How to Change Default Notification Settings in Google Calendar
Direct answer: Open Google Calendar settings, select the calendar you want to configure, and set your preferred notification timing under “Other notifications” or “Event notifications.” You can set separate defaults for timed events and all-day events. This takes about 60 seconds per calendar, and the steps differ slightly between web, Android, and iOS.
One important detail upfront: default notification settings only apply to new events you create after changing them. Existing events keep whatever notification was set when they were created. If you need to fix notifications on events that already exist, you’ll need to edit those individually.
Quick-start: Change defaults on web (most common)
Direct answer: Most people manage Google Calendar from a browser. Here’s the exact path.
- Open Google Calendar in your browser.
- Click the gear icon (top-right corner) and select Settings.
- In the left sidebar, find Settings for my calendars.
- Click the specific calendar you want to configure (e.g., your primary calendar).
- Click Event notifications.
- Under Notifications, you’ll see the current default. Click the time value to change it.
- Example: change “10 minutes” to “30 minutes.”
- To add a second default notification, click Add notification.
- Scroll down to All-day event notifications and set that separately.
- Changes save automatically.
That’s it for the quick answer. The rest of this guide covers Android, iOS, per-calendar overrides, and a notification strategy framework that prevents both missed meetings and alert fatigue.
Change default notifications on Android
Direct answer: Android uses the Google Calendar app’s built-in settings. The path is slightly different from the web version.
- Open the Google Calendar app.
- Tap the hamburger menu (three horizontal lines, top-left).
- Scroll down and tap Settings.
- Tap the calendar you want to configure (listed under your Google account).
- Under Notifications, tap Events.
- Set your default notification time (e.g., 10 minutes, 30 minutes).
- To add a second notification, tap Add notification (if available).
- Go back and tap All-day events to set a separate default for all-day events.
Android-specific notes
- Android defaults often start at 30 minutes. Many people prefer 10 minutes for timed events.
- If you have multiple Google accounts on your phone, each account’s calendars are listed separately. You need to configure each one.
- Android notification channels matter: if you’ve muted the Google Calendar app channel at the OS level, no default timing will help. Check Android Settings > Apps > Google Calendar > Notifications if alerts aren’t arriving.
If notifications aren’t showing at all on Android, start with our full notification troubleshooting guide.
Change default notifications on iOS (iPhone / iPad)
Direct answer: On iOS, you configure defaults through the Google Calendar app’s settings, not through Apple’s Settings app.
- Open the Google Calendar app on your iPhone or iPad.
- Tap the hamburger menu (three horizontal lines, top-left).
- Tap Settings.
- Tap the calendar you want to configure (listed under your Google account).
- Tap Notifications or Event notifications.
- Set the default notification time.
- Set a separate time for All-day events.
iOS-specific notes
- Apple’s built-in Calendar app uses a different notification system. If you use both apps, your defaults won’t sync between them.
- iOS Focus modes can suppress Google Calendar notifications entirely. If you use Focus, add the Google Calendar app to your “allowed apps” list.
- Background App Refresh must be enabled for Google Calendar. Check iOS Settings > General > Background App Refresh > Google Calendar.
If notifications are silently failing on iOS, our guide to reminders not working covers the most common iOS-specific causes.
Settings map: where to find notification settings on every platform
Direct answer: The exact path to notification defaults depends on your platform. This table maps every location.
| Platform | Path to Default Notification Settings | All-Day Events Separate? |
|---|---|---|
| Web (Chrome/Firefox/Edge) | Settings (gear icon) > Settings for my calendars > [Calendar name] > Event notifications | Yes |
| Android | Menu > Settings > [Calendar name] > Notifications > Events | Yes |
| iOS | Menu > Settings > [Calendar name] > Notifications | Yes |
| Google Workspace Admin | Admin console > Apps > Google Workspace > Calendar > Sharing settings (org-level defaults) | Varies |
| Setting | What It Controls |
|---|---|
| Event notifications | Default alert timing for new timed events |
| All-day event notifications | Default alert timing for new all-day events |
| Add notification | Adds a second (or third) default alert at a different time |
| Notification type (web only) | Desktop notifications vs. alerts (in-app pop-ups) |
Key distinction: On the web, Google Calendar also lets you choose between “Desktop notifications” (browser push notifications) and “Alerts” (pop-ups within the Calendar tab). This is a separate setting from notification timing, found under Settings > General > Notification settings. If your desktop notifications aren’t working, that toggle is the first thing to check.
All-day event defaults vs. timed event defaults
Direct answer: Google Calendar treats all-day events and timed events as two separate notification categories. You configure each one independently.
Why this matters
All-day events — birthdays, deadlines, holidays, project milestones — need a fundamentally different notification approach than timed meetings. A 10-minute reminder before an all-day event fires at 11:50 PM the night before (or whatever “start of day” your calendar uses). That’s rarely useful.
