Enabling Chrome’s pop-up blocker takes one check in Settings, and the current default is already set to block unwanted pop-ups and redirects on the desktop version of the browser.
Pop-up ads are one of the oldest nuisances on the web, and Chrome handles them quietly in the background. The browser comes with pop-ups and redirects blocked by default on computer versions, but the setting is easy to verify or adjust. A wrong tap in Settings can flip that default off, so knowing exactly where the switch lives saves a frustrating search session.
Where The Pop-Up Blocker Lives In Chrome Settings
The pop-up control sits inside Chrome’s privacy and security menus. On a desktop computer, the full path is four clicks from the toolbar. Open Chrome, click the three-dot More menu in the top-right corner, then go to Settings → Privacy and security → Site settings → Pop-ups and redirects. That page shows the current default — either Blocked (recommended, and the default) or Allowed.
If pop-ups are getting through, this is the first place to check. A quick glance confirms whether the blocker is active or has been accidentally toggled off. The same page also lists sites you have explicitly allowed or blocked, which matters when one specific website keeps triggering pop-ups while everything else behaves.
How To Allow Pop-Ups On A Specific Site
Some legitimate websites rely on pop-ups for logins, payment windows, file downloads, or embedded content. Blocking every pop-up globally can break those functions. The fix is to add that site to the allowed list without disabling the blocker for everything else.
The fastest method happens right on the page. When Chrome blocks a pop-up, a small icon appears in the address bar — usually a window with an X or a pop-up count. Click that icon, then click the pop-up link you want to see. A prompt appears: Always allow pop-ups and redirects from [site]. Click Done, and that site is whitelisted immediately.
To add a site manually, go back to Settings → Privacy and security → Site settings → Pop-ups and redirects. Under Allowed to send pop-ups and use redirects, click Add and type the site’s web address. Use the pattern [*.]example.com to include all subdomains of that site.
How To Block A Specific Site
If one website keeps sending unwanted pop-ups despite the global blocker, add it to the block list. Navigate to Settings → Privacy and security → Site settings → Pop-ups and redirects. Under Not allowed to send pop-ups or use redirects, click Add and enter the site pattern. Any site on this list Chrome will permanently block, overriding the default setting.
If a site is accidentally on the allowed list, find it under Allowed to send pop-ups and use redirects and click the three dots next to it, then select Block. Chrome moves it to the blocked list without needing a fresh entry.
Pop-Up Blocker Settings At A Glance
| Setting Location | What It Controls | Best Used When |
|---|---|---|
| Settings > Pop-ups and redirects (default toggle) | Blocks or allows all pop-ups globally | You want a blanket on/off for all sites |
| Allowed to send pop-ups list | Whitelists specific sites | A trusted site needs pop-ups for login or payments |
| Not allowed to send pop-ups list | Blacklists specific sites | One site keeps bypassing the global block |
| Address-bar pop-up icon | Quick one-time or permanent allow on the fly | You visited a page and its pop-up was blocked |
| Third-party extension interference | Blocks Chrome’s own blocker from working | Pop-ups persist even when Chrome says blocked |
| Notification permissions | Separate from pop-ups — controls banner alerts | You are seeing notification prompts, not pop-ups |
| Per-site add pattern with wildcard | Covers all subdomains of a site | The site uses different subdomains for different features |
What To Do When Pop-Ups Still Show Up
A pop-up that appears after Chrome’s setting is confirmed as “Blocked” usually means a browser extension is overriding the built-in blocker. Some pop-up blocker extensions conflict with Chrome’s own blocking system. Open More → Extensions → Manage extensions and review any installed pop-up or ad blockers. Try turning them off one by one to see which one is interfering.
Another possibility is a system-level ad blocker running outside the browser, such as in antivirus software or a network-level DNS filter. Those operate independently from Chrome’s settings and require their own configuration to allow or block pop-ups.
Common Mistakes That Confuse Pop-Up Settings
- Mixing up pop-ups with browser notifications — they are entirely separate systems in Chrome. Notification permissions live under Settings → Privacy and security → Site settings → Notifications.
- Adding a whole site to the allowed list when only one specific page needs the pop-up. Chrome’s site-level allow works fine, but it is broader than necessary — the address-bar method is cleaner for one-off cases.
- Forgetting to use the address-bar blocked-pop-up icon for a site you only visit once. The icon disappears after the session ends, so manually adding the site to the allowed list is the permanent option.
- Assuming a third-party extension labeled “pop-up blocker” is just an enhancer. Many extensions replace Chrome’s built-in system entirely, which can cause confusion when toggling the browser setting seems to do nothing.
Pop-Up Blocker States For Different Scenarios
| Scenario | Chrome Setting Needed | Result You See |
|---|---|---|
| You want every pop-up blocked | Default set to Blocked (no sites on allowed list) | No pop-ups from any site |
| You need a banking site’s pop-up | Add site to Allowed to send pop-ups | Pop-ups for that site only |
| One site keeps getting through | Add site to Not allowed to send pop-ups | That site is permanently blocked |
| Pop-ups appear despite global block | Check extensions and system blockers | Extensions disabled or the conflict resolved |
| A page asks for notification permission | Settings > Notifications — block the site there | No banner alerts but pop-ups still protected |
Check And Confirm Your Blocker Is Active
The pop-up blocker setting is the only thing between you and a browser full of ad windows. Open Chrome’s pop-ups and redirects page right now and verify the default is Blocked (Sites cannot send pop-ups or use redirects). That single toggle covers almost every pop-up situation a typical user encounters. For the rare site that genuinely needs a pop-up to function, add it to the allowed list using the site-wide setting or the quick address-bar method. If pop-ups still occur after that, the culprit is almost certainly an extension or external tool running alongside Chrome.
References & Sources
- Google Chrome Help. “Block or allow pop-ups in Chrome – Computer.” Official documentation covering the pop-up blocker settings path, per-site exceptions, and the default blocking behavior.
