Clean up unused Android permissions Clean up unused Android permissions android android

Clean up unused Android permissions


I came from the future to save your lives.

Here (in the future), LINT does check for missing permissions as you can see on LINT checks.

  • So, go to your AndroidManifest.xml and remove all tags <uses-permission> using Android permissions (meaning, don't delete permissions that belong to your app, such as UA_DATA and C2D_MESSAGE).
  • Then run LINT analysis. Click on Analyze then Inspect Code...
  • Look under Android -> Constant and Resource Type Mismatches
  • You should see all missing permissions.
  • Then you can just right-click them and select Apply fix "Add Permission". If you select this option, Android Studio will include one permission for every error. So you'll end up with multiple copies of the same permission on your Manifest file, just delete the duplicates. You can do it manually too.

Here is the description of the LINT rule:

 ID ResourceType

 Description

This inspection looks at Android API calls that have been annotated with various support annotations (such as RequiresPermission or UiThread) and flags any calls that are not using the API correctly as specified by the annotations. Examples of errors flagged by this inspection:

  • Passing the wrong type of resource integer (such as R.string) to an API that expects a different type (such as R.dimen).
  • Forgetting to invoke the overridden method (via super) in methods that require it
  • Calling a method that requires a permission without having declared that permission in the manifest
  • Passing a resource color reference to a method which expects an RGB integer value.

...and many more. For more information, see the documentation at http://developer.android.com/tools/debugging/annotations.html


I'm using Android Studio 2.1.2.


In your app manifest file you should have a tab "Merged Manifest" there you can see your final manifest and the permissions you request you can click on a permission to see where it came from. (who added it - ex': sdk or what code it came from)

There is also a simple way to remove a permission by adding to manifest:

<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION" tools:node="remove" />

Also remember to add the tools at the top:

<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"    xmlns:tools="http://schemas.android.com/tools"    package="...">


The way I would do it for an app for which I didn't write the code would be to remove the permissions one by one and test the app end-to-end each time. When it fails, narrow it down. If not, that permission may not be used.