start in the Find Hub app on your phone. Find the lost item in your list and select it. A button labeled “share item location” appears, and tapping it generates a unique secure URL that you can copy.

Head to the airline’s website or app. Find the baggage help section and paste the link directly into the form. The airline gets access to a map showing your bag’s location with real-time updates.

Sharing stops the moment your phone detects the item is back with you. Google builds in extra privacy protection with automatic link expiration after seven days and encrypted device data.
Google is working with Samsonite to embed Find Hub technology directly into suitcases. That means future luggage will pair with the network right out of the box with no separate tracker tag required. The company also confirms more airlines including Qantas will join the program soon.
For now the feature gives Android users the same luggage tracking power iPhone owners have used since last year. Grab a compatible tracker tag before your next trip and check if your airline is on the list. The whole setup takes minutes and could save you hours of stress at the baggage counter.