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How to Restore Previous Session in Chrome (Complete Guide)

Key Takeaways

Why Chrome session restore matters

Ctrl+Shift+T restoring closed tabs

You had thirty tabs open. Research for a project, a half-written email, a YouTube video you were saving for later, and a dozen documentation pages. Then Chrome crashed, your laptop restarted for an update, or you accidentally closed the wrong window. Now everything is gone.

This is a common frustration Chrome users face. The browser has session restore built in, but it fails often enough that thousands search for solutions every month. This guide covers every method available in 2026, from keyboard shortcuts to reliable backup strategies.

Method 1: The keyboard shortcut (Ctrl+Shift+T)

This is the fastest way to recover recently closed tabs, and it should be your first move whenever tabs disappear unexpectedly.

How it works

Each time you press this shortcut, Chrome reopens the most recently closed tab. Press it repeatedly to walk backward through your closed tab history. If you closed an entire window, the first press reopens that entire window with all its tabs.

When it works

This method works when you intentionally or accidentally closed tabs or windows during your current browsing session. Chrome keeps a queue of recently closed items in memory.

When it fails

[IMAGE: Ctrl+Shift+T Keyboard Shortcut Demo]Screenshot showing Chrome reopening a recently closed tab using the keyboard shortcut, with the tab sliding back into the tab bar.

Method 2: Chrome settings, "Continue where you left off"

Chrome has a built-in setting that tells the browser to reopen your previous session every time you start it. To enable it:

  1. Open Chrome and go to chrome://settings/onStartup (type this in the address bar).
  2. Select "Continue where you left off".
  3. Close the settings tab. The change takes effect immediately.

With this enabled, every time you open Chrome, it will attempt to restore all the windows and tabs from your last session.

The limitations

This setting is designed for clean shutdowns. When you close Chrome normally and reopen it, your tabs come back. But it breaks down in several common scenarios:

Important Limitation

"Continue where you left off" does not preserve tab groups. Even if your tabs come back, they will all be ungrouped. If you rely on tab groups for organization, you need a separate backup solution.

Method 3: History and recently closed tabs

Chrome's History menu maintains a record of pages you have visited and tabs you have recently closed.

Recently closed (quick access)

  1. Click the three-dot menu in the top-right corner of Chrome.
  2. Hover over History.
  3. Look at the "Recently closed" section at the top of the submenu.
  4. Click on individual tabs or entire windows to restore them.

Full history page

  1. Press Ctrl+H (Cmd+Y on Mac) to open the full History page.
  2. Browse or search for specific pages.
  3. Click any entry to reopen it.

The History page goes back weeks or months, so it is your best bet for finding tabs from older sessions. The downside: it shows individual pages in a flat list. You cannot restore an entire session or tab group from History.

Method 4: Chrome session files (advanced)

Chrome stores session data in files on your computer. In some cases, you can recover a session by accessing these files directly.

Where Chrome stores session data

Look for files named Current Session, Current Tabs, Last Session, and Last Tabs. The "Last" files contain data from your previous session.

The recovery process

  1. Close Chrome completely.
  2. Navigate to the folder above.
  3. If Last Session and Last Tabs exist, rename Current Session to Current Session.bak and Current Tabs to Current Tabs.bak.
  4. Copy Last Session and rename it to Current Session. Do the same with Last Tabs.
  5. Reopen Chrome.

Proceed with caution

Editing session files directly is risky. If Chrome crashed, these files may already be corrupted. Always make backup copies before renaming anything. This method is a last resort, not a regular workflow.

[IMAGE: Chrome Session Files Location]File explorer showing the Chrome user data directory with Current Session, Last Session, Current Tabs, and Last Tabs files highlighted.

Method 5: Use a session backup extension

Chrome menu showing Restore window option

The methods above all depend on Chrome's internal session storage, which is fragile. Extensions solve this by storing your session data independently, so it survives crashes, updates, and even Chrome reinstalls.

