Chrome how-to
How to Save All Open Tabs in Chrome
Three ways to save every open tab in Chrome — from the built-in options to a one-click method that lets you name, search, and restore whole sessions later.
Method 1 — Bookmark all tabs (built in)
Press Ctrl+Shift+D (Windows) or Cmd+Shift+D (Mac) to bookmark every open tab into a new folder. It works, but bookmarks pile up fast, aren't dated, and restoring means opening a folder — there's no session concept and no memory savings.
Method 2 — Chrome tab groups
Right-click a tab and choose "Add tab to group." Good for organizing within a window, but groups don't persist as saved, searchable sessions you can restore after closing everything.
Method 3 — Save tabs as a session with Roost (recommended)
- Install Roost from the Chrome Web Store (free).
- Click the Roost icon, then Save tabs — every open tab is saved as a named session.
- Close the tabs to reclaim memory; your session is safe.
- Reopen Roost anytime to search and restore the whole window, layout intact.
Comparison at a glance
| Method | Names & dates | Search | Restore layout | Frees RAM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bookmark all tabs | No | Bookmark search | No | No |
| Tab groups | Names only | No | No | No |
| Roost session | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Save your first session in 10 seconds
One click captures every open tab — free, private, no account.
Add Roost to Chrome — FreeRelated comparisons
Frequently asked questions
How do I save all open tabs in Chrome at once?
Press Ctrl+Shift+D (Cmd+Shift+D on Mac) to bookmark them all into a folder, or install a tab manager like Roost and click Save tabs to capture every open tab as a named, restorable session.
Can I reopen all the tabs I saved?
Yes. From a bookmark folder you can open all bookmarks, but with Roost you restore the whole session with its window layout preserved.
Does saving tabs free up memory?
Bookmarks and groups don't free memory on their own. With Roost you can save a session, close the tabs to reclaim RAM, and restore them later.
Is there a free way to do this?
Yes. Chrome's bookmark shortcut is free, and Roost's free tier saves and restores unlimited sessions with no account.