Chrome Tab Scrolling Gone? 5 Ways That Still Work (2026)
Chrome tab scrolling is gone: Chrome 144 pulled the flag and it has not returned. Restore wheel-to-switch tabs with Alt+Scroll, plus 4 faster ways to any tab.
Chrome tab scrolling stopped working in Chrome 144 (January 2026), which deleted the #scrollable-tabstrip flag with no built-in replacement. It is still gone in Chrome 149 (June 2026). To get wheel-to-switch behavior back, hold Alt and scroll anywhere on the page with SuperchargeNavigation. Four faster methods below reach any tab in under two seconds.
Key takeaways
- Chrome 144 removed
#scrollable-tabstripwith no replacement. It has not returned as of Chrome 149.- Fastest workaround: Alt+Scroll cycles tabs from anywhere on the page — no cursor precision required, no narrow strip to target.
- For 60+ tabs, Alt+K to search by name is faster than any scrolling. Type a fragment of the title and jump directly there.
You had 60 tabs open. You could scroll through them. Then Chrome 144 shipped in January 2026 and the #scrollable-tabstrip flag disappeared without warning. Now those 60 tabs are 60 identical favicons you have to hover one by one to identify.
If this happened to you, you probably found the Chromium bug tracker thread with hundreds of other users asking the same question. Google’s response: tab scrolling will come back in a redesigned form, sometime in H1 2026. No version number, no date.
As of Chrome 149, the feature is still missing.
What follows is what actually works right now — and why most of these beat what the old scrollable tab strip ever gave you.
What Tab Scrolling in Chrome Used to Do
The chrome://flags/#scrollable-tabstrip flag let you opt into a behavior that should have been the default: when tabs overflow the strip, scroll through them instead of compressing each tab into a tiny favicon. The flag existed for years. It was not enabled by default, so most Chrome users never knew about it, but the people who did use it treated it as essential.
Chrome 144 removed the flag as part of a tab strip architecture rewrite. Google is building a proper, non-flag version of tab scrolling. The problem is that they shipped the removal before the replacement was ready.
If you run Chrome Enterprise LTS on M143, the flag still works. For everyone else, the flag is gone and there is no built-in alternative yet.
Why Waiting Is Costing You Time
Every time you hover over a compressed favicon to figure out which tab it is, that is 2-3 seconds of interrupted focus. Do that 30 times a day across 60 tabs and you are losing real minutes to a problem that used to be solved.
Google said H1 2026. That window closes June 30, and it has nearly run out with no version announced. The feature could ship next week or slip further. If you work with a lot of tabs daily, waiting on a fix to a problem you have right now does not make sense.
And even when tab scrolling returns, it will solve exactly one thing: scrolling a horizontal strip. It still will not let you search tabs by name, cycle within a specific tab group, or see full titles without hovering. The options below do all of that.
Option 1: Scroll Gestures — the Direct Replacement
The closest behavioral match for tab strip scrolling is SuperchargeNavigation’s scroll gesture system. Hold a modifier key and scroll anywhere on the page:
- Alt + Scroll Up/Down — cycle through all tabs in the window, wrapping around at the ends
- Shift + Scroll Up/Down — cycle within the current tab group only, stopping at group boundaries
The key difference from the old tab strip scrolling: you do not need to position your cursor on a narrow strip at the top of the browser. Scroll anywhere on the page. Your cursor can stay exactly where you are working.
If you use a laptop: trackpad two-finger scrolling can accidentally skip multiple tabs in one gesture. SuperchargeNavigation has a trackpad mode that accumulates scroll delta before triggering, so you always move one tab at a time. Toggle it in the extension settings.
If you use Chrome’s tab groups: Shift+Scroll respects group boundaries. When you are inside a group, it keeps you there instead of cycling into unrelated tabs. This is something tab strip scrolling never offered — it treated all tabs as a flat list regardless of grouping.
Option 2: Chrome’s Built-In Keyboard Shortcuts
Before reaching for an extension, check what Chrome already gives you from the keyboard. None of these depend on the tab strip being scrollable:
| Shortcut | What it does |
|---|---|
| Ctrl + Tab | Next tab (left to right, wraps around) |
| Ctrl + Shift + Tab | Previous tab |
| Ctrl + 1 to Ctrl + 8 | Jump to the 1st through 8th tab |
| Ctrl + 9 | Jump to the last tab |
| Ctrl + Shift + A | Open Chrome’s own tab search box |
Ctrl+Tab moves in visual order, left to right, so it stays predictable even with 60 tabs open. The numbered shortcuts are the fastest way to reach a tab you keep in a fixed position. And Ctrl+Shift+A opens Chrome’s built-in tab search, useful for a one-off lookup.
The limit shows up at scale. Ctrl+Tab still steps through tabs one at a time, and you have to leave the page you are on to open Chrome’s search box, which then closes after a single jump. That is where the extension options below pull ahead, but for a handful of tabs the native shortcuts may be all you need.