Recommended defaults
- Timed events: 10 minutes before (or 5 minutes if you’re in back-to-back meetings).
- All-day events: The morning of the event, or the day before. Google Calendar lets you set all-day event notifications in units of days, hours, or minutes. Choose “1 day before” or “on the day of the event at 9:00 AM” depending on your preference.
Common mistake
Many people set their timed-event defaults and assume all-day events inherit the same settings. They don’t. If you’re missing reminders for deadlines or birthdays, check the all-day event notification defaults specifically.
Per-calendar notification overrides
Direct answer: Each calendar in your Google Calendar can have its own default notification settings. This is one of the most useful — and most overlooked — features.
How per-calendar overrides work
When you add a calendar (your work calendar, a shared team calendar, a birthday calendar), each one gets its own notification defaults. Your primary calendar might default to 10-minute reminders. Your “Deadlines” calendar might default to 1-day reminders. Your “Birthdays” calendar might have no notifications at all.
Setting per-calendar defaults (web)
- Open Settings (gear icon).
- In the left sidebar under Settings for my calendars, click the calendar name.
- Click Event notifications.
- Set the default for that specific calendar.
- Repeat for All-day event notifications.
Setting per-calendar defaults (mobile)
On both Android and iOS:
- Open Settings from the hamburger menu.
- Each calendar is listed separately under your account.
- Tap the calendar and set its notification defaults.
Strategy: use per-calendar defaults to reduce noise
The real power here is using different calendars for different event types, each with appropriate notification timing:
- Work meetings calendar: 10-minute default
- Focus blocks calendar: No notification (you’re already aware)
- Deadlines calendar: 1 day before
- Birthdays / holidays: Morning of the event
- Shared team calendar: 30 minutes before (gives time to prepare)
This approach eliminates the “one size fits all” problem. Instead of getting the same 10-minute alert for a birthday and a client call, each event type gets the timing it actually needs.
If you’ve set per-calendar notifications and some calendars are still silent, check whether the issue is the notification setting or a deeper permissions problem. Our Chrome notification troubleshooting guide covers that in detail.
Notification strategy framework: timing by meeting type
Direct answer: The “right” default notification time depends on what the event is. A standup needs a different lead time than a focus block. Here’s a framework.
Decision rules for notification timing
Choose your notification time based on two factors: preparation needed and transition time.
- No preparation + fast transition (standup, daily sync): 2-5 minutes before
- No preparation + slow transition (walking to a conference room, switching context from deep work): 10 minutes before
- Some preparation needed (1:1 with a report, client check-in): 15-30 minutes before
- Significant preparation (board presentation, quarterly review): 1 day before + 30 minutes before
Recommended notification timing by event type
| Event Type | First Notification | Second Notification (optional) | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daily standup | 2 minutes | None | Quick context switch, no prep |
| 1:1 meeting | 10 minutes | None | Time to review notes |
| Client / external meeting | 30 minutes | 5 minutes | Prep + final reminder |
| Focus / deep work block | None | None | You set it, you know it’s there |
| All-day deadline | 1 day before | Morning of | Early warning + day-of nudge |
| All-day event (birthday, holiday) | Morning of event | None | Awareness, not urgency |
| Interview (you’re conducting) | 30 minutes | 10 minutes | Review resume + final prep |
| Team social / optional | 5 minutes | None | Low stakes, just a nudge |
How to implement this with Google Calendar
You can’t set different defaults per event type within a single calendar. But you can create multiple calendars — one per event category — and set per-calendar notification defaults as described in the section above. This is the systematic approach.
Alternatively, accept a single “good enough” default (10 minutes works for most people) and manually adjust notifications on events that need different timing.
Common mistakes with default notifications
Direct answer: Four mistakes account for most notification frustration. Here’s how to avoid each one.
Mistake 1: Duplicate alerts from overlapping systems
You set a 10-minute default in Google Calendar. Your phone’s OS also sends a notification. A Chrome extension sends another. Now you get three alerts for every event.
Fix: Choose one primary notification source. Disable the others. If you want redundancy for important meetings, make the backup intentional — not accidental.
Mistake 2: Forgetting per-calendar settings
You change your primary calendar’s defaults and assume every calendar follows suit. Then your shared team calendar, your holiday calendar, and your side-project calendar all stay on their old settings (or have no notifications at all).
Fix: After setting your primary calendar defaults, go through each calendar in Settings and configure them individually. It takes two minutes and prevents weeks of confusion.
Mistake 3: Ignoring all-day event defaults
You set 10-minute defaults for timed events. All-day events still use whatever Google’s factory default is (often a notification the evening before at a strange time). You miss a deadline because the reminder was sent at 11:50 PM.
