If you own a Pixel 10, your long‑drive navigation experience might just get a lot easier. Google has rolled out a new “Power Saving” mode for Google Maps, designed to dramatically reduce battery drain when using turn‑by‑turn driving navigation. Instead of the usual full‑color interface with all controls and overlays, the map switches to a stripped‑down black-and-white layout that shows only the essentials: your route line, the next turn, and minimal on‑screen info.
To trigger this mode, you simply start navigation and then hit the phone’s power button — the screen dims or locks, but route guidance continues on the lock screen. The result: because the screen uses far less power (especially on OLED displays, where black pixels draw almost no energy), you could get several additional hours of battery life compared to standard navigation. For road-trippers, delivery drivers, or anyone who spends lots of time behind the wheel, this could turn a dreaded battery drain into an all‑day companion.
It’s worth noting, though, that the mode is currently limited: it works only during driving directions, in portrait orientation. Navigation when walking or biking doesn’t benefit from it — and at least for now, the feature stays exclusive to Pixel 10 devices. Still, it reflects a smart move by Google — after all, navigation is one of the most energy‑hungry activities on a phone, and stripping the interface down to the basics could make Maps significantly more practical on the road.

















