flat.social

How to Set Up a Google Meet: Step-by-Step for Every Device

Create meetings on desktop, mobile, and iPad. Learn how to generate links in advance, invite participants, and configure your settings before anyone joins.

By Flat Team·

This is an independent guide. Not affiliated with or endorsed by Google LLC.

You need to set up a Google Meet in the next five minutes. Maybe your manager just pinged you about a surprise client call, or your study group needs a last-minute video session before tomorrow's exam. You open your browser, stare at meet.google.com, and wonder: do I need a Google account? Can I send a link ahead of time? What about my phone?

Setting up a Google Meet takes under a minute once you know where everything is. The catch: Google spreads the setup process across Google Calendar, Gmail, the Meet app, and the web. Depending on your device, the steps look different.

This guide walks you through how to set up a Google Meet on desktop, iPhone, iPad, and Android. You'll learn how to create meeting links in advance, invite people, adjust your audio and video settings, and pick the right Google Workspace plan for your needs.

What is Google Meet?

Google Meet is a video conferencing service from Google that lets you host and join video calls from your browser, the Google Meet app, or through Gmail and Google Calendar. Free Google accounts can host meetings with up to 100 participants for 60 minutes. Paid Google Workspace plans extend time limits and add features like recording, breakout rooms, and noise cancellation.

How to Set Up a Google Meet on Desktop

The fastest way to start a Google Meet is through your browser. You don't need to download anything. Google Meet runs in Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari.

How to Set Up a Google Meet from Your Browser

Follow these steps to create a Google Meet on your computer using any modern browser.

  1. 1
    Go to meet.google.com

    Open your browser and navigate to [meet.google.com](https://meet.google.com). Sign in with your Google account if you're not already logged in.

  2. 2
    Click "New meeting"

    On the Meet homepage, click the "New meeting" button. You'll see three options: create a meeting for later, start an instant meeting, or schedule in Google Calendar.

  3. 3
    Choose your meeting type

    Select "Start an instant meeting" to jump in right away. Select "Create a meeting for later" to generate a link you can share before the call. Select "Schedule in Google Calendar" to set a date, time, and invite participants through a calendar event.

  4. 4
    Allow camera and microphone access

    Your browser will ask for permission to use your camera and microphone. Click "Allow." You'll see a preview of your video. Toggle your camera or mic off if you prefer to join muted.

  5. 5
    Share the meeting link

    Copy the meeting link from the screen or from the "i" (meeting details) icon in the bottom-left corner. Send this link to your participants via email, chat, or any messaging app.

Picture this: Priya from product management gets a message at 2:55 PM that the design review starts at 3:00. She opens a new tab, goes to meet.google.com, clicks "Start an instant meeting," and copies the link into her team's Slack channel. Everyone joins within 30 seconds. No downloads, no calendar event, no fuss.

You can also start a Google Meet directly from Gmail by clicking the Meet icon in the left sidebar, or from Google Calendar by creating a new event and clicking "Add Google Meet video conferencing." Both methods generate the same type of meeting link.

If your Google Meet camera isn't working, check your browser permissions before the meeting starts. A quick permissions check saves you from the awkward "can anyone see me?" moment.

Want Meetings That Feel Like Real Conversations?

Grid-based video calls can feel stiff. Flat.social gives your team a virtual space to walk around and talk naturally with spatial audio.

What Is Flat.social?

A virtual space where you move, talk, and meet — not just stare at a grid of faces

Walk closer to hear someone, step away to leave the conversation

Try It Free

How to Create a Google Meet Link in Advance

You don't have to start a meeting immediately. Google Meet lets you generate a reusable link that participants can join at any time.

Method 1: From meet.google.com

  1. Go to meet.google.com
  2. Click "New meeting"
  3. Select "Create a meeting for later"
  4. Copy the link that appears (it looks like meet.google.com/abc-defg-hij)
  5. Share the link whenever you're ready

This link doesn't expire after one use. You and your participants can reuse it for recurring calls. However, only the original creator (or a Google Workspace admin) controls who can enter without being admitted.

Method 2: From Google Calendar

  1. Open Google Calendar
  2. Click the "+" or an empty time slot to create a new event
  3. Click "Add Google Meet video conferencing"
  4. Add participants by entering their email addresses
  5. Save the event

Calendar automatically sends invites with the meeting link to everyone you added. Participants get the link in their email and on their calendar.

For a deeper walkthrough on link creation, see our guide on how to create a Google Meet link.

How to Set Up a Google Meet on Phone

The Google Meet app is available for both iPhone and Android. You can download it from the App Store or Google Play Store.

Starting a meeting on the Google Meet app:

  1. Open the Google Meet app
  2. Tap "New meeting"
  3. Choose "Get a meeting link to share," "Start an instant meeting," or "Schedule in Google Calendar"
  4. For an instant meeting, tap "Start an instant meeting" and allow camera/mic access
  5. Tap the copy icon to share the meeting link with participants

Joining a meeting on your phone:

  1. Open the Google Meet app or tap a meeting link someone shared with you
  2. If using the app, tap "Join with a code" and enter the meeting code (the abc-defg-hij part of the link)
  3. Tap "Join" after previewing your video

David's team does daily standups at 9 AM. He commutes by train, so he joins from his phone every morning. He opens the Google Meet app, taps the recurring meeting from his recent list, mutes his mic until it's his turn, and he's in. Total setup time: about 10 seconds.

