Highlight a tab or an extension and click the End Process to kill any egregious resource hog and reclaim some CPU and memory overhead. The small Task Manager window shows fluctuating percentages for each open tab and extension you have running in terms of CPU and memory usage. To open Chrome's Task Manager, click the triple-dot Menu button in the top right and go to More Tools > Task Manager. It also shows how much Chrome uses as a whole, as well as as any extensions you have running.
Before you start closing tabs all willy-nilly, take a look at Chrome's built-in task manager to see which tabs are using the most CPU and memory resources. The more tabs and extensions you have running in Chrome, the more resources it consumes. Identify and eradicate offending tabs and extensions With Chrome updated, here are three ways to improve the browser's performance. If you aren't using the most recent version of Chrome, you can update Chrome on this page. On a Mac, you can also click Chrome in the menu bar and then click About Google Chrome. You can do so by entering chrome://help/ in Chrome's URL bar or by clicking the Menu button (the icon with the three vertical dots) to the right of Chrome's URL bar and then clicking Help > About Google Chrome. Still, you can improve Chrome 57's performance further.īut, first, to check to see which version of Chrome you are running, open Chrome's settings. With past versions of Chrome, such careless opening of new tabs was detrimental to my MacBook Pro's battery and overall performance. Since updating to version 57 of Chrome, I have found I can let my open tabs grow to obscene numbers without it killing my MacBook Pro's battery life and slowing performance. It achieves this efficiency by a new mechanism for throttling background tabs so they consume less power. With Chrome 57, Google's browser is less of a resource hog than it has been in the past.