--- Google Installer For Miui 12.5.5 Android 10 Repack Site

This software is provided "as is" without any warranty. We are not responsible for any damage to your device, data loss, or bootloops. Always ensure your data is backed up before proceeding with system-level modifications.

A Google Installer is a third-party APK tool designed to automatically install the core Google Mobile Services (GMS) – including the Play Store, Google Play Services, and the Google Services Framework – onto devices that lack them.

While official methods exist (like flashing a global ROM), they often require an unlocked bootloader, which wipes your data. The Google Installer bypasses this by using system vulnerabilities or permissions granted to specific Xiaomi system apps (like the ‘Installer’ or ‘Backup’ app) to inject the Google framework.

If you are not comfortable with repacks, consider unlocking your bootloader (apply via Xiaomi’s official tool) and flashing the Xiaomi.eu ROM or Global Stable ROM. This takes 7 days of waiting but is 100% safe and provides native Google support.


Even with a repack, you may encounter issues:

| Error | Solution | | :--- | :--- | | "Google Play Services keeps stopping" | Go to Settings > Apps > Manage Apps > Google Play Services > Clear all data and uninstall updates. Run the Installer again. | | "Device is not Play Protect certified" | This is normal. Register your device’s GSF ID online at Google’s registration portal, or ignore the warning (apps still work). | | Download pending (Play Store) | Go to Settings > Accounts > Google > Remove account > Reboot > Add account again. | | Installer says "ROM incompatible" | The repack is for the wrong build. You need a specific repack for Android 10 (not 11 or 12). |


Method 1: Manual Installation (Recommended)

  • Do not open apps yet. Go to Settings > Apps > Manage Apps > Google Play Services.
  • Scroll down to Battery saver and select "No restrictions".
  • Go to Permissions and ensure "Contacts", "Phone", and "Location" are allowed.
  • Reboot the device.
  • Open Play Store and log in.
  • Method 2: MIUI Backup Method

    Originally, Xiaomi provided an official app called "Google Installer" for older MIUI versions (like MIUI 9, 10, and early 11). This app would automatically download and install the four core components required for GMS: --- Google Installer For Miui 12.5.5 Android 10 REPACK

    However, starting from MIUI 12.5 and Android 10/11, Xiaomi blocked these installers, citing performance and battery drain issues. The standard versions of Google Installer fail with errors like "Installation failed – incompatible with your device" or "App not installed."

    The REPACK version is a modified, patched APK created by third-party developers. It bypasses Xiaomi’s blocklist and forces the installation of Google services on MIUI 12.5.5 Android 10.


    When the first winds of monsoon swept over the city, Noor found the market quieter than usual. Stalls sagged under the weight of last week's rain, and the neon signs of the repair shops flickered like tired constellations. Noor's phone — a scratched, otherwise loyal companion running MIUI 12.5.5 on Android 10 — had begun coughing at dawn: notifications stalled, the camera froze for seconds at a time, and the Maps app refused to locate them more than once a week.

    He carried the phone into a shop tucked between a tea stall and a sari vendor. A hand-painted board read "Sajid — Software & Miracles." Sajid smiled like he was expecting trouble and set the phone on a cloth mat while steam rose from a samosa across the lane.

    "This device needs more than prayer," Sajid said. "It needs a fresh breath."

    Noor watched as Sajid's fingers tapped sequences on his own battered laptop. Files moved like migrating birds across the screen. "I have a repack," Sajid explained, as if the word itself were a charm. "A Google installer for this MIUI build. People call it a repack because the parts are the same, but I've stitched them together so they behave better — less bloat, fewer ghosts."

    "Is that safe?" Noor asked. The words felt clumsy in his mouth; he knew enough to be cautious. But the camera's refusal to focus on his son's drawings and the battery's sudden thirst were persuasive.

    Sajid shrugged. "Nothing is without risk. But neither is doing nothing. Tell me what you want: speed? privacy? the old widgets that wouldn't live here anymore?" He smiled. "Or perhaps both." This software is provided "as is" without any warranty

    Noor thought of the little things: voice messages that arrived a day late, a wallet app that asked for his fingerprint when he only wanted to pay for bread. "Make it steady," he said. "And keep the photos intact."

