Important: If there’s a dangerous home emergency (like a fire, carbon monoxide leak, or an intruder), leave immediately and call 911 from a safe location.
If your address wasn’t verified when you first set up your Google Home Premium subscription, you’ll get a phone notification that says "Unable to verify your address." In the Emergency Calling settings in the Google Home app , you’ll get "Issue" next to your address.
You can still use emergency calling with Google Home Premium during this time. However, any emergency call you make is directed to a national call center instead of the emergency call center closest to your home.
First, check that your address was entered correctly.
- Open the Google Home app
.
- At the top right, tap your Profile picture or Initial
Home Settings
Google Home Premium.
- Tap Emergency calling.
- Next to your address, you’ll find its current status.
- Verified: Your address is good to go.
- Verifying: We’re still checking your address. Until it’s been verified, your 911 calls may get routed to a national 911 call center.
- Issue: Your address hasn’t been verified, and your 911 calls will be routed to a national 911 call center.
- Review your address information.
- If your address is correct but it still hasn’t been verified, contact Google Home Premium support for more help.
- If your address isn’t correct:
- Tap on your address.
- Tap Edit.
- Update your address info and tap Next.
- Once your address has been updated, try to set up Emergency Calling again.
If you live in a new home, your address may not yet be in the emergency services database. This database is not owned or operated by Google. Wait a few weeks before you try to verify your address again.
To set up Emergency Calling in the Google Home app , you must be at home. Otherwise, you get a "Your phone is outside the address area" message.
Before you try to set up Emergency Calling again, make sure that:
- You're physically at your home.
- You’ve entered the full street address for the home in the Google Home app
.
- You’ve turned on Location permissions for the Google Home app
in your device’s Settings.
When you use emergency calling, the 911 operator may ask you for a call back number. If you’re disconnected before you can provide a call back number, the operator can still call you back on your cell phone.
If you can't find Emergency calling in the Google Home app, or it’s turned off:
- Open the Google Home app
, then go to Home Settings
Google Home Premium
Emergency calling. Follow the on-screen steps to turn on Emergency calling.
- Enhanced 911 (E911) is only available for those who pay for Google Home Premium. If you’re on a 30-day trial, you’ll have to add a payment method to use the feature. Those who aren’t subscribed can input a home address but won’t be able to turn the feature on.