However, there is power in awareness. The “Most Visited” page can also be a tool for intentionality. You can remove a tile. You can pin a site you want to visit more often. You can clear your history to start over. In that small act of curation—deleting the distraction, pinning the project—you reclaim agency. You turn the algorithm’s mirror into a vision board.

When you open a new tab in Google Chrome, the first thing you see is the "Most Visited" area. This grid of website thumbnails acts as a visual speed dial, offering one-click access to the sites you frequent most.

You can easily toggle between your manually curated links and the browser's automated suggestions.

Here you have two main options:

Open a New Tab and tap (three dots) > Customize new tab page . Toggle My shortcuts to show or hide the most visited sites. Managing Individual Shortcuts

This data is stored locally on your device. If you sync your Chrome history across devices, your "Most Visited" sites may eventually sync, but they are primarily determined by the habits on the specific device you are using.