The Best Chrome Tab Manager in 2026 (We Built One — Here's the Honest Comparison)
If you searched for "best Chrome tab manager," you're either drowning in open tabs or you've finally decided that "Ctrl+Shift+T forever" isn't a tab strategy.
We're going to give you a straight answer: the best tab manager is the one that fits how you actually work, and the difference between most of them comes down to three things — how fast you can find a tab, how cleanly they sync across devices, and how predictable the subscription is.
Full disclosure before the table: we built one of these tools (Amazing Tabs). We'll point that out where it matters and we'll tell you when one of the other tools is a better pick than ours.
TL;DR — The 2026 comparison table
| Tool | Best for | Free tier | Paid plan | Search | Cross-device sync | Sessions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazing Tabs | Power users who live in keyboard search | 20 cards | $4.90/mo · $42/yr · $49 lifetime | Instant / search + omnibox at |
Yes (built in) | Yes |
| OneTab | Memory savings, light archivers | Free, no paid plan | — | Basic list scroll | No (export only) | No native sessions |
| Toby | Visual collections, teams | 3 collections | $5/mo (Pro) · team plans on top | Tag/collection-based | Yes (account) | Limited |
| Workona | Project-based workspace switching | 5 workspaces | $7/mo (Pro) · $10+/mo (Teams) | Workspace + tab search | Yes | Yes (per workspace) |
| Session Buddy | Saving and restoring full sessions | Free with paid premium | $19/yr (Premium) | List + filter | Cloud (Premium) | Yes (this is the core feature) |
If you only read the table: OneTab is the right pick if all you want is to collapse 80 tabs into one list to free RAM. Toby wins on visual organisation if you live in dashboards. Workona is the heavyweight if you switch between projects all day. Session Buddy is the safest if your only fear is losing a window. Amazing Tabs is built for people who want to find a specific tab, fast, with one keystroke, across every machine they use.
Now the honest detail.
What "tab manager" actually means in 2026
Three jobs people lump together:
- Reduce open tabs — "I have 90 tabs open, my MacBook fan is screaming, save them somewhere I can come back to."
- Organise tabs by project — "Client A tabs over here, side project tabs over there, don't mix them."
- Find a specific tab quickly — "I read a Notion page about onboarding somewhere last Tuesday."
Most tools optimise for one of these and bolt the other two on as an afterthought. The right pick depends on which job is actually wasting your time.
Amazing Tabs — built for "find a tab in one keystroke"
We started Amazing Tabs because the failure mode that drove us crazy wasn't open-tab count. It was the search-failure moment. You know it: you swear you had a tab open with a Stripe invoice link, you flip through five Chrome windows, you can't find it, you eventually re-search Stripe and re-navigate the whole tree.
So the wedge we picked was search, not collection.
- Press
/from anywhere in your browser. A spotlight-style search opens. Type three characters of the tab title. Hit Enter. - Use the Chrome omnibox: type
at docs<space>and you instantly search inside everything you've ever saved into Amazing Tabs. - "Cards" are our unit — a saved tab, a saved group, or a saved session. They sync to cloud across every device you sign in on.
- Workspaces and collections exist if you like the dashboard view, but they're optional. The product still works if you live entirely in keyboard search.
What we'll tell you that the marketing copy won't:
- The free tier is intentionally tight (20 cards). If you save sessions of 30+ tabs each, you'll hit the cap fast and you'll need Premium. We made this deliberate after launching with a higher cap and watching nobody upgrade.
- We don't have native team plans yet. If you need shared workspaces with your colleagues, look at Workona or Toby first.
- We're early. The roadmap is moving fast, but you should know you're picking a small indie product, not a 5-year-old SaaS.
Try it free → Add Amazing Tabs to Chrome — no signup needed for the free tier. Hit
/after install to see what we mean by search.
OneTab — still the simplest, still has the same ceiling
OneTab is the tool that taught millions of people that tabs could be collapsed into a list.
- It's free, no account, no signup. One click collapses every tab in the window into a saved list.
- Memory drops immediately because none of those URLs are loaded anymore.
- You can name lists, share lists as a public URL, drag-and-drop to re-order.
Where it stops:
- No real search. It's a long scrollable list. Once you have 200+ saved tabs, finding one becomes its own problem.
- No native cloud sync. It saves locally. You can export/import, but that's a manual step.
- No sessions in the "open everything I had on Tuesday" sense. Lists are static — you save once, OneTab doesn't track what you reopen.
OneTab is great as a "RAM rescue" button. It's a bad pick if your job is finding tabs across weeks of saved lists.
Toby — beautiful collections, slow keyboard
Toby is the visual one. New tab page becomes a board of collections, and each collection is a row of tab tiles.
- The new-tab dashboard is genuinely well-designed.
- Drag-and-drop tiles, tag collections, share boards with teammates.
- Cloud sync is built in once you make an account.
What we'd flag honestly:
- Keyboard usage is limited. Toby is mouse-first. If you measure your tab manager by keystrokes, this isn't your tool.
