In the 7 years since I wrote a blog post about rescuing my Google Pixel from a boot loop people have started reaching out to me desperately looking for a way to fix their phones. This particularly horrible glitch happens at the worst time – when your phone storage is completely full of pictures and videos. In my case, we were on vacation and not near wifi when I’d happened to fill up the phone storage and it got stuck in a boot loop.1
Google Support was adamant there was no way to recover my data and my options were to factory wipe the phone myself or send it to them so they could do it. Of the resources found back in 2018, almost nothing survived Google’s march of “progress” and destruction of their own older resources. In this case the links to Google’s own Pixel support forums and links to resources no longer work – and there are no working Archive.org / Way Back Machine links.
Anyhow, if you’re stuck in the same situation as I was – without the resources and links I had back then, perhaps if you dig around you can still find a way?

Before you get started – a warning. I don’t currently have this problem and am trying to piece together how I fixed my problem 7 years ago on an older phone, using current guides that are no longer accessible. I haven’t verified any of these links and resources, I’m just some rando on the internet who is trying to help you out because some other internet randos helped me out a long time ago. Google has a nasty habit of deleting their own resources and shuffling things around. I don’t know the first thing about installing new operating systems on phones and following any of these links or suggestions might permanently damage your systems. But, as I mentioned before… I tried this because Google Support was beyond unhelpful and I was completely out of options.

The basic framework for the fix was:
- Get the phone to “Recovery Mode” so at least isn’t not boot looping, overheating, and chewing up your battery.
- If you have an unlocked phone, or a locked phone from Google which you could theoretically unlock over a terminal, you should be able to get the phone “Safe Mode” where it will be able to turn on and access the operating system, but with limited other apps useable.
- Find and install the latest Android ADB (Android Debug Bridge) and FastBoot (an Android diagnostic tool)
- I say “latest,” but I’m not an expert and am not currently having this problem. Perhaps it’s best to use the version which most closely matches your phone? Anyhow, I installed ADB on the root of my PC and then created a path to it with “SET PATH=%PATH%;c:\adb” so the operating system would know it could access those resources.
- Try to find a “Rescue OTA” (Android Rescue Over-the-Air update) for your phone model.
- This would essentially be the same update that you might get when you let your phone download and install an update over night via WiFi – with the only difference that you’ve downloaded it onto your PC and are going to try to shove it back into the phone over a cable.
- Try to “sideload” the OTA update back into the phone using ADB / Fastboot (I don’t remember the specific steps to do this – but since these resources are constantly being worked on, I assume someone has written a guide).
If this post helped you out or you found some resources helpful, please let me know so I can update this post and help others.
Good luck!
- It was also overheating – which might have been a contributing factor the boot loop – or caused by the constant booting and looping [↩]