Fix: Set all-day event defaults explicitly for every calendar. “1 day before” or “morning of the event” are both reasonable choices.
Mistake 4: Mobile and web settings out of sync
You configure perfect notification defaults on the web. Then you open the Android or iOS app and find different settings. Or you change mobile settings and wonder why your desktop experience didn’t update.
Clarification: Per-calendar notification defaults set on the web generally sync to mobile apps, since they’re stored server-side. But the notification type (desktop notifications vs. alerts) is device-specific. And if you’ve manually overridden settings on mobile, those local changes can create a mismatch.
Fix: Set defaults on the web first (it has the most complete settings UI). Then verify on mobile that the sync took effect. If anything looks different, update mobile to match.
Mistake 5: Too many default notifications
Adding three or four default notifications per event seems thorough. In practice, it creates alert fatigue. You start dismissing notifications reflexively, which defeats the purpose.
Fix: One default notification is usually enough. Add a second only if you consistently miss the first. More than two is almost never useful.
Defaults apply to new events only — what about existing events?
Direct answer: When you change default notification settings, only events created after the change pick up the new defaults. Events that already exist keep their original notification settings.
What this means in practice
If you’ve been using 30-minute defaults and switch to 10 minutes, every event already on your calendar still has a 30-minute reminder. Only new events get the 10-minute default.
How to update existing events
- Individual events: Open the event, click the notification section, change the time, save.
- Recurring events: Open the event, change the notification, and choose “All following events” or “All events in the series.” This is the fastest way to update many events at once.
- Bulk updates: Google Calendar doesn’t offer a “change all notifications” button. For large-scale changes, update recurring series first, then handle one-off events as you encounter them.
This is one of the most commonly misunderstood aspects of Google Calendar defaults. If your reminders aren’t working after changing defaults, check whether the events in question were created before the change.
Building a reliable notification system
Direct answer: Default notifications are one layer of a reliable alert system. For meetings you absolutely cannot miss, a single notification layer isn’t enough.
The problem with single-layer notifications
Browser notifications fail. Chrome gets closed. Your phone goes into Do Not Disturb. OS updates reset permissions. These aren’t rare events — they’re Tuesday.
If your entire meeting-awareness system is “Google Calendar will notify me,” you’re one browser restart away from missing a meeting.
A practical redundancy framework
Layer 1: Google Calendar defaults (what this guide covers) Set thoughtful defaults per calendar. This handles 90% of your events.
Layer 2: Mobile backup Enable Google Calendar notifications on your phone. If your desktop notification fails, your phone catches it. Make sure the Google Calendar app has notification permissions and isn’t affected by Focus/DND modes.
Layer 3: Dedicated meeting alert tool For critical meetings — client calls, interviews, presentations — a lightweight backup tool ensures you get alerted even if layers 1 and 2 fail. TimeHopper can serve as this backup layer, providing independent meeting alerts that don’t depend on browser permissions or OS notification settings.
You don’t need all three layers for every event. Daily standups are fine with layer 1 alone. But that board presentation next Thursday? Use all three.
FAQ
Will changing default notification settings affect events others have invited me to?
No. Default notification settings only apply to events you create. Events you’ve been invited to keep whatever notification you set (or Google’s default) when you accepted. You can always change the notification on an individual invited event by opening it and editing the reminder.
Can I set different default notifications for different days of the week?
No. Google Calendar doesn’t support day-of-week-based notification defaults. The workaround is the per-calendar strategy described above: create separate calendars for different event categories and set appropriate defaults on each.
Why does my all-day event notification arrive at a strange time?
Google Calendar sends all-day event notifications based on your calendar’s time zone and the notification timing you chose. If you set “10 minutes before” on an all-day event, it fires 10 minutes before midnight (the technical start of the event). Set all-day notifications in days (“1 day before”) or choose a specific time (“on the day of the event at 9:00 AM”) to avoid this.
Do notification defaults sync across devices?
Per-calendar notification defaults are stored server-side and generally sync across devices. However, the notification type (desktop notifications vs. alerts) is a per-device setting on the web version. And if you’ve manually overridden settings in the mobile app, those local overrides take priority.
What’s the difference between “Desktop notifications” and “Alerts” in Google Calendar?
On the web version, under Settings > General > Notification settings, you can choose between:
- Desktop notifications: Push notifications delivered by your browser, even when the Calendar tab isn’t active (requires Chrome or another supported browser, and proper permissions).
- Alerts: Pop-up dialogs that appear inside the Google Calendar tab. These only work if the Calendar tab is open and active.
For most people, Desktop notifications are the better choice. Alerts are useful if you always have Calendar open in a pinned tab.
Sources
- Google Calendar Help: Change notification settings — official Google documentation on configuring Calendar notifications and defaults.