Option 3: Find Any Tab in Under Two Seconds
Scrolling through tabs — whether in a strip or with gestures — is linear. You move through them one by one until you find the right one. With 20 tabs, that is fine. With 60, it is slow.
Alt+K opens a Quick Search overlay on top of whatever page you are viewing. Type a few characters and it filters all your open tabs by title and URL in real time. Hit Enter to jump to the match. Escape to dismiss.
Think about what you actually do when you have 80 tabs open: you are not looking for “the next tab” or “the previous tab.” You are looking for that specific Jira ticket, or the Stack Overflow answer you found earlier, or the Google Doc someone shared. Alt+K finds it immediately instead of making you scroll past 40 irrelevant tabs to get there.
This is the feature that makes going back to sequential scrolling feel slow once you have used it.
Option 4: A Vertical Tab List That Shows Full Titles
The fundamental problem with tab scrolling is that it is a patch on a broken design. The horizontal tab strip runs out of space because it is horizontal. Adding scrolling makes a horizontal list navigable, but it is still a horizontal list where you can only see a few tabs at a time.
A vertical tab sidebar removes the constraint entirely. SuperchargeNavigation puts a full tab list in Chrome’s side panel — each tab gets its own row with a favicon and its complete title visible. Sixty tabs in a horizontal strip means 60 identical-looking favicons. The same 60 tabs in a vertical sidebar means 60 readable lines you can scan in a second.
From the sidebar:
- Click any tab to switch to it
- Drag tabs to reorder them
- Search within the panel to filter by title
- See at a glance which tabs are playing audio, which are suspended, which belong to which group
Workspaces — if 60 Tabs in One Strip Was the Problem
If you had 60 tabs because they belong to three different projects, the real fix is not better scrolling — it is separating them. Workspaces in SuperchargeNavigation let you split tabs into named contexts. “Work” holds your email, calendar, and project tabs. “Research” holds the 15 articles you are reading through. “Personal” holds everything else.
Switching workspaces swaps the entire tab context. Each workspace remembers its tabs independently. Instead of one overwhelming strip of 60 tabs, you have three focused sets of 20.
Option 5: Preview Links Without Opening More Tabs
Part of why you end up with 60 tabs is that every link you want to check becomes a new tab. Alt+Click on any link opens a Glance preview — a full-page overlay that loads the linked page without actually creating a tab. Read it, decide if it matters, then either promote it to a real tab or close the preview.
This does not replace tab scrolling directly, but it attacks the root cause: having too many tabs open in the first place. If you check a link and it is not useful, you never added it to your tab count.
SuperchargeNavigation also includes Super Drag (drag links up to open in background, down for foreground) for when you do want to open tabs quickly without right-clicking.
Getting Started
Install SuperchargeNavigation from the Chrome Web Store. No account, no data collection.
After installing, try Alt+Scroll on any page — you will immediately feel the difference from hunting through the tab strip. Open the side panel from Chrome’s toolbar to see all your existing tabs listed vertically with full titles. Every tab you already have open shows up instantly.
If you use a trackpad, toggle trackpad mode in the extension settings. Everything else works with defaults.
When Chrome Brings Tab Scrolling Back
Google will eventually ship a redesigned tab scrolling feature, with the rebuild expected to reach Canary, Dev, and Beta channels first. Whenever it lands in stable Chrome, it will work alongside everything described here. The extension does not modify Chrome’s tab strip, so there is no conflict.
You might find that you use both: native tab scrolling for quick visual scanning, Alt+K for finding specific tabs, and the sidebar for managing larger sessions. Or you might find that once you have tab search and a vertical sidebar, scrolling through a horizontal strip feels like going back to a flip phone.
Either way, nothing here locks you in.
Quick Reference
| Problem | Solution | Shortcut |
|---|---|---|
| Scroll through tabs with the mouse | Alt+Scroll gesture | Alt + Scroll Up/Down |
| Cycle tabs with the keyboard | Chrome built-in | Ctrl + Tab / Ctrl + Shift + Tab |
| Stay within a tab group while cycling | Group-aware scroll | Shift + Scroll Up/Down |
| Find a specific tab by name | Quick Search overlay | Alt + K |
| See all tab titles at once | Vertical tab sidebar | Side panel button |
| Separate tabs by project | Workspaces | In sidebar |
| Preview a link without opening a tab | Glance preview | Shift + Click |
| Open links without right-click menu | Super Drag | Drag link up/down |
Works on Chrome 144 through 149 and beyond. Free, no account required.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Chrome remove tab scrolling?
Can I still enable tab scrolling in Chrome?
What is the best alternative to Chrome tab scrolling?
Does tab scrolling work in Chrome 149?
How do I scroll through tabs with my mouse wheel in Chrome?
Is there a Chrome flag to bring back tab scrolling?
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