Home / Blog / Best Tab Manager

Best Tab Manager for Chrome: 7 Extensions Tested

Key Takeaways

How We Tested

We installed each extension on a clean Chrome profile and used it as our primary tab manager for two full days. Our test scenario included 60+ open tabs organized into 5 Chrome tab groups across 2 windows. We tested each extension on four tasks: saving all tabs, restoring tabs, preserving tab group structure, and handling a simulated Chrome crash.

We also evaluated install size, permissions requested, user interface quality, and pricing. Here are our results, ranked by overall effectiveness for the typical Chrome power user.

[IMAGE: Testing Setup Overview] Screenshot of the 60+ tab test setup with 5 color-coded tab groups across a Chrome window

1. TabGroup Vault - Best for Tab Group Users

TabGroup Vault takes first place because it solves the problem Chrome still does not handle well: making tab groups permanent. One click saves all your tab groups as a snapshot, preserving group names, colors, tab order, and URLs. One click restores them exactly.

In our crash test, we force-quit Chrome and reopened it. Chrome's native session restore recovered most tabs but scrambled the tab groups. TabGroup Vault's snapshot restored everything, including two collapsed groups that Chrome had expanded incorrectly.

Pros

Cons

TabGroup Vault

Rating: 9/10
Price: Free (5 snapshots) / $29 lifetime Pro
Best for: Anyone who uses Chrome tab groups and wants them to persist reliably

2. Session Buddy - Best for Full Session Backup

Session Buddy is the most thorough session saver we tested. It captures every open window with all tabs and lets you name, search, and restore sessions. The interface shows a hierarchical view of windows and tabs that makes it easy to find specific pages.

The main limitation is that Session Buddy does not preserve Chrome tab groups. When you restore a session, all tabs come back as ungrouped tabs in the correct windows. If you spent time organizing tabs into groups, you lose that structure.

Pros

Cons

3. Workona - Best for Teams and Workspaces

Workona is the most ambitious extension on this list. It creates its own workspace system on top of Chrome, letting you organize tabs, documents, and links into named workspaces. Switching workspaces opens the right set of tabs and hides the rest.

The downside is the monthly cost and the fact that Workona runs parallel to Chrome's native tab groups rather than enhancing them. You manage tabs in two systems, which adds friction.

Pros

Cons

4. OneTab - Best for Quick Memory Savings

OneTab does one thing well: it collapses all your tabs into a single page of links, freeing up memory instantly. You can restore tabs individually or all at once. It is fast, simple, and requires no configuration.

The trade-off is that OneTab does not organize anything. It creates a flat list in the order tabs were open. Tab groups, tab positions, and any structure you had are gone. It is a memory tool, not an organizer.

Pros

Cons

5. Toby - Best for Visual Organizers

Toby replaces your new tab page with a visual dashboard. You drag tabs into named collections that appear as cards. It looks polished and works well for people who think visually about their tab organization.

Pros

Cons

6. Tab Manager Plus - Best for Tab Search

Tab Manager Plus provides a popup that lists all open tabs with a search bar. It is the fastest way to find a specific tab when you have dozens open. It does not save or organize tabs, but it solves the navigation problem effectively.

Pros

Cons

7. Cluster - Best for Window Management

Cluster gives you a bird's-eye view of all open windows and their tabs. You can drag tabs between windows, sort them, and close duplicates. It fills a gap in Chrome's native window management but does not save sessions or support tab groups.

Pros

Cons

[IMAGE: Feature Comparison Matrix] Visual grid comparing all 7 extensions across key features with check marks and X marks

Overall Comparison

Extension Tab Groups Save/Restore Price Rating
TabGroup Vault Full support Yes Free / $29 9/10
Session Buddy No Yes Free 8/10
Workona Own system Yes Free / $8/mo 8/10
OneTab No Partial Free 7/10
Toby No Yes Free / $5/mo 7/10
Tab Manager Plus No No Free 6/10
Cluster No No Free 6/10

The Verdict

If you use Chrome tab groups, TabGroup Vault is the best tab manager available. It is the only extension that preserves the full tab group experience at a one-time cost that pays for itself the first time it saves you from a crash.

If you do not use tab groups and want comprehensive session management, Session Buddy is the best free option. For teams and workspace-heavy workflows, Workona delivers the most features but at a higher ongoing cost.

For a broader look at all the tab organizer options available, see our comparison of 10 Chrome tab organizer extensions. For tips on building a system around whatever tool you choose, check out our definitive guide to organizing Chrome tabs.

[IMAGE: Decision Flowchart] Flowchart: Do you use tab groups? -> Yes -> TabGroup Vault / No -> Do you need session saving? -> Yes -> Session Buddy / No -> Tab Manager Plus

Stop Losing Your Tab Groups

TabGroup Vault saves and restores Chrome tab groups with one click. Free to try, Pro just $29 lifetime.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Chrome tab manager is best for saving tab groups?
TabGroup Vault is the only Chrome extension that fully saves and restores tab groups with names, colors, and tab order intact. Other tab managers either ignore tab groups entirely or save tabs as flat lists without group structure.
Is Session Buddy still a good tab manager in 2026?
Yes, Session Buddy remains one of the best free session managers. It reliably saves and restores all open tabs and windows. Its main limitation is that it does not support Chrome's native tab groups, so any group organization is lost during save and restore.
Do I need a paid tab manager extension?
It depends on your needs. Free options like OneTab and Session Buddy work well for basic tab saving. If you rely on Chrome tab groups and need auto-save and reliable restore, TabGroup Vault Pro at $29 one-time is a worthwhile investment that pays for itself quickly.
Can tab manager extensions conflict with each other?
Extensions that serve different purposes (like a tab saver and a tab search tool) rarely conflict. However, running two extensions that both try to manage sessions or modify the new tab page can cause unexpected behavior. Stick to one primary tab manager and complement it with specialized tools.
How much memory do tab manager extensions use?
Most tab manager extensions use between 20-50 MB of memory when active. TabGroup Vault uses about 25 MB. This is negligible compared to the memory used by the tabs themselves, and tab managers often help you reduce overall memory usage by making it easier to close or archive unneeded tabs.