Google Chrome is a popular web browser and one of the most popular browsers in use today. It has a number of features that make it an excellent choice for online browsing, including support for hardware acceleration. If you’re using Google Chrome, you can enable hardware acceleration by following these steps:

  1. Open Google Chrome and click on the three lines in the top left corner of the window. This will open a menu with options.
  2. On the left side of the menu, select “Settings.”
  3. In the “Settings” window, select “Hardware Acceleration.”
  4. In the “Hardware Acceleration” section, you’ll find several options. The first option is “Enable.” If you check this option, then Google Chrome will start to use hardware acceleration to improve your browsing experience. The second option is “Disable.” If you check this option, then Google Chrome will not use hardware acceleration and your browser will still be able to run without it but will not display any improved results. The last option is “Custom.” If you choose this option, then you can set specific preferences for how hardware acceleration works in Google Chrome. For example, you can choose to have all websites run with hardware acceleration or only certain websites run with it.

What Is Hardware Acceleration in Chrome?

Hardware acceleration refers to when a program uses a computer’s hardware in support to perform some functions more efficiently than capable in the software. The hardware was designed to perform some functions faster than software running on the CPU alone.

In Chrome, hardware acceleration utilizes your computer’s graphics processing unit (GPU) to tackle graphics-intensive tasks, like playing videos, games, or anything that requires faster mathematical calculations. Passing off specific tasks gives your CPU a chance to work tirelessly on everything else, while the GPU handles processes that it was designed to run.

While this does sound great in most cases, sometimes hardware acceleration can cause Chrome to lag, freeze, or crash—it could even cause your laptop’s battery to drain a lot faster. As everyone’s computer is slightly different, the issue could lie in the GPU or driver associated with it. If you suspect hardware acceleration is the culprit, the best thing to do is to disable it and see if that fixes the problem.

How to Turn Hardware Acceleration On or Off

By default, hardware acceleration is enabled on Chrome, so let’s look at disabling it first.

Fire up Chrome, click the menu icon, and then click on “Settings.” Alternatively, you can type chrome://settings/ into the Omnibox to go directly there.

In the Settings menu, expand the “Advanced” drop-down section found in the left sidebar and then select “System.”

Find the “Use hardware acceleration when available” setting. Toggle the switch to the “Off” position and then click “Relaunch” to apply the changes.

If you’d rather wait to restart Chrome and finish up anything you’re working on, just close the tab. Chrome will apply the change the next time you close and reopen it.

To confirm it has been fully disabled, type chrome://gpu/ into the Omnibox and hit Enter. When hardware acceleration has been disabled, a majority of the items under “Graphics Feature Status” will read “Software only, hardware acceleration disabled.”

If you’re looking to enable—or re-enable—hardware acceleration, head back to chrome://settings/system and toggle “Use hardware acceleration when available” setting to the “On” position. Then, click “Relaunch” to apply the change.