Warning: Experimental features ahead! By enabling these features, you could lose browser data or compromise your security or privacy. Enabled features apply to all users of this browser. If you are an enterprise admin you should not be using these flags in production.
Interested in cool new Chrome features? Read our blogs.Experimental feature, which offers automatic password change to the user when they sign in with a credential known to be leaked. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS
Will pop up the leaked check dialog on every password form submission. This should be used in combination with #improved-password-change-service to better test the improved password change service – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS
When enabled, keeps account preferences, themes and search-engines separate from the local data. If the user signs out or sync is turned off, only the account data is removed while the pre-existing/local data is left behind. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS
When enabled, Chrome will extract the checkout amount from the checkout page of the allowlisted merchant websites. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS
When enabled, allows Chrome to dynamically fix the AXTree of sites. This is experimental and may cause breaking changes to users of assistive technology. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS
Enables the API for getting a unique token of the system clipboard's current state. For details, see https://github.com/explainers-by-googlers/clipboard-contents-id – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, Android
When enabled, Chrome will have the ability to load and query the allowlist for checkout amount extraction, which will be used to check if the current URL is eligible for products that use the checkout amount extraction algorithm. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS
If enabled, DevTools will try to fetch project settings in the form of a `com.chrome.devtools.json` file from a well-known URI on local debugging targets. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS
Enables the CSS Value Tracing UI in the elements panel. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS