Delete, allow and manage cookies in Chrome - Computer (original) (raw)

You can choose to delete existing cookies, allow or block all cookies, and set preferences for certain websites.

Important: If you are part of the Tracking Protection test group, you'll find a new Chrome setting for managing third-party cookies called "Tracking Protection." Learn more about Tracking Protection.

What cookies are

Cookies are files created by websites you visit. By saving information about your visit, they make your online experience easier. For example, sites can keep you signed in, remember your site preferences, and give you locally relevant content.

There are 2 types of cookies:

Delete all cookies

Important: If you delete cookies, you might get signed out of sites that remember you, and your saved preferences could be deleted. This applies any time a cookie is deleted.

  1. On your computer, open Chrome.
  2. At the top right, click More More and then Settings Settings.
  3. Click Privacy and security and then Third-party cookies.
    • Tip: If you are part of the Tracking Protection test group, select Tracking Protection instead.
  4. Click See all site data and permissions and then Delete all data.
  5. To confirm, click Delete.

Delete specific cookies

Delete cookies from a site

Delete cookies from a period of time

Important: If you don't allow sites to save cookies, sites may not work as expected. To manage first-party cookies, learn more about on-device site data.

You can allow or block cookies for any site.

Allow or block third-party cookies

Allow third-party cookies for a specific site

Important: If you’re using your Chromebook at work or school, you might not be able to change this setting. For more help, contact your administrator.

If you block third-party cookies by default, you can still allow them for a certain site.

  1. On your computer, open Chrome.
  2. At the top right, click More More and then Settings.
  3. Click Privacy and security and then Third-party cookies.
    • Tip: If you are part of the Tracking Protection test group, select Tracking Protection instead.
  4. Next to "Allowed to use third party cookies," click Add.
  5. Enter the web address.
    • To create an exception for an entire domain, insert [*.] before the domain name. For example, [*.]google.com will match drive.google.com and calendar.google.com.
    • You can also put an IP address or a web address that doesn't start with http://.
  6. Select Add.

To remove an exception you don't want any more, to the right of the website, click RemoveRemove.

Allow third-party cookies temporarily for a specific site

If you block third-party cookies, some sites may not work as you expected. You can temporarily allow third-party cookies for a specific site you visit.

  1. On your computer, open Chrome.
  2. In the address bar at the top:
  3. To close the dialog box and reload the page, select Close Close. You can also select anywhere outside of the dialog box to close it.
  4. Once the page reloads, the address bar shows “Third-party cookies allowed,” “Third-party cookies blocked,” or “Third-party cookies limited” depending on your settings.

Tips:

Allow related sites to access your activity

A company can define a group of sites that are related to each other. For example, a company might want to keep you signed in as you move between acme-music.example and acme-video.example.

If you allow third-party cookies: Allows related sites to access your activity to personalize content or keep you signed in across sites.

If you block third-party cookies: It often prevents this kind of connection between sites. You can block third-party cookies while you allow sites in the same group to improve your experience.

Important: If you select “Allow third-party cookies,” then a group of related sites can share your activity in the group by default.

Important: If you have “Tracking Protection” in your settings, then a group of related sites can share your activity in the group by default.

About embedded content

Sites you visit can embed content from other sites, for example images, ads, text, and even features — like a text editor or weather widget. These other sites can ask for permission to use info they’ve saved about you (often saved using cookies) in order for their content to function properly.

For example, imagine you normally compose documents on docs.google.com. While completing a task for school, you need to collaborate with other students on your school’s class portal that offers direct access to Google Docs. With your permission:

In some cases, this info can be used to track your activity as you browse sites. As a privacy feature, you can decide when to allow embedded content to access your data for sites you trust.

Tip: The connection uses cookies and lasts for 30 days or as long as you remain active. You can stop allowing the connection anytime in Settings.

To allow or decline permission

When you browse a site that displays a prompt requesting for permission for the embedded content to use information they’ve saved about you:

Tips:

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