Productivity Route

The Best AI Apps for Android in 2025

Which AI apps work well on Android for real work - not just demos - and how to use them on the go.

10 steps ~1h For all professionals Free

The best AI apps for Android in 2025 include ChatGPT (best all-around, available on Android), Claude (strong for documents and context-specific tasks), Perplexity (best for research on mobile), and Otter AI (best for meeting transcription on the go). Most of these apps sync with desktop and handle offline features like cached conversations. At aidowith.me, the Weekly Status Update route shows you how to use AI apps to complete real work tasks - 10 steps to ship a weekly status update in about 1 hour, mobile-compatible throughout. The key difference between casual AI use and professional AI use is not the app. It's the workflow. Over 3 sessions using aidowith.me, most professionals build a mobile-first AI workflow that saves 5 or more hours per week on recurring tasks like communication, status reporting, and meeting preparation.

Last updated: April 2026

The Problem and the Fix

Without a route

  • Android AI apps get recommended but nobody explains whether they work for real professional tasks or just demos.
  • You switch between phone and desktop constantly because no one AI app covers your full workflow.
  • Voice and mobile AI tools feel gimmicky until you find the right use case.

With aidowith.me

  • ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity all have strong Android apps that handle real professional tasks on mobile.
  • The 10-step Weekly Status Update route at aidowith.me is mobile-compatible from start to finish.
  • Over 3 sessions, you build a mobile AI workflow that saves 5+ hours per week on recurring tasks.

Who Builds This With AI

Managers & Leads

Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.

Ops & Analysts

Summaries, process docs, and structured output from messy inputs.

Marketers

Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.

How It Works

1

Install your core 3 AI apps on Android

Start with ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity. All 3 are free on the Google Play Store. Set up accounts and enable notifications for quick access.

2

Find your mobile-first use cases

Voice-to-text drafting, quick research, summarizing long documents on the go - these are the tasks AI does best on mobile. The route helps you identify your top 3.

3

Build a mobile workflow for your most frequent task

Pick one recurring task you do from your phone (email responses, status updates, meeting prep). Build a prompt template for it. Run it every time. You'll save 30+ minutes per week on that task alone.

Build Your Mobile AI Workflow

The Weekly Status Update route at aidowith.me is 10 steps you can run from your Android device. Build a real work AI workflow starting today.

Start This Route →

What You Walk Away With

Install your core 3 AI apps on Android

Find your mobile-first use cases

Build a mobile workflow for your most frequent task

Over 3 sessions, you build a mobile AI workflow that saves 5+ hours per week on recurring tasks.

"I draft my weekly update on my Android commute. ChatGPT on mobile plus my prompt template takes 20 minutes instead of an hour."
- Product Owner, tech company

Questions

ChatGPT (by OpenAI) and Claude (by Anthropic) are the best general-purpose AI apps for Android. Both have solid mobile interfaces and handle drafting, analysis, and research well. Perplexity is best for research with sourced answers. Otter AI is the best Android app for meeting transcription. All are available free on the Google Play Store.

Most AI apps (ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity) require internet connectivity to generate responses - they process on the server, not your phone. Otter AI has some offline transcription capability. For offline use, local AI models like Ollama (desktop only) or LM Studio are options, but they require more setup and aren't yet practical on Android.

ChatGPT and Claude mobile apps have the same model capabilities as desktop. The main difference is input - typing long prompts or uploading files is easier on desktop. Voice input on Android works well for quick prompts. For complex tasks like data analysis or document editing, desktop is more practical.