Is your laptop suddenly as slow as a snail and the fan is making a lot of noise every time you open Chrome?
Many people suggest switching to Edge or Brave. You don’t need to. You just need to change a few hidden settings.
I’ll show you how to stop Chrome from being a RAM vampire.
Here’s how:
(Save this later).
1. Why is Chrome so heavy?
Chrome separates each tab and extension into its own program.
Opening 10 tabs? It’s like opening 10 heavy applications simultaneously. Your laptop’s RAM will be eaten up instantly.
2. Turn on “Memory Saver”.
This is an official feature but one that’s often overlooked. Its function is to “sleep” tabs you’re not currently using.
This way, your RAM is forced to be freed up for active tabs only. Your laptop will breathe a sigh of relief.
Activating it is easy:
Open Chrome -> Click the three dots in the top right -> Select Settings.
Select the “Performance” menu on the left side of the screen.
Enable the “Memory Saver” toggle. Now Chrome will automatically manage your memory efficiency.
3. Enter the secret “Chrome Flags” path.
This is a developer experiment menu intentionally hidden from regular users. We’ll do a little tinkering here.
Type this in your search address bar (without spaces):
chrome://flags
Then press Enter.
In the Flags search bar that appears, type: GPU rasterization.
Change the status from “Default” to “Enabled.”
This feature forces the browser’s workload to shift from the processor (CPU) to the graphics card (GPU). Your laptop will feel much lighter when scrolling.
4. Turn off the stealth feature.
Even though Chrome is closed, it often remains running in the background to receive notifications or updates. This causes the laptop to continue heating up.
Open Chrome Settings -> Select the System menu on the left.
In the System menu, look for the option “Continue running background apps when Google Chrome is closed.”
Turn off the toggle (slide it to the left until it’s gray).
Now, when Chrome is closed, your RAM will actually be 100% freed.
5. Check the secret Task Manager.
Windows has a Task Manager, and it turns out Chrome has its own too. This is for checking which extensions are consuming the most memory.
Open Chrome, then press these keys simultaneously on your keyboard: Shift + Esc.
A list of all processes in Chrome will appear.
Click “Memory footprint” at the top to sort them by size.
If an extension (Adblock, etc.) is consuming an unreasonable amount of memory, click its name and then press “End process.”
Now close all tabs and reopen Chrome.
You’ll notice the difference. Your laptop’s fan will be quieter, and tab switching will feel faster again.
Do this on all your laptops to extend their lifespan.
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