Split screen mode on an iPad, Windows PC, or Chrome browser closes quickly once you use the correct control — a divider drag, a settings toggle, or an experimental flag.
A split screen that won’t go away feels like the device is fighting you, but the fix is almost always a single action once you know where to look. iPad split view clears by dragging the divider to an edge, Windows snapping stops in the Multitasking settings, and Chrome’s experimental split view lives in a hidden flags menu. Each takes about ten seconds.
What Does “Eliminate Split Screen” Actually Mean?
Split screen means different things on different devices, and the fix changes accordingly. On an iPad it is the multitasking feature that shows two apps side by side or a floating app window. On Windows it is the Snap windows behavior that automatically docks a window to half the screen when you drag it to an edge. In Chrome it is an experimental Split View button that appears in the browser toolbar. Each one has its own off switch, and none of them require reinstalling software or resetting the device.
Eliminate Split Screen on iPad: Two Ways That Work
iPad split screen comes in two forms — Split View with two apps side by side and Slide Over with a floating app on top of the main one. Both close differently, and each takes under five seconds.
To close Split View (two apps sharing the screen), touch and hold the vertical divider bar between the two apps, then drag it all the way to the left or right edge of the display. The app on the trailing side disappears and the remaining app fills the full screen. A reader knows it worked when the app they kept expands edge to edge with no divider visible.
To close a Slide Over floating window, touch and hold the gray handle bar at the top center of the floating app, then drag it downward off the bottom of the screen. The floating window vanishes and the main app returns to full screen.
Using the three-dot menu: Tap the three dots at the very top center of an app window in Split View. A small menu appears with options for Split View, Slide Over, and Full Screen. Tap Full Screen to expand that app and collapse the other, or tap Close to dismiss the app entirely. This method works on any iPad running iPadOS 13 or later.
Disable iPad Multitasking Completely in Settings
If you never want iPad apps to split the screen again, you can turn off the multitasking feature in system settings. Open Settings → Home Screen & Dock → Multitasking and toggle Allow Multiple Apps to off. The screen shows a green toggle when on and gray when off. Once disabled, opening a second app from the Dock will replace the current app instead of splitting the screen.
A note on newer iPadOS versions: Apple Community discussions note that recent iPadOS releases no longer offer a complete kill switch for multitasking the way older versions did. The toggle reduces split-screen behavior but may not eliminate every multitasking gesture. The surest close on modern iPads remains dragging the divider or using the three-dot menu each time.
Turn Off Windows Snap Windows for Good
On Windows, the feature most people call split screen is Snap windows, the behavior that locks a window to half the display when you drag it to the edge of the screen. Microsoft’s official guidance says to open Settings → System → Multitasking and set Snap windows to Off. The toggle is a simple on-off switch near the top of the Multitasking page. Once turned off, dragging a window to the edge will move it normally without snapping it into a two-pane layout. Microsoft’s Q&A guidance on disabling split-screen confirms this as the correct path.
Disabling Snap windows affects other window management conveniences — you lose the ability to dock windows to screen edges or quadrants, which can make multi-monitor setups less efficient. If you only want to stop accidental splits without losing snapping entirely, consider adjusting the sensitivity rather than turning the feature off completely.
Remove the Chrome Split View Experimental Option
Google Chrome includes an experimental Split View feature that adds a split-screen button to the browser toolbar. To remove it, type chrome://flags into the address bar and press Enter. In the search box on the flags page, type Split view. A flag called Split view appears with a dropdown menu set to Default. Change it to Disabled, then click the Relaunch button that appears at the bottom right of the page. After Chrome restarts, the Split View button disappears from the toolbar.
Because this is an experimental flag, the exact label and behavior may shift between Chrome versions. If the flag does not appear in a future release, the feature has likely been removed or replaced by the Chrome development team.
Split Screen Fixes at a Glance
| Device | Quick Fix Method | Settings Path (Permanent) |
|---|---|---|
| iPad — Split View | Drag the divider all the way to one edge | Settings → Home Screen & Dock → Multitasking → Allow Multiple Apps off |
| iPad — Slide Over | Drag the floating window down off the bottom of the screen | Same as above |
| iPad — Three-Dot Menu | Tap three dots → Full Screen or Close | Same as above |
| Windows 10 / 11 | Drag window away from edge (temporary) | Settings → System → Multitasking → Snap windows off |
| Google Chrome | No quick exit — must use flags | chrome://flags → Split view → Disabled → Relaunch |
| Older iPad models | May not support split screen at all | No action needed (feature unavailable) |
| iPad with no three-dot menu | Split View not available on that device | Check iPad model compatibility |
Common Split Screen Mistakes and How to Fix Them
| Mistake | Why It Fails | The Real Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Dragging the divider only partway on iPad | The divider snaps back if not pushed to the absolute edge | Drag firmly until the app disappears and the other expands fully |
| Confusing Slide Over with Split View | Slide Over floats on top and closes differently | Drag the floating window down off the screen bottom |
| Trying to turn off iPad split screen in the wrong settings menu | The toggle is under Home Screen & Dock, not Display | Use Settings → Home Screen & Dock → Multitasking |
| Assuming Windows doesn’t use Snap windows | Users search for “split screen” and miss the correct name | Look for “Snap windows” in Multitasking settings |
| Changing Chrome settings in the main settings page | The Split View option is a flag, not a standard setting | Use chrome://flags, not the regular Chrome settings menu |
| Restarting the device before changing the setting | Split screen returns after reboot if the setting is unchanged | Change the toggle or flag, then relaunch — restart alone does nothing |
Quick Reference — Eliminate Split Screen on Any Device
Three devices, three fixes. On an iPad, drag the divider to the edge or tap the three dots and choose Full Screen. On Windows, turn Snap windows off in Multitasking settings. In Chrome, disable the Split View flag in chrome://flags and relaunch. That is the full workflow — no hidden steps, no second search needed.
References & Sources
- Microsoft. “How do I get rid of the split screen?” Microsoft Q&A — official guidance on disabling Snap windows in Windows Multitasking settings.
- Apple Support Communities. “Disable split screen on iPad.” Community discussion on multitasking controls across iPadOS versions.
- ProCase. “How to Get Rid of Split Screen on iPad.” Guide covering divider drag, three-dot menu, and Slide Over closure steps.
- ElevenForum. “How to disable split screen option.” Windows 11 user guide confirming the Multitasking settings path.
- Google Chrome Help. “I want to get rid of Split View option in Chrome.” Thread documenting the chrome://flags method for disabling the experimental Split View button.
