How To Enable Mic On Chromebook | Both Controls You Need

Getting your Chromebook mic to work takes two steps: turn on Microphone access in system settings, then allow the app or site that needs it.

Before you dig into browser settings, know that how to enable mic on Chromebook starts at the system level — one toggle in Privacy settings overrules everything else. You can grant permission inside Chrome, an Android app, or a website, but if that system toggle is off, none of them can use the mic. The fix is two settings deep and takes about ten seconds.

The System Toggle That Controls The Mic

The Chromebook has a master microphone switch hidden inside Privacy controls. When this toggle is off, it blocks microphone access for every app, service, and website on the device. When it is on, individual apps and sites can request and use the mic as needed.

Follow these steps to turn on system-wide microphone access:

  1. Click the time in the bottom-right corner of the screen.
  2. Select Settings.
  3. On the left panel, choose Privacy and security, then Privacy controls.
  4. Turn on Microphone access.
  5. If you see a specific app listed below the toggle, click it and turn on microphone permission for that app.
  6. If your Chromebook has a physical microphone switch on the side or keyboard, make sure it is set to the on position.

Once the toggle is on, you will see the system respond — apps that were previously blocked will now show microphone access as available, and the mic icon may appear in the status area when active.

How To Allow The Mic In Chrome Browser Sites

System access and website permission are separate controls. You can have the system toggle on and still be blocked at the browser level if a site was previously denied. Chrome manages site mic permissions in its own settings panel.

  1. In Chrome, click the three-dot menu in the top-right corner and open Settings.
  2. Go to Privacy and security, then Site settings.
  3. Click Microphone.
  4. Select Sites can ask to use your microphone or Sites can use your microphone.
  5. Scroll to the Blocked list and remove any site you previously denied — click the trash icon or three-dot menu next to it.
  6. If multiple input devices are listed in a dropdown at the top, confirm the correct microphone is selected.

After these steps, reload the site that needs mic access. You will see a permission prompt in the address bar — click Allow.

Problem Likely Cause Fix
Mic not working in any app System Microphone access is off Turn on the toggle in Privacy controls
Mic works in some apps but not in Chrome Site permission was denied or blocked Check Site settings → Microphone → remove from Blocked list
Mic works in Chrome but not in an Android app App-specific permission not granted Open the app’s permission in Privacy controls and set to Allowed – while in use
No sound from mic at all Physical mic switch is off Locate the switch on the side or keyboard edge and toggle it on
Wrong device picked up audio Multiple input devices and wrong one selected Choose the correct microphone from the Chrome device dropdown
Mic worked yesterday but not today System update changed a permission or switch Re-check Privacy controls and physical switch
Permission prompt never appears on a site Site is set to Block or Quiet notifications Remove the site from Blocked list; set default to Ask

What To Check If The Mic Still Won’t Work?

If the system toggle is on and browser permissions look correct but the mic remains silent, three things are worth a look before you dig deeper.

The physical switch. Some Chromebooks have a hardware switch that cuts power to the microphone entirely. It is usually a small slider on the side or a dedicated key on the keyboard with a mic icon. If it is toggled off, no software setting can override it.

The input device dropdown. Chrome lists every audio input it detects. If more than one device appears — like an external USB mic and the built-in one — the wrong device may be selected. Open Site settingsMicrophone and pick the correct microphone from the list.

The blocked list. A site you visited months ago and denied once will remain in Chrome’s blocked list unless you manually remove it. Even with the default set to Ask, a previously denied site gets no prompt. Clear it from the blocked section and reload the page.

How Do Microphone Permissions Work On Chromebook?

Chromebook runs three layers of mic permission simultaneously, and each one must be set to allow for the mic to work in a given scenario. The system toggle is the master switch. When it is off, nothing below it matters. When it is on, the Chrome browser and Android apps each read the permission differently — Chrome shows it as Allow while Android apps see it as Allowed – while in use. That difference usually does not affect functionality, but it explains why the wording changes depending on which app you check.

Google’s official Chromebook microphone documentation confirms that the system Privacy control blocks access across all levels when off, and that per-app permissions operate independently once the system toggle is on.

Permission Layer Where To Change It What It Controls
System Microphone access Settings → Privacy and security → Privacy controls Master switch for all mic use on the device
Chrome site permission Chrome Settings → Site settings → Microphone Which websites can request and use the mic
Android app permission Settings → Apps → pick the app → Permissions Mic access for individual Android apps
Physical mic switch Hardware switch on the device case or keyboard Cuts all mic power; overrides every software setting

Get Your Chromebook Mic Working

When the mic stops working, run these checks in order and you will find the block in under a minute.

  • Turn on Microphone access in Privacy controls.
  • Check the physical mic switch on the device.
  • Open Chrome Site settings → Microphone and remove the site from the Blocked list if present.
  • Set the default mic behavior to Ask so new sites prompt you.
  • Select the correct input device if multiple microphones appear.
  • Reload the site or restart the app and grant the permission prompt.

That sequence covers every common failure. If the mic still does not work after all six steps, the issue is likely hardware — a damaged port, loose internal connection, or failed component — and a repair or external USB microphone becomes the next step.

References & Sources

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