When I’m deep in research, I usually have twenty tabs open. After a while, the favicons disappear and Chrome leaves me with a row of anonymous gray slivers. This was my daily frustration with Chrome for years. Whether I was working on a 32-inch Windows desktop or trying to stay productive on a 14-inch MacBook Pro, the horizontal tab bar remained the ultimate bottleneck.
Although I’m a big fan of Chrome, I was considering switching to a different browser simply because it doesn’t offer vertical tabs. And I found this hidden setting, and it changed everything.
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I prefer Google Chrome
For obvious reasons
You might ask why I didn’t simply choose another web browser with vertical tabs. I tried. I looked at Edge and Brave, both of which have had vertical tabs baked into their DNA for a while now.
But every time I drifted away, I found myself pulled back to Chrome for obvious reasons. There is a snappiness to Chrome that I have never quite found elsewhere.
When I’m bouncing between high-intensity tasks, I need a browser that doesn’t just keep up but stays out of the way. Chrome is that old reliable that somehow stays the fastest in the race.
I also prefer a good design. The Material You makeover in Chrome is beautiful. The way the UI colors subtly shift to match my setup creates a polished environment. It’s clean, modern, and makes looking at a screen for ten hours a day a lot more pleasant.
I loved Gemini’s tight integration in Chrome. Since it works well with all other Google services like Keep Notes, Tasks, Docs, and more, using it in my workflow has been a huge productivity booster.
Overall, I didn’t want a new browser; I just wanted my favorite browser to work better on my screens.
Enabling vertical tabs in Chrome
Takes a minute
I have been tracking this feature for a while now. I saw the early rumors that Google was finally playing with a vertical layout in the Chrome Beta and Canary builds. But as much as I wanted it, I just couldn’t bring myself to switch.
When you are in the middle of a high-stakes workday, the last thing you want is a beta browser crashing or a plugin failing right before a deadline. I just needed that stable, reliable Chrome experience, and I wanted the tabs on the side.
The moment I found out, I didn’t hesitate. I didn’t have to download an unstable version or jump through hoops. I typed chrome://flags into my address bar, searched for #vertical-tabs, and flipped the switch to Enabled.
After a quick relaunch, a simple right-click on the tab bar gave me the option to move all my tabs to the side. Suddenly, that cramped, horizontal strip at the top disappeared, and my browser finally felt like it belonged on my 32-inch monitor.
The workflow boost is massive
Obvious advantages
Once I made the switch, the benefits were immediate. Here is why the vertical layout is a total game-changer for my daily flow.
I used to look at my 32-inch monitor and feel like I was wasting half of what I paid for. Most websites are designed with a vertical column of content in the center, which leaves massive space on the left and right.
Meanwhile, the horizontal tab bar at the top was stealing precious vertical pixels. By moving my tabs to the side, I was finally using that dead horizontal space and reclaiming the vertical room that actually matters.
And thanks to a vertical bar, I don’t have to guess which icon is which. I can actually read the full page titles. I’m no longer hunting for a specific Google Doc by hovering over six identical blue icons.
It’s a rare ‘one-size-fits-all’ solution that actually works for both a massive workstation and a small laptop.
When I use tab groups, they don’t just combine tabs together horizontally. They create clear, labeled sections that make sense. I can collapse a whole project’s worth of tabs into a single header and keep the sidebar clean and my focus sharp.
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It’s rare that a single UI change can solve problems, but vertical tabs managed to do exactly that. It turned my 32-inch monitor into a productivity powerhouse and rescued my 14-inch laptop from the brink of total clutter.
After all, in a world of widescreen displays and infinite scrolling, that tiny horizontal strip just doesn’t cut it anymore. If you are tired of dealing with dozens of tabs, give vertical tabs a try for just 24 hours.
It might feel a little ‘wrong’ for the first twenty minutes, but once you experience the ease of reading full-page titles and reclaimed vertical space, going back to the old method is impossible.