TabGroup Vault: reliable session backup

TabGroup Vault saves snapshots of your Chrome tab groups automatically. Unlike Chrome's built-in session restore, your data is stored independently and includes full tab group structure (names, colors, and tab order). Restore everything with one click after any crash or update. Free tier includes 5 snapshots. Pro ($29 one-time) adds unlimited snapshots, bulk restore, Google Drive backup, and support for 5 Chrome profiles.

The key advantage of an extension-based approach is independence. Chrome's session files live inside Chrome and break when Chrome breaks. A well-designed extension stores data separately, creating a backup available regardless of what happens to the browser.

Why built-in methods fail

Chrome's session restore was designed for a simpler era of browsing. Here is why it falls short for modern workflows:

ScenarioBuilt-in RestoreExtension Backup
Normal shutdown and reopenWorksWorks
Browser crashSometimes failsWorks
OS update/restartOften failsWorks
Chrome auto-updateSometimes loses tabsWorks
Tab group structureNot preservedFully preserved
Multiple windowsInconsistentAll windows saved
Older sessions (days ago)Not availableAvailable via snapshots

Setting up reliable session restore

For the most reliable session protection, combine Chrome's built-in tools with an independent backup. Here is the recommended setup:

  1. Enable "Continue where you left off" in Chrome settings. This covers normal shutdowns.
  2. Install a backup extension like TabGroup Vault. This covers crashes, updates, and tab group preservation.
  3. Learn the Ctrl+Shift+T shortcut. This handles quick recovery of accidentally closed tabs during a session.
  4. Enable Google Drive backup (if your extension supports it). This protects against hardware failure and lets you restore across devices.

With this layered approach, you have two independent safety nets for your tabs. The built-in tools handle simple cases, and the extension handles everything else.

[IMAGE: TabGroup Vault Restore Interface]Screenshot of TabGroup Vault showing saved snapshots with tab group names, colors, and a one-click restore button.

Recovering tab groups specifically

If you use Chrome's tab groups feature to organize your work, session recovery is more important and more difficult. Chrome's built-in session restore does not preserve tab group metadata reliably. Even when tabs come back, they arrive ungrouped. Your organization is gone.

A tab-group-aware extension solves this. TabGroup Vault stores the complete structure of every tab group: the group name, color, collapsed/expanded state, and the order of tabs within each group. When you restore a snapshot, you get back what you had before.

What About Chrome Flags?

Some guides suggest enabling experimental flags at chrome://flags to improve session restore behavior. While there have been flags related to session persistence in the past, relying on them is not recommended for several reasons:

For a stable, long-term solution, stick with the methods described above rather than depending on experimental browser features.

Never Lose Tabs Again

TabGroup Vault automatically backs up your Chrome tab groups. Restore everything with one click after any crash or update.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why didn't Chrome restore my previous session after a crash?
Chrome's session restore relies on internal session files that can become corrupted during a crash. If the files are damaged, Chrome cannot read them and opens a blank window instead. This is why an independent backup extension provides more reliable protection.
Can I restore tabs from several days ago?
Chrome's built-in tools only keep the most recent session. The History page (Ctrl+H) shows individual pages from weeks ago, but not entire sessions. Extensions like TabGroup Vault keep multiple snapshots over time, letting you restore sessions from days or weeks back.
Does "Continue where you left off" restore tab groups?
Not reliably. Chrome may restore the tabs themselves, but tab group names, colors, and organization are frequently lost during session restore. A tab-group-aware extension preserves the full group structure.
How many tabs can Ctrl+Shift+T restore?
Chrome keeps a queue of recently closed tabs in memory during your current browsing session. The exact limit varies, but you can typically recover the last 10-25 closed items by pressing the shortcut repeatedly. Once Chrome restarts, this history is cleared.
Is there a way to auto-save my Chrome session periodically?
Yes. Extensions like TabGroup Vault can take automatic snapshots of your tab groups at regular intervals. This means even if you forget to manually save, your most recent session state is always backed up.