Michael Anderson
Former journalist turned tech writer with a passion for helping professionals enhance productivity through AI.
Introduction
Got a Google Slides presentation you want to run on its own? Auto-advance is a super useful trick that makes your slides flip automatically. It’s awesome for stuff like digital displays, self-paced tutorials, or announcements that need to keep going without you clicking anything. Here’s a quick, easy guide to set it up with Google Slides’ “Publish to the web” feature.
Why Use Auto-Advance?
Auto-advance makes your shared presentations run smoothly without needing someone to click through them. It’s great for:
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Showing info on screens at events or stores.
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Creating lessons people can watch on their own.
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Running updates that loop all day.
With just a few steps, your presentation can play by itself and even start over when it’s done.
How to Set It Up
Follow these easy steps to make your Google Slides auto-advanced:
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Open your presentation in Google Slides on your computer.
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Click File at the top, then select Share and choose Publish to the web from the menu. A window will pop up.
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Stay on the “Link” tab, and tick the box that says “Start slideshow as soon as the player loads.” This makes it play right when someone opens it.
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Pick a time for “Auto-advance slides“—like 3 or 5 seconds. This decides how long each slide shows before moving to the next one.
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Want it to repeat? Check “Restart the slideshow after the last slide” so it loops back to the start.
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Hit “Publish” to get a link. Copy that link and send it to whoever needs it.
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Try it out by opening the link in a new tab. Watch to see if it starts and moves through the slides like you planned.
Tip: Choose a time that gives people enough chance to read each slide. For quick stuff, 3-5 seconds works. For more details, try 7-10 seconds.
Making It Even Better
You can tweak a few things to improve your presentation:
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Add sound: Put in background music or voice recordings if you like. Just match the sound length to your slide times.
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Check the timing: Test it to make sure people can read everything before it moves on.
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Use videos smartly: If you add videos, set them to play on their own and give the slide enough time to finish.
Fixing Problems
If something’s not working, try these:
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Slides won’t move? Make sure you set the auto-advance time in the publish settings.
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Not looping? Check that you ticked the restart box before publishing.
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Timing seems wrong? Open the link on another device or browser to see if it’s smoother.
Conclusion
Setting up auto-advance in Google Slides is quick and makes your shared presentations look polished. It’s an easy way to let your slides run hands-free for any audience. Try it out next time you’re sharing something online—it’s simpler than you think!
FAQs: Auto-Play & Loop Google Slides Made Simple
Got questions? We’ve got answers. Here’s what readers like you usually ask about hands-free Google Slides:
Q1: Can I auto-play slides without publishing them to the web?
Absolutely! Use Method 1 (Slideshow → Auto-advance) for live presentations. But heads up: it won’t loop automatically unless you manually restart the slideshow. For endless looping (like digital signage), stick with Publish to the web.
Q2: My slides move too fast! How do I adjust timings?
Easy fix:
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Go back to your published link settings.
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Increase the “Auto-advance slides” duration (try adding 2-3 seconds).
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Republish and test the new link. Pro tip: Time one slide with a stopwatch while reading it aloud—your audience’s pace matters!
Q3: Can I set different timings for specific slides?
Sort of. The Publish to the web method uses one timing for all slides. But if you’re presenting live:
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In Slideshow mode, click Tools → Speaker notes
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Use “Auto-advance” to set custom timings per slide.
Q4: Why isn’t my slideshow looping?
Double-check these:
✅ The “Restart slideshow after last slide” box is ticked
✅ You’re using the published link (not the regular Slides URL)
✅ No typos in the shared link If it still won’t loop, republish the slides—sometimes settings need a refresh.
Q5: Does this work on phones/tablets?
Yes—if your viewers open the published link in a browser (Chrome works best). But fair warning: timings might feel slightly slower on mobile devices. Test it on multiple screens!
Q6: Can I add music that plays through the whole slideshow?
You bet! Upload an MP3 to Google Drive, insert it on your first slide, then:
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Right-click the audio icon → Format options
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Check Play across slides and Hide icon when presenting Bonus: Match the audio length to your total slideshow time (e.g., 3-minute song for 20 slides at 9s each).
Q7: My videos won’t auto-play. Help!
Two things to try:
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In video Format options, select Autoplay when presenting
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Make sure your slide’s auto-advance time is longer than the video length Still stuck? Convert the video to a GIF—it’ll play instantly!
Q8: Will editing my slides break the published link?
Nope! BUT viewers will only see updates after you:
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Make changes → Go to File → Publish to the web
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Click Stop publishing → Publish again
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Share the same link (it stays constant).
Q9: Why does my slideshow look blurry when published?
Google compresses images slightly. Fix this by:
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Using PNGs instead of JPEGs
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Keeping image sizes under 2MB
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Avoiding ultra-HD photos (1080p is plenty).
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