    Sajid nodded and opened a drawer. From beneath coils of cable and a stack of SIM adapters he withdrew a small USB stick wrapped in electrical tape. Its label read, in peeling ink: GOOGLE_INSTALLER_v2_REPACK. Noor felt a small thrill — both of hope and of superstition.

    "There's a sequence," Sajid warned, "and you mustn't interrupt it. No calls. No rains on the window. We back up first." He handed Noor a cup of hot tea while he worked: a minor ritual. The laptop hummed and exhaled code. Progress bars unfurled like tiny skylines.

    The repack was not elegant. It was a thing assembled from necessity: core services slimmed to essentials, permissions politely negotiated rather than demanded, frameworks re-bound so that the fingerprint unlock and the payment token could talk without shouting. As the installer moved through the phone's arteries, Noor thought of patchwork quilts stitched by his grandmother — pieces of time and use sewn into a new pattern.

    At one point, a warning flared. "Signature mismatch," the screen read. Sajid did not flinch. He typed a string too long to parse by eye and smiled, the same smile as when someone tells a story with a satisfying ending. "There are always mismatches when you rehouse things," he said. "We translate."

    A power cut darkened the room for a breath. The generator outside wheezed awake. Noor's heart stuttered. He imagined outages mid-install — files orphaned, the device rendered mute. Sajid's hands moved faster, guided by a habit the way a violinist's bow knows the next note. When the lights returned, the laptop's bar had ticked forward. The phone, once a slow, reluctant thing, glowed with a steadier light.

    "Repacked," Sajid announced. "Cleaner Google core. Less spying sirens, more cooperation between apps. And your photos — untouched."

    Noor turned the phone over as if it might now contain a different city. The gallery opened without the old lag. The camera focused on a speck of dust on the counter and captured it with a clarity that felt like a small apology. Notifications arrived, polite and prompt. The payment app whirred through the fingerprint prompt like a familiar key. Even with a repack, you may encounter issues:

    He asked no more questions about signatures, frameworks, or moral lines blurred when software was reassembled outside the neat rows of sanctioned stores. He paid Sajid in notes and a promise to bring a tray of samosas next Tuesday.

    Weeks passed. The phone became a companion again — obedient, quick, quietly efficient. Noor found himself noticing small things: an old playlist that started playing in the right order again, voice notes that no longer cut off in the middle, his son’s morning drawings appearing like fresh prints on the screen without delay.

    One night, Noor's son, Tariq, leaned over the table and asked, "Did you magic the phone, Baba?"

    Noor laughed. "Something like that."

    In the months that followed, Noor heard opinions ripple through the neighborhood. Some praised Sajid's cunning; some warned of shortcuts that might become traps later. But technology in small towns moves like weather: people learn the patterns and act accordingly. Noor found his peace not in the certainty of the repack's provenance but in how it had restored small rhythms to his life. He still backed up his photos — old habits are worth keeping — and when the phone once again asked for an update, he sat with Sajid under the neon sign, both of them sipping tea and arguing about whether "cleaner" meant "safer."

    The repack, as it turned out, was not a miracle nor a sin. It was a kind of translation — a pragmatic bridge built between what the device demanded and what its owner needed. In the end, Noor realized the heart of it was simple: the thing worked, and because it did, his son could record the sound of rain without interruption, and Noor could call his mother to say goodnight.

    And somewhere, in a drawer by Sajid's stool, another USB stick waited, labeled with a different tidy handwriting: REPACK_v3. For every small repair, there was always more repair to come — and the human work that stitched software and life together went on, quietly, kindly, imperfectly.

    ⚠️ Critical Warning
    MIUI 12.5.5 (Android 10) is often found on China ROM devices (e.g., Redmi Note 9, Redmi 9, Mi 10 Ultra).
    Do not use this on Global/EEA/India ROM – they already have Google.
    This guide is for China ROM only where Google Play is removed.