How to use Google Wallet, step by step

LaptopMag offers a play-by-play walk through of Google Wallet.

Mark Spoonauer, LAPTOP Editor in Chief, uses Google Wallet in a Duane Reade.

LaptopMag.com

September 20, 2011

I’ll never forget the first time I used Google Wallet to pay for something. I was at Duane Reade, where I just picked up some hand sanitizer. When I got up to the check-out counter, I just whipped out the Samsung Nexus S 4G, held it up to the PayPass reader, and voila, payment accepted. The woman behind the counter looked at me suspiciously and asked “What did you just do?” Well, I guess you could say we both experienced the future of payments. I quickly explained to the sales clerk that I was participating in a trial of Google Wallet, a new app that enables users to tap to pay at hundreds of thousands of locations, as well as store loyalty cards and gift cards and redeem deals. Granted, Google Wallet is only available on a single smartphone at the moment, but as more Android handsets roll out with NFC support, this app could be a big deal. Here’s what it’s like to use Google Wallet in the real world.

Payment Options and Adding funds

For now, Google Wallet integrates directly only with Citi MasterCard cards, but you can also add funds from any debit or credit card to a Google Prepaid Card. Since we don’t have a MasterCard, we added $20 to the prepaid card by filling in the info for our debit card, along with our billing address and phone number. The process took just a couple of minutes, but it’s pretty annoying to have to refill your card. The good news is that Google has licensed the NFC specs for American Express, Discover, and Visa, though the company has not announced a partnership with those credit card companies.

Finding Tap and Pay Locations

You’ll know if the store you’re shopping in supports Google Wallet if you see a MasterCard PayPass logo and/or a logo illustration that looks like a person holding a credit card up to a wireless signal. But, if you want to know before you go, you should use PayPass Locator app, which helps you find PayPass locations near you.

Near our downtown New York City office, the app found 23 locations that were within fairly close walking distance, which are displayed on a map. The app provides an icon for each location to make it easier to discern the type of business it is without you having to tap on it. For example, the Rx icon is for pharmacies–which is how we found Duane Reade–and Best Buy had a shopping cart icon. Malibu Diner had a burger and drink icon.

Once you tap on a business you can share it via SMS, report a problem (if it doesn’t accept PayPass), or map it in Google Maps (if you’re looking for directions). Overall, we found plenty of businesses near our office to try Google Wallet out, but there are still a lot of retailers and other shops that don’t accept PayPass payments, especially as you move closer to the suburbs.

Making Purchases

Checking out with your NFC phone and Google Wallet is a cinch. All you need to do is hold your phone up to the PayPass terminal once your total is displayed on the screen. You’ll feel your phone vibrate to let you know that a transaction has taken place. There was an extra step that required us to enter the payment type on screen; in this case we needed to select Credit because that’s how retailers see Google Wallet. But at first we mistakenly tapped Debit because that’s the card we used to fill our Google Prepaid Card.

Regardless, we wish retailers would automatically recognize Google Wallet as a credit card so you could save even more time. The clerk handed us the receipt and that was it. Our leather wallet never left our back pocket.

No Receipts for Now

What you don’t get when making Google Wallet purchases is a digital receipt. For now Google Wallet only provides “Tap Events” when you select the History option within the Google Wallet app. These events merely display the time of the purchase, the location, and the card you used. Google says that it’s working on bringing receipts to Google Wallet. This would be a great feature for keeping track of expenses, and we could envision Google providing APIs to developers like Expensify.

Loyalty Cards

Google Wallet goes way beyond a mere payment mechanism, and it starts with Loyalty Cards. The idea is that you can earn loyalty credit through Google SingleTap merchants by using your NFC-enabled Android phone to pay. As of this writing only American Eagle Outfitters was available as an option within the app to add a new loyalty card, but Google lists 15 SingleTap merchants on its site. Other partners include Macy’s, Foot Locker, Subway, and Toys R Us.

To register your loyalty card you enter the loyalty card number and tap Add Card. Google says that you’ll be able to redeem offers as well with a single tap, which brings us to Google Wallet’s next big feature.

Google Offers

While it’s nice that Google Wallet can lighten your regular wallet, Google knows that it needs to add extra incentive to get people to pay with their phones. That’s where Google Offers come in, which you can find within the Google Shopper app. Google Shopper lists deals near you, from discounts on food to $100 off scuba lessons. The offers then automatically syncs with the Google Wallet app.

You can save offers to redeem them later, but chances are you won’t be able to pay with your phone. That’s because most merchants (especially smaller ones) don’t offer NFC-capable payment terminal. So you’ll show your phone’s screen to redeem an offer and then pay with an old-fashioned credit card or cash. Google SingleTap merchants are the exception, where you can pay and redeem offers with a single tap.

Obviously, Google and its partners want to work towards having more businesses on board that will accept payments via NFC, but it’s going to take time and money.

Security and Privacy

Google Wallet includes several security features designed to provide peace of mind, some of which are behind the scenes and some that you control. To prevent others from using your Android phone as a wallet, Google Wallet uses a PIN number that you must enter at timed intervals. Under Settings you can set the PIN timer to 1 minute, 5 minutes, 15 minutes, or 30 minutes.

If you would rather not let Google keep a record of where you’re making purchases, you can tell the app to not use your location. So you’ll only see the time when you look up Tap Events in Google Wallet.

For those concerned about wireless snoopers, the Nexus S 4G contains a Secure Element chip that only authorized programs can access, like Google Wallet. This works hand in hand with the PIN code. Google claims that this element is protecting from both snooping and tampering, but advises that you treat a lost or stolen phone just like a lost credit card. You should contact the credit card companies for the cards you’ve used on Google Wallet.

Google Wallet Outlook

It’s too soon to determine whether Google Wallet will be a hit. The app is available on only one phone, and there are a lot more businesses who don’t accept NFC payments than those that do, making using Google Wallet somewhat of a hunting expedition. However, when you find a participating retailer, Google Wallet works seamlessly. We also love the idea of using a single app to redeem offers, rack up loyalty points, and check out with a single tap. Google just needs to work hard to sign up more SingleTap merchants.

Google isn’t alone in the phone-as-wallet race. Isis, a joint venture of AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon, has signed up American Express, Discover, and Visa as partners. But Isis isn’t a real product yet. Google Wallet is here now, and it’s off to a pretty good start.