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How to enable dark mode on every site in Google Chrome

Today we will tell you how to quickly turn on the dark mode on each site in Google Chrome. Believe me, it’s very easy and simple.

Dark mode is now everywhere, including Windows 10/11, iOS 15 and Android 12. Web browsers such as Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Edge also use dark mode. Browsers are now adding automatic dark mode to websites thanks to a feature called Preferences-Color-Scheme.

Some sites today also offer a dark mode. For example, you can enable dark mode on YouTube, Twitter or Slack in a few clicks. It’s pretty cool, but enabling this option separately every time is hardly convenient.

When you turn on dark mode in Windows 10, macOS, iOS or Android, all the apps you use will know that you have turned on dark mode and can turn it on automatically.

Google Chrome already has a built-in dark mode. Websites can automatically switch to dark mode if you use it, provided that the site supports it. But most websites don’t have automatic dark mode or any other dark mode. But still you can enable this mode for almost all websites.

How to enable dark mode on all sites

Note that this is an experimental parameter that can be changed or deleted at any time. One day it may move to the Chrome settings screen or disappear completely.

To enable dark mode on each site in Google Chrome, you need to:

  1. To find it, type chrome://flags in the Chrome search bar and press Enter.
  2. Find Dark Mode in the search box at the top of the Experiments page that appears.
  3. Check the box to the right of Automatically render all web contents using a dark theme – Mac, Windows, Linux, Chrome OS, Android
    and select Enabled as the default setting.
  4. Click Relaunch to restart Chrome.

Chrome will close and restart all open web pages. Be sure to save any content on these pages before restarting the browser.

Now all websites will be displayed in dark mode. This looks very impressive on a laptop screen with an OLED display, for example, such as the ASUS ZenBook 13 OLED (UX325).

Read also: ASUS ZenBook 13 OLED (UX325) review: Versatile OLED Ultrabook

If you don’t like how it looks, then go back to Experiments in Chrome, change this parameter to Default and restart the browser. The browser will stop messing with website colors after disabling this option.

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Yuri Svitlyk

Son of the Carpathian Mountains, unrecognized genius of mathematics, Microsoft "lawyer", practical altruist, levopravosek

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