Enable pop-ups on a Chromebook by adjusting Chrome’s site settings — not a system-wide Chromebook control — under Settings > Privacy and security > Site settings > Pop-ups and redirects.
You opened a page for work or school, clicked a link, and nothing happened — the pop-up got swallowed by Chrome’s default blocker. On a Chromebook, pop-ups live and die inside Google Chrome, not in a separate operating-system setting. Fixing it takes about 30 seconds once you know where to look, and you can choose whether to open the door for one site or all of them. Here is the exact path.
Where Chromebook Pop-Up Controls Actually Live
Pop-up blocking on a Chromebook is handled entirely through the Chrome browser’s site settings. There is no separate “allow pop-ups” switch hidden in the Chromebook system tray or settings app. Google’s official Chromebook help page confirms the only controls are inside Chrome itself under Pop-ups and redirects.
This matters because searching for a system-level toggle wastes time. Open Chrome first, then follow the menu path. The same instructions work across every Chromebook model — Acer, Lenovo, HP, Samsung, or Google’s own Pixelbook — because they all run ChromeOS with the same Chrome browser at the core.
The Fastest Way To Allow Pop-Ups For One Site
When a specific site legitimately needs pop-ups — a bank login, a school portal, a ticketing platform — the quickest route is through the address bar pop-up notice.
- On the page where the pop-up was blocked, look at the right end of the address bar for the Pop-up blocked icon.
- Click the icon, then select Always allow pop-ups and redirects from [site].
- Click Done.
The pop-up icon disappears from the address bar for that site, and the blocked content loads on your next action.
How To Change The Default Pop-Up Setting
If you routinely need pop-ups from many sites and want to turn the blocker off entirely, change Chrome’s default behavior. The trade-off is worth naming: allowing all pop-ups can expose you to deceptive ads and unwanted redirects. Per-site allowances are safer.
- Open Chrome on your Chromebook.
- Click the three-dot menu at the top right, then Settings.
- Click Privacy and security in the left sidebar, then Site settings.
- Scroll down to Pop-ups and redirects.
- Select Sites can send pop-ups and use redirects to turn off the blocker for all sites.
The toggle under Default behavior switches from “Blocked” to “Allowed.” Return here anytime to turn the blocker back on.
Adding a Site To The Allow List Manually
If you know a site’s address but haven’t triggered a pop-up yet, add it to the allowed list directly:
- In Pop-ups and redirects, scroll to Allowed to send pop-ups and use redirects.
- Click Add.
- Enter the site address — for example,
portal.example.com. - Use the pattern
[*.]example.comto allow pop-ups across every subdomain of a site (useful for large school or corporate domains). - Click Add again.
To remove a site from the list later, click the three-dot menu next to its entry and select Remove.
Pop-Up Settings: Default vs. Per-Site
| Setting Type | What It Does | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Default: Blocked | Chrome blocks all pop-ups unless a site is on the allow list | Most users — safe, selective |
| Default: Allowed | Chrome lets any site open pop-ups and redirects | Tech testing or sites that constantly need pop-ups |
| Per-site: Always allow | Only specified sites can show pop-ups; everything else is blocked | Work/school portals, banking, ticketing |
| Per-site: Always block | Specific sites never get pop-up permission | Problematic sites that abuse pop-ups |
| Domain pattern | Allow all subdomains of a root domain with [*.]example.com |
Large organizations with many subdomains |
| Address bar shortcut | Click the pop-up icon on a blocked page to allow that site instantly | On-the-spot fixes when a needed pop-up gets blocked |
Common Mistakes That Muddle The Fix
Three errors pop up regularly when people search for this: confusing pop-ups with notifications, mixing Android Chrome steps into a Chromebook article, and looking for a system-level toggle that does not exist.
Chromebook notifications — the alert banners that slide in from the bottom-right corner — live under a completely different setting. They do not control windows that open in your browser tab. If you are seeing pop-up-style content getting blocked, ignore the notification settings entirely and stay inside Privacy and security > Site settings > Pop-ups and redirects.
On a Chromebook, Chrome is the same desktop-class browser that runs on Windows and Mac laptops. The Android version of Chrome has a different menu path, so following Android-specific pop-up instructions on a Chromebook will take you nowhere. Stick to the Settings → Privacy and security route described above.
Acer’s Chromebook support documentation points users directly to Google’s pop-ups page rather than offering its own tool, confirming that no system-level setting exists — it is Chrome or nothing.
Pop-Up Pitfalls: When Allowing Everything Backfires
| Issue | Why It Happens | How To Avoid It |
|---|---|---|
| Deceptive pop-up ads | Some sites use fake system-warning pop-ups to trick you into clicking | Only allow pop-ups on sites you trust and use regularly |
| Unwanted redirects | A site opens a new tab or redirects you to an ad page | Block that site under Not allowed to send pop-ups or use redirects |
| Accidental malware visits | A pop-up leads to a harmful site that tries to download files | Keep the default block on; enable per-site only when a real need arises |
| Chrome warnings | Chrome may display a “Pop-up blocked” bar even for safe intents | Tap that bar and allow the specific site — not all sites |
Final Settings Checklist For Pop-Ups On A Chromebook
You do not need to turn off pop-up blocking for the whole internet just because one site needs it. Keep the default at “Blocked” and grant exceptions one at a time. Here is the routine for any site that requires pop-ups:
- Visit the site, trigger the pop-up action, and when Chrome blocks it, click Pop-up blocked in the address bar.
- Select Always allow pop-ups and redirects from [site] and click Done.
- If the pop-up still does not appear, go to Settings > Privacy and security > Site settings > Pop-ups and redirects and confirm the site appears under Allowed to send pop-ups and use redirects.
- For a site you have not visited yet, add its address manually using the Add button in the same settings panel.
That is the whole process. The pop-up blocker is a helpful guard by default — the trick is knowing exactly where to make the exception when a legitimate site needs it.
References & Sources
- Google Chromebook Help. “Block or allow pop-ups in Chrome.” Official Chromebook documentation covering the Pop-ups and redirects settings path.
- Acer Community. “How do I allow pop-ups on my Acer Chromebook?” Confirms the setting lives in Chrome, not system-wide.
