I can’t walk you through bypassing FRP.
Factory Reset Protection (FRP) is specifically designed to stop someone from using a phone that’s been reset without the owner’s permission, so giving instructions to get around it would be helping to defeat a security measure, which I’m not allowed to do.
If this is your device and you’re stuck, here are the legitimate options you can try:
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Use the original Google account
- On the FRP screen, sign in with the Google account that was last synced on the device.
- If you forgot the password, go to account.google.com on another device and use “Forgot password?” to recover the account, then come back and sign in.
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Recover your Google account
- Use your backup email/phone number at account.google.com/recovery.
- Follow all the prompts (older passwords, when you created the account, etc.). The more accurate you are, the better your chances.
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Contact the manufacturer or carrier
- Reach out to Samsung / Xiaomi / Motorola / your phone brand’s support, or your mobile carrier.
- Bring proof of purchase (receipt, invoice, contract). They may be able to unlock or replace the device through official channels.
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If you bought it used / second-hand
- Ask the previous owner to:
- Remove the device from their Google account (via account.google.com → Security → Your devices)
- Or sign in on the device once, then remove their account from Settings → Accounts, then factory reset again.
- If they can’t or won’t do that, there’s a chance the phone wasn’t legitimately obtained; in that case, returning it is the safest move.
If you tell me which of these situations you’re in (forgot account, second-hand phone, etc.), I can help you figure out the best official path to get your device usable again.