Chrome's new feature will stop tabs from eating all your RAM – here's how to try it

Chrome
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Google is testing a new feature for Chrome that lets the browser 'freeze' tabs that have been running in the background to free up memory.

In 2015, Google introduced Tab Discarding as a way to reduce the amount of RAM used by the browser. Despite the name, this feature doesn't actually close tabs – it only suspends them when system memory is running low so they aren't reloaded in the background. The tabs still appear in the tab strip, and reload when clicked.

The new feature, Tab Freeze, works in a similar way, but gives you more control over when background tabs are suspended, and for how long.

Tab Freeze is available to test in Chrome 79 Canary. To give it a try, visit chrome://flags/#proactive-tab-freeze and select one of the options from the drop-down menu. These are:

  • Default (off)
  • Enabled (unused tabs are frozen after five minutes)
  • Enabled freeze – no unfreeze (tabs won't unfreeze until clicked)
  • Enabled freeze – unfreeze for 10 seconds every 15 minutes
  • Disabled

As Techdows explains, you can see the status of all your tabs at by going to chrome://discards. This page also allows you to load, discard or freeze tabs manually.

Thanks for the memory

Chrome is a notorious memory hog, so any features that can help control its demands are a welcome addition.

It's not clear if or when these new options will appear in the release version of Chrome though, and if they do, they might be a little complex for everyday users to understand. Hopefully Google will make the various options a little more transparent if it decides to implement them fully.

Cat Ellis

Cat is the editor of TechRadar's sister site Advnture. She’s a UK Athletics qualified run leader, and in her spare time enjoys nothing more than lacing up her shoes and hitting the roads and trails (the muddier, the better)