There are many ways to Control Volume on Google Home Mini. These depend on the app(s) you’re playing from mostly. But the Mini itself has two touch pads for controlling volume on its edges as well. Plus, you may control the volume with the Google Home app. Finally, the Mini also controls loudness through voice commands to the Google assistant.
Below, we show these basic ways, which you can do no matter the app you’re streaming from. But we do not explore any app-specific volume controlling of the output device. This is so because with so many apps that send audio, this article would fast grow too large. So, we stick here with the basic volume controlling means here.
You can control the volume without using any apps as follows.
Firstly, see the right way to sit the Mini Google Home next.
Touch the left edge of the speaker (nine o’clock) to lower the volume one increment. You can also tap the right edge of the speaker (three o’clock) to raise the volume one notch.
The next pic shows the locations of the volume control touch pad regions. Find them in the same straight line formed by the four activity lights.
If you need finer volume controlling, then use the Google Home app to set speaker volume. Discussed below.
Google Home understands two scales for volume adjustment: 0-10 and 0-100 percent. If you want to say a percent to control the volume, then add the word ‘percent’ to your request. Example commands follow.
If you say the percent label, then 0 means lowest volume (muted) and 100 means max (full) volume. But if you omit the percent label, then the volume control range is between 0 and 10.
There are also shortcut commands for minimum and maximum volume setting, as in:
In the Google Home app, which must have Wi-Fi access to your speaker, you can control the speaker volume. How? By finding your speaker in the available Google devices list in the app. Then, move the volume control there left and right, until you hit the loudness you want.
Note that you can’t control speaker volume unless it is actually streaming / playing something. That is, you won’t see the volume control in the Google Home app unless streaming is in progress.
To adjust the volume from within the Google Home app, follow the procedure listed next.
on your mobile device. You should see its Home screen, as shown next.
Find the hamburger pointed at by the purple arrow in the last photo.
This then brings up the Main Menu, as shown next.
See this, pointed to by the purple arrow in the last picture.
You then see the Devices screen, as seen in the picture shown in the next step.
See this as shown next.
The speaker is currently streaming when you see a small speaker icon (volume controlling link). Find this in the lower right edge of its device card, as pointed at by the purple arrow.
But this button does not show when not streaming. Thus, you cannot control the volume like this, when the Mini is playing nothing. So, be sure to start an audio stream to your Mini before setting volume as is done here.
See the speaker volume button in the last picture.
Tapping it then brings up the volume control screen, as pictured next.
Drag these left and right around the circle, until you hear your preferred volume.
The slider volume control here provides more granular control than the touch pads on the Mini itself. That is, you can raise and lower the volume in much smaller increments. This is much finer than the ten-percent jumps up and down that you get when tapping the Mini touch pads.
Note that moving this onscreen volume control around takes effect right away. No need to press any Submit buttons to force the new setting into effect.
If using your Mini as a Bluetooth speaker, you can control volume with the adjustments on the paired device. Now in this demo, we’re playing YouTube content on our iPad Air, and streaming to the Mini via a Bluetooth connection.
See our post here, that demonstrates how to pair.
These sources include internet radio stations, a song from Spotify, or an Audible book. In this scenario, we stream YouTube audio to our Google Home Mini, as shown next.
See this shown next.
Note the purple arrowed volume control square with a speaker inside of it in the last picture.
Also note that the volume change you hear is behind by a second or so. Why? Because of the delay (latency) of the commands going across the Bluetooth airwaves.
Finally, you can cast to the Google Home devices like the Mini too. Similar to Bluetooth, but done over Wi-Fi instead. Yet like in this Bluetooth example, you can usually change the volume of the speaker. How? By adjusting it in the app that’s doing the Chromecasting.
But a, we don’t cover here controlling volume in individual apps. So, we leave this task as an exercise for the reader to discern.
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