LibreWolf
A modified version of Firefox designed to increase protection against tracking and fingerprinting techniques, while also including security improvements.
Private alternatives to Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Safari, vetted against our public criteria.
A modified version of Firefox designed to increase protection against tracking and fingerprinting techniques, while also including security improvements.
Anti-fingerprinting Firefox fork built by the Tor Project and distributed by Mullvad VPN, designed to be used with a VPN. Available on Windows, macOS, and Linux.
Fast, cross-platform Chromium browser that blocks ads and trackers by default. A complete package out of the box, suitable for beginners or when setup time matters.
Reliable, fast and privacy-friendly. Harden it with add-ons, enable DNS-over-HTTPS, and sync across all your devices.
Tor, short for The Onion Router, is for enabling anonymous communication. It directs Internet traffic through a free, worldwide, volunteer overlay network, consisting of more…
Dedicated mobile privacy browser with automatic tracking protection and ad blocking. With Focus, your pages load faster and your data stays private.
Privacy-focused search engine and mobile browser. Blocks trackers, forces encrypted connections, and does not profile you. Partially open-source, based in the US.
Open-source Chromium fork for Android with built-in ad blocking and anti-fingerprinting. The actively maintained successor to Bromite.
Free, open-source browser that routes your iOS traffic through the Tor network for extra anonymity.
No matches for those filters.
Your browser is the single most important privacy tool you have, and the popular default is built by an advertising company. These browsers keep the modern web usable while blocking trackers, resisting fingerprinting, and not reporting home. From a hardened everyday browser to Tor for anonymity, pick the one that fits.
A private browser blocks trackers and ads, resists fingerprinting (the quiet technique that identifies you without cookies), ships sane defaults so you are not hunting through menus, and is not built by a company that profits from watching you. Engine diversity matters too: a web where every browser is the same Chromium core is easier to track and to control.
Most people want a hardened everyday browser that blocks tracking by default and stays out of the way. When you need anonymity rather than just privacy, the Tor Browser routes you through multiple relays so sites cannot trace your address, at the cost of speed. Use the right one for the moment instead of forcing a single browser to do both jobs.
You can see how exposed your current browser is with the EFF’s Cover Your Tracks and the open comparisons at PrivacyTests.org. Less unique is better. Pair your browser with a good content blocker and a private search engine, and you have covered most of the everyday tracking surface.