Web browsers keep track of your past activity for a reason. That history comes in handy if you want to find a funny article again, or return to your favorite photo of the kids, or if restore a tab that you accidentally closed. At the same time, some people find this constant tracking a little on the creepy side. Not to mention that, if you share a computer with others, you might not want them finding out about a gift you secretly bought them, your interest in 1970s folk rock, or your more private Google searches.
Fortunately, all of today's web browsers make it very simple to erase your history and wipe away your online tracks. In this guide, you'll find out about the information your browser automatically logs, what that data does—and how to get rid of it.
What your browser saves
First of all, our primary concern: your browser history, which is the list of sites and pages you've visited in the past. This history helps you retrace your steps, bring back pages you want to refer to again, and reach your favorite sites more quickly. Many browsers draw from your history to suggest specific URLs as soon as you start typing addresses in the search bar.
Next up are cookies, little bits of code that sites will want to store on your system. Cookies help websites recognize who you are, but they come in all kinds of different forms. For example, if you go to a weather website and it instantly shows you the cities whose weather conditions you've previously looked up, that's a cookie in action. If you return to a shopping site and it still has the same items in your basket, again that's cookies at work. These files won't harm to your computer, but some users don't like being tracked in these ways, and prefer to delete them on a regular basis.
While you're looking at cookies, you might see that your browser distinguishes standard cookies from third-party ones. Third-party cookies track behavior across multiple sites; they're usually injected into ads rather than being part of the actual page code. You can blame this type of cookie for personalized ads: If you've spent some time searching multiple sites for tents, and then you start seeing tent ads everywhere, then third-party cookies are responsible.
When you decide to erase your internet history, most browsers will list all these types of data separately. You can decide to clear everything out, which lets you start all over again as if you had a new browser on a new computer, or you might decide to keep certain types of files, like the cookies and cache, to make your browsing life more convenient.
Private or incognito mode
However, this mode doesn't erase everything you do. If you log on to a site like Facebook and Amazon in incognito mode, those pages will recognize you and record your browsing activity. In other words, your browser won't remember what you've been up to, but any sites you log into will. This means you might see evidence of your private browsing in ads that appear later. And if you download files, private mode won't wipe them either, though it will clear out your download history.
How to erase your history in any browser
In Google Chrome, click the three dots to the right of the address bar to open the application menu, then choose Settings. Scroll down and click Advanced, then click Clear browsing data. Make your choices from the list, set the time period you'd like to clear, and then click the Clear browsing data button. Note: If you've set the browser to sync with other computers via your Google account, clearing your history will also erase data across all the other devices where you've signed into Chrome.
If you're using Apple Safari on macOS, you can blitz your browsing history by opening the Safari menu and then clicking Clear History. Choose the time period you want to erase from the drop-down menu, then click Clear History to confirm the action. When you clear your history in Safari, you won't get the option to delete different types of data, so it will wipe your cookies and cached files along with your history.
Windows 10 users who are giving the new Microsoft Edge browser a whirl can also clear their browsing history. Click the three dots to the right of the address bar, then pick Settings from the menu that appears. Under the Clear browsing data heading, click Choose what to clear. Next, make your choices from the list, which includes browsing history and cached data, and then click Clear.
Finally, in the Windows version of the popular third-party browser Opera, click Menu in the top left of the screen. Then hit More tools and Clear browsing data to find the right dialog box. Choose your types of data, specify your time period, and click Clear browsing data. On macOS, Opera requires a slightly different process: Open the menu, click Preferences, then select Privacy & security, and finally hit Clear Browsing Data. You'll then end up with the same history-clearing options—types of data, time period, etc—that you would get in the Windows version.