

Click “Restore” button within the relevant session.Find the relevant session by scrolling the timeline.Click “Archive” category under Tags section.Click “Open sidebar” icon button in the top left corner.Tablerone automatically saves all sessions containing open tabs in case you ever want to reopen them. To get the following features, install Tablerone from the Chrome Web Store. Tablerone is a browser extension that enables you to restore all tabs and windows as far back as your browsing History goes.

To find tabs in History, search by site name or topic keyword. Pages are sorted by the timestamp when they were open, so if the lost tabs have been open on different days, it will be challenging to find them because they will be buried under all other tabs you opened and closed in-between. Unfortunately, History doesn’t remember the order of tabs or if they were organised into separate windows. If you need to restore tabs older than the last session, your only option is browser History. Select “Continue where you left off” option.Open the Chrome menu by clicking the three dots button in the top right corner.Tip: You can automatically restore tabs to where you left off before quitting the browser on the next start. If that happens, you can still manually restore all tabs and closed windows. In that case, Chrome will not be able to restore them back on the next start it will restore an empty window. The problem is that whichever page caused the browser to crash can do it again straight after restoring. Next time you start Chrome after a crash, you should see a pop-up dialogue in the top right corner enabling you to restore tabs and windows as they were before the crash. Unfortunately, there is no shortcut for this action. Select the “# of tabs” option from the “Recently Closed” section.To reopen accidentally closed browser window(s): Restoring an entire window of tabs is not as straightforward as a single tab, but it’s possible. If you use multiple browser windows, you might lose tabs by accidentally closing one or more windows either by clicking the X button (close window), pressing ⌘+⇧+W / Ctrl+⇧+W shortcut, or quitting the browser with ⌘+⇧+W / Ctrl+⇧+W shortcut. Tip: You can repeat this action all the way back to the first closed tab after the browser started the last time. Luckily, it’s just as easy to reverse this action. It’s very common to click the X button in the tab by accident or hit ⌘+W / Ctrl+W shortcut prematurely.

Restore tabs with Chrome options Restore last closed tab This article will teach you six ways to restore tabs and retrieve hours of research it took to find them. If your browser just crashed, or you accidentally closed a window, don’t panic.
