Skip to main content

Chrome Tab Groups are here to fix your bad tab habits. Here’s how to get it now

Google will soon make it easier for you to keep tabs of your tabs. The feature has been in testing in Chrome Beta for the last few months, and now Google will make its new tab management option available to everyone, including systems on Chrome OS, Windows, Mac, and Linux starting next week.

Dubbed Tab Groups, this new feature allows you to group together related or similar Chrome browser tabs into a group, making it easier to locate your tabs. The feature is great for those who are doing research on the internet or are working on multiple Google Docs or Sheets.

Recommended Videos

“Chrome’s stability and performance are important to us, so we’re releasing Tab Groups slowly in our upcoming version of Chrome, which begins rolling out next week,” Google said in a blog post. If you want to regain more control of Chrome to manage tab clutter, you don’t have to wait until the public release of Tab Groups. Just follow our simple instructions below to get started today.

How to get Chrome Tab Groups now

To get Chrome tabs now, you can download Google’s Chrome Beta browser if you prefer not to wait for the public release of Tab Groups. Be aware that, as with all beta software, Chrome Beta may come with its own set of bugs and kinks.

1. Download Google Chrome

Visit Google’s Chrome Beta page to download and install the beta browser release on your operating system of choice. You’ll want to make sure you have installed Chrome Beta version 81.

2. Start browsing

Launch the new Chrome Beta browser that you have installed, and browse as you normally would. Start opening tabs as part of your workflow.

3. Start grouping

Google Chrome Tab groups

To start grouping similar or related tabs together, right-click on the tab you want to group, and select Add to new group from the contextual menu. Once you do this, you’ll see a gray outline surrounding the top of that tab, along with a gray circle to the left of that tab.

Left-click on the bubble. A menu will pop up that allow you to name the Tab Group and change the default group color.

4. Add to the group

To add more tabs to the new Tab Group you created, right-click on additional tabs you want, and choose the option to Add to existing group. Then select the Tab Group you want.

5. Reorder your groups

Similar to how you can reorder tabs around by dragging on them, you can do the same with Tab Groups. Click and hold on the Tab Group, and drag them around on the tab bar at the top of your Chrome Beta browser window to reorder and rearrange tabs as you wish.

6. Leave a group

If you need to remove a tab from a Tab Group, right-click on the tab that’s part of that group and select Remove from group.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
These Chrome extensions will put cash-saving coupons right in your browser
Woman shopping online for best Early Prime Day Deals

You can save time and money this holiday season with just a few clicks, and you don't have to hunt for those coupon codes on your own anymore, either.

If you know you're going to do your holiday shopping online this year via your Chrome browser, why not let a coupon code browser extension help you out? If you need help choosing one for yourself, read on to see our picks for the best Chrome extensions for holiday shopping coupons.
Rakuten

Read more
Half of Google Chrome extensions may be collecting your personal data
Google Chrome icon in mac dock.

Data risk management company Incogni has found that half of every installed Google Chrome extension has a high to very high risk of collecting personal data, showing a strong correlation to the number of permissions given.

After analyzing 1,237 Chrome extensions found in the Chrome Web Store, a study by Incogni has uncovered some troubling findings. Nearly half (48.7%) of the extensions were found to potentially expose users' personally identifiable information (PII), distribute malware and adware, and record passwords and financial information.

Read more
This Chrome extension lets hackers remotely seize your PC
A depiction of a hacker breaking into a system via the use of code.

Malicious extensions on Google Chrome are being used by hackers remotely in an effort to steal sensitive information.

As reported by Bleeping Computer, a new Chrome browser botnet titled 'Cloud9' is also capable of logging keystrokes, as well as distributing ads and malicious code.

Read more