Google Duo Will Lose Unlimited Desktop Call Duration in Meet Takeover


Google Meet and Duo logos

Google announced last month that it was merging its two video call apps, Google Meet and Google Duo, and the transition officially started a few days ago. However, the switch does have one significant downside.

Even though there will be many advantages to the new combined Google Meet, especially compared to Duo (which has always been lighter on features), there will be at least one drawback. Google confirmed to How-To Geek that starting a Meet call from a phone or tablet won’t have a maximum time limit, but calls started from the Meet desktop web app will be limited to 60 minutes for free Google accounts. We also asked Google if the time limit applies for 1-on-1 calls, but the company did not answer in time for publication.

Time Limits in Duo and (old) Meet

Google Duo has never had a maximum limit on the length of calls, for both audio-only and video calls. The main limit was just on the number of people you could have on a single call — Duo maxed out at eight participants before the COVID-19 pandemic, which was raised to 12 in March 2020, and raised again to 32 people a few months later. Duo didn’t even have group video calls on the web until May 2020.

Google Meet, in contrast, was built from the start for large companies and organizations to have online video meetings. Google Workspace accounts (the ones set up by organizations) can have 500 participants on the same call, though the limit for most Google accounts is 100. There’s no time limit with Meet calls for paid Workspace accounts, which was also true when Meet was rolled out to free Google accounts in the early days of the pandemic, but that ended in 2021.

Zoom forces free calls to end after 40 minutes, and free Microsoft Teams meetings are limited to 60 minutes in groups or 30 hours in 1-to-1 calls. However, there are still some services that offer free calls with no time limit, such as Microsoft Skype and Apple FaceTime.

RELATED: Google Meet and Duo Are Merging: Here’s What Will Happen





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