- Free tier limits are tight (3 collections at the time of writing). Heavy users will hit Pro pricing fast.
- Performance on large boards has been a long-standing complaint — once you have hundreds of tiles, the dashboard slows.
If you treat your browser as a visual workspace and you live in dashboards, Toby is a good pick. If you treat your browser as a search engine for things you've already opened, it's the wrong shape.
Workona — the heavyweight project switcher
Workona is the largest of these in scope. It's not really a tab manager — it's a workspace manager that happens to handle tabs.
- Define a "workspace" per project. Each workspace owns its own tabs, notes, links, Google Docs, etc.
- Switch workspace → all your project's tabs come back.
- Team plans exist. Shared workspaces are real.
- Integrations with Google Drive, Notion, Asana, etc.
Where Workona doesn't fit everyone:
- Heavy. Mental and UI overhead is real. If your work isn't cleanly project-shaped, you'll fight the abstraction.
- Pricier. $7/mo at the Pro tier and team plans climb from there.
- Search is workspace-scoped first. Cross-workspace tab search exists but isn't its strength.
If you bill clients per project, Workona is probably the cleanest fit on this list. If you don't, it's overkill.
Session Buddy — the safety net
Session Buddy has been around forever and it's still the right call for one specific use case: "I had 60 tabs open across 3 windows and Chrome crashed."
- Auto-saves your sessions periodically.
- Restores entire windows of tabs, with their group structure intact.
- Premium adds cloud backup, history, scheduled saves.
Where it stops:
- It's a backup tool, not an organiser. Day-to-day tab finding isn't its job.
- The UI shows its age. Functional, not delightful.
If your only pain is losing windows, Session Buddy or built-in Chrome recovery is enough. You don't need a paid tab manager for that.
So which one should you actually install?
Pick by the failure mode that hurts most:
- "My browser is choking on RAM." → OneTab. Free, one-click, done.
- "I can never find that tab I read on Tuesday." → Amazing Tabs. The whole product is built around this exact moment.
- "I want a beautiful dashboard of my projects." → Toby.
- "I switch between 6 client projects a day." → Workona.
- "I'm just terrified of losing tabs to a crash." → Session Buddy.
If you're between Amazing Tabs and Toby, the question is: do you reach for the keyboard or the mouse first? Keyboard → us. Mouse → them.
If you're between Amazing Tabs and Workona, the question is: is your work project-shaped? If the answer is "everything bleeds into everything," Amazing Tabs will feel lighter. If the answer is "I have 6 distinct contexts," Workona earns its pricetag.
How we'd build a workflow with Amazing Tabs
The setup most of our power users converge on:
- Install Amazing Tabs and let it sit for a week without any organisation. Just save tabs as you go.
- Press
/to find tabs by typing. Notice how rarely you actually need to organise anything. - When a project gets dense, group its cards into a collection. Don't pre-build collections you don't need.
- Set up the omnibox shortcut:
at <query>from the address bar searches your saved tabs without opening the popup. - Sign in to sync across devices. Phones, laptops, desktops — same cards.
Most "tab managers" ask you to organise first. We argue that's a tax. Search-first means you only organise when the cost of not organising is higher than the cost of doing it.
Honest pricing math (2026)
If you use a tab manager every day for a year, the costs are:
- OneTab: $0.
- Session Buddy Premium: $19/yr.
- Toby Pro: $60/yr.
- Workona Pro: $84/yr.
- Amazing Tabs Premium: $42/yr (annual) or $4.90/mo if you prefer monthly.
- Amazing Tabs Lifetime: $49 one-time, capped at 200 founder spots, then it goes back to subscription only.
For us, the lifetime deal is real and intentionally limited. We're keeping it small because it's a founder offer, not a sale.
Want to lock in the lifetime price? See the lifetime deal. 200 spots, no recurring charge ever.
Where this comparison will be wrong in 6 months
Tab managers are an active category. Every tool on this list has shipped meaningful changes in the last year.
- Workona has been pushing into team workspaces and document integrations.
- Toby's roadmap leans into AI-assisted organisation.
- OneTab is the steady one — it changes the slowest.
- We (Amazing Tabs) are heads-down on cross-device parity and a much faster session restore flow.
We'll update this article quarterly. If something here is wrong by the time you're reading it, tell us and we'll fix it.
The honest pick
If we had to recommend a single tool to a stranger we'd never met:
- They have under 50 tabs open right now, want zero pricing, want zero account → OneTab.
- They have 50+ tabs, want fast keyboard search, want cross-device sync → Amazing Tabs.
- They run a 3-person team and want shared workspaces → Workona.
- They want a visual dashboard, period → Toby.
- They're a paranoid backup person → Session Buddy.
If "fast keyboard search across every device" is the bullet that made you nod, we built the tool you're looking for.
Add Amazing Tabs to Chrome — free → Install from the Chrome Web Store. No credit card. 20 cards on the free tier, upgrade only if you want more. See pricing if you want the full plan breakdown.
- chrome tab manager
- tab manager
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- OneTab
- Toby
- Workona
- Session Buddy