Of course, you could go through them, bookmarking what you need to and discarding the rest. But, there’s a faster, simpler way that lets you hang on to all of your precious tabs while categorizing them into easy-to-use groups. Best of all, it’s built right into Chrome. Let us show you how to use Chrome’s tab groups to get your hoard of browser tabs organized once and for all.
How to use tab groups in Google Chrome
Materials needed: Any PC (Windows or macOS) or Chromebook running a recent version of the Google Chrome browser
Estimated time: 1-10 minutes (depending on how many tabs you’re organizing)How-to video
Step 1: Start creating your first group
To get started, you’ll need to create you first tab group. It’s simple to do. Just go to any open tab that you’d like to include in the new group and right-click or two-finger click–depending on if you’re using a mouse, or trackpad, and if you’re on Windows, macOS, or Chrome OS. Once you’ve done this, look for the Add tab to new group option (highlighted in the red box above).
Step 2: Name and customize your group
Once you click Add tab to new group the dialogue box seen above will pop up. First, you’ll want to name your group. Choose something representative of what you’ll keep in it, like “Work” for your remote working tabs, “Shopping” for your holiday gift research, or “Entertainment” for your favorite streaming sites. Once you’ve chosen a name and typed it in, you can also choose a color for the group. These are very helpful in quickly finding and identifying tab groups in your peripheral vision, especially if you’re consistent with which color you associate with which types of group (red for Work and blue for Entertainment, for instance).
Step 3: Add more tabs to existing groups, or create new ones
Once you’ve created at least one group, you can begin to organize your tabs. When you’re ready to start organizing, find the next tab you’d like to group and right-click it. You’ll see a new option named Add tab to group, with a sub-menu that pops out. Within this sub-menu, you can either add that to any of your existing groups, or create a new group with it as the first tab. Alternately, you can simply grab a tab with your mouse and drag it into the group by dropping it among the group’s existing tabs. Creating any subsequent groups you’d like works just like the process explained in Step 2.
Final step: Review and organize your tab groups
Once you’ve got any tabs you’d like to group organized into their respective categories, you’re pretty much done. But, there are a few things you should know to get the most out of tab groups:
Collapsing and expanding groups - You’ll notice each tab in an open group will have the color-coded shade from that group wrapped around its tab (if active) or beneath it (if hidden). You can collapse or expand groups by simply left-clicking on them. Collapsing groups you’re not currently using is a great way to save space on your tab bar, letting your expanded group and non-grouped tabs remain large enough to easily read. Moving groups - Tab groups behave very similarly to individual tabs for the purposes of moving them around within their current window, or dragging them to a new window. You can do either by simply left-clicking, dragging, and dropping the group into the position you’d like in your current window, or another available Chrome window. You can’t, however, place one group within another group.Removing tabs from groups and ungrouping - Any time you right-click on a tab that’s already in a group, you’ll see an option named Remove tab from group. This is a quick and easy way to ungroup any tab you’d like to keep, but no longer want grouped. You can also right-click on a group and click Ungroup which will eliminate the group itself, but keep all of its included tabs.A note about pinning tabs - The option to pin tabs in Chrome is another organization trick some of you may enjoy using. However, you should know you cannot include pinned tabs in groups. Pinning any tab that’s already grouped will remove it from its group. In the same vein, grouping an already pinned tab will unpin it and add it to the group you chose.
It removes the close button from the tab itself, making it harder to accidentally close the tab without realizing it. Pinning a tab keeps it visible at all times (without being hidden within a collapsed group), making it easy to quickly access with one click, if you use it very frequently.Pinned tabs will always persist until individually closed, even if you manually quit Chrome and re-open it or the browser crashes.
Just think of tab groups and pinned tabs as two tools in your organizational arsenal with similar purposes but different characteristics.
Microsoft Edge and Brave - Since both of these browsers are also based on Chromium, like Google Chrome, the interface for grouping tabs within them is essentially identical. Safari - Apple’s first-party browser supports persistent tab groups that can be organized in almost exactly the same way as those in Chrome. Opera - Opera has a similar feature called Opera Workspaces that organizes your tabs much like Chrome’s tab groups.Firefox - Firefox does not currently have a built-in tab grouping functionality, but third-party add-ons are available that add the ability to group tabs to the browser.