On Android, you can also start a Google Meet directly from the Google app or from Gmail's mobile app. On iPhone, the Gmail app and Google Calendar app both support starting Meet calls.

Tired of the Same Video Grid?

Flat.social replaces the static video grid with a 2D space where your team moves around freely. Walk up to someone to chat, step away when you're done.

How to Set Up a Google Meet on iPad

Google Meet works on iPad through the Google Meet app (same app as iPhone) or through Safari.

Using the Google Meet app on iPad:

  1. Download the Google Meet app from the App Store if you haven't already
  2. Open the app and sign in with your Google account
  3. Tap "New meeting" and choose to start instantly, create a link for later, or schedule via Calendar
  4. Allow camera and microphone permissions when prompted
  5. Share the link with participants

Using Safari on iPad:

  1. Open Safari and go to meet.google.com
  2. Sign in with your Google account
  3. Click "New meeting" and follow the same steps as on desktop

The iPad app gives you the same features as the phone app, but with a layout optimized for the larger screen. You'll see more participants in the grid view and have easier access to the chat and participant panels.

If you want to customize how you look on camera, check out our Google Meet virtual backgrounds guide or try the free Google Meet background creator.

How to Set Up a Google Meet and Invite People

Once your meeting is created, you have several ways to bring people in.

During the meeting:

  • Click the "People" icon in the bottom toolbar
  • Click "Add people"
  • Type email addresses and click "Send invite" to notify them by email
  • Or copy the meeting link and share it through any channel you prefer

Before the meeting (via Calendar):

  • When scheduling the event in Google Calendar, add guests in the "Add guests" field
  • Each guest receives an email invitation with the meeting link and a calendar entry
  • Guests can RSVP directly from the invite

Adjusting meeting settings before you join:

  • On the preview screen (before clicking "Join now"), you can toggle your camera and microphone
  • Click the three-dot menu for audio/video settings: choose your speaker, microphone, and camera source
  • Enable captions by clicking the "CC" icon once you're in the meeting

Host controls (Google Workspace users):

  • Click the lock icon or "Host controls" to manage who can share their screen, send chat messages, or turn on their mic
  • Enable "Quick access" to let people from your organization join without knocking
  • Turn off "Quick access" to require everyone to be admitted by a host

These host controls are available on paid Google Workspace plans. Free accounts have more limited host options.

For tips on looking your best on video calls, check our guide on looking good on video calls. And if you want to blur your background on Google Meet, that's a quick toggle in the visual effects menu.

Google Meet: Free vs. Paid Plans

Google Meet is free for anyone with a Google account, but paid Google Workspace plans unlock extra features.

Google Meet (Free with a Google account):

  • Up to 100 participants
  • 60-minute time limit for meetings with 3 or more people (1:1 calls have no limit)
  • Screen sharing, real-time captions, and virtual backgrounds
  • No meeting recording
  • No breakout rooms

Google Workspace plans add features like meeting recording (saved to Google Drive), breakout rooms, noise cancellation, polls, Q&A, attendance tracking, and longer meeting durations. See Google Workspace pricing for current plan details and rates.

For most personal calls, the free plan covers everything you need. If your team records meetings regularly or needs breakout rooms for workshops, a Workspace plan is worth evaluating.

Wondering how Google Meet stacks up against other platforms? Our Google Meet vs. Zoom comparison breaks down the differences.

Troubleshooting Common Google Meet Setup Issues

If something goes wrong while setting up your Google Meet, here are the most common problems and fixes.

1. Camera or microphone not working. Your browser might be blocking access. Click the lock icon in the address bar and make sure both camera and microphone are set to "Allow." If you're using the app, check your device settings under Privacy > Camera and Privacy > Microphone.

2. "You can't create a meeting" error. This usually means your Google Workspace admin has restricted Google Meet for your organization. Contact your IT admin to check if Meet is enabled for your account.

3. Participants can't join. If guests see "Asking to join" and nobody admits them, check your host controls. "Quick access" may be turned off, meaning every participant needs manual approval. As the host, you'll see a notification to admit them.

4. No audio after joining. Make sure you selected the correct speaker and microphone in the audio settings (three-dot menu > Settings > Audio). Also check that your system volume isn't muted and that no other app is using the microphone.

5. Meeting link doesn't work. Double-check the URL format. Google Meet links follow the pattern meet.google.com/abc-defg-hij. If someone shared a partial link or added extra characters, it won't work. Create a fresh link from meet.google.com.

6. Poor video quality. Close other tabs and apps that use bandwidth. Switch to a wired internet connection if possible. In the three-dot menu, go to Settings > Video and lower the send/receive resolution to save bandwidth.

Frequently Asked Questions

Google, Google Meet, Google Calendar, Google Workspace, Gmail, and Google Drive are trademarks of Google LLC. This site is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Google LLC.

Explore More Use Cases

Try a Different Kind of Meeting

Create a free Flat.social space and see what meetings feel like when people can actually move around.