Opening Chrome, clicking the three-dot menu, and selecting New Incognito window (or pressing Ctrl + Shift + N) starts a private browsing session on a Chromebook that doesn’t save your history or cookies.
Whether you’re shopping for a gift, checking a sensitive account, or just want a clean slate, Incognito mode on your Chromebook is the fastest way to browse without leaving a local trail. One keyboard shortcut does it, and closing the session is just as simple — but there are a few gotchas that trip up first-timers. Here’s exactly how to open, use, and leave Incognito mode on a Chromebook, plus what it actually protects.
Opening an Incognito Window on Your Chromebook
The official way to start Incognito mode on a Chromebook works the same whether you’re a new Chrome user or a power user. Google’s desktop help page explicitly lists Chrome OS for the shortcut combination.
- Open the Chrome browser on your Chromebook.
- Click the three-dot menu (More) in the top-right corner.
- Select New Incognito window.
- Look for the Incognito icon (a hat-and-glasses figure) in the top-left corner of the new window — that’s your confirmation it’s active.
That icon is your main if you see it, your new session is private. If no new window appears or the icon is missing, Chrome didn’t enter Incognito mode.
The One Shortcut You’ll Actually Remember
You don’t need the menu every time. The keyboard shortcut Ctrl + Shift + N opens a fresh Incognito window on any Chromebook. It’s the same shortcut that works on Windows and Linux desktops — Google confirms Chrome OS uses the same key combination. Mac users press ⌘ + Shift + N instead.
This shortcut is the fastest route for anyone who opens Incognito windows regularly. Once you press it, you’re in a private session immediately, with no extra clicks.
| Operating System | Shortcut to Open Incognito | How to Close Incognito |
|---|---|---|
| Chrome OS (Chromebook) | Ctrl + Shift + N | Close every Incognito window |
| Windows | Ctrl + Shift + N | Close every Incognito window |
| Linux | Ctrl + Shift + N | Close every Incognito window |
| Mac | ⌘ + Shift + N | Close every Incognito window |
| Android | Tap three dots → New Incognito tab | Close all Incognito tabs |
| iOS | Tap two squares → New Incognito Tab | Close all Incognito tabs |
| Edge on Chromebook | Ctrl + Shift + N (InPrivate) | Close all InPrivate windows |
How to Leave Incognito Mode Correctly
The session ends only when you close every single Incognito window you have open. This is the most common mistake people make: closing one Incognito window while another stays open keeps the private session alive. Google’s official wording is explicit — the session ends only when all Incognito windows are closed.
If you see a small number near the Incognito icon (like “2”) it means multiple Incognito windows are still open. Click the Close button on each one, or use Ctrl + W to close tabs one by one until the number disappears. When the last Incognito window closes, your cookies from that session are deleted and the new browsing data stops being collected.
What Incognito Does and Doesn’t Protect
Incognito mode on a Chromebook gives you a clean local session. Chrome doesn’t save your browsing history, downloaded-page records, or new cookies after you close all Incognito windows. Files you download remain on your device, and any bookmarks you create stay in your main Chrome account. Third-party cookies are blocked by default in Incognito mode on desktop Chrome, which tracks normal browser behavior since Google phased out third-party cookies in Chrome generally.
Here’s what Incognito doesn’t do: it doesn’t make you invisible to websites, your employer, your school, your internet service provider (ISP), or your network administrator. If you sign into your Google Account inside an Incognito window, Google’s official help warns that your searches can still be recorded in Google Web History unless that history setting is turned off separately. Schools and employers using managed Chromebooks may also track browsing activity through their network monitoring tools — Incognito won’t hide that.
Common Myths and Misunderstandings
Two misunderstandings trip up most Chromebook users. First, Incognito mode does not hide your activity from a school or work administrator if those devices are managed. The official Google Chrome help page on Desktop doesn’t address this directly, but support forums and third-party confirmations note that management-level tracking runs separately from the browser’s local session. Second, closing one Incognito window ends the private session only if it’s the only one open — always check the Incognito icon’s number indicator before assuming you’re back to normal browsing.
Incognito vs. Normal Browsing on a Chromebook
You can keep a normal Chrome window and an Incognito window open at the same time on your Chromebook. Incognito browsing continues if you open another Incognito window during the same session. Here’s how the two modes compare:
| Browsing Activity | Normal Window | Incognito Window |
|---|---|---|
| Browsing history saved | Yes | No |
| New cookies kept after closing | Yes | No (deleted on close) |
| Downloaded files remain on device | Yes | Yes |
| Bookmarks saved | Yes | Yes |
| Signed-in Google Account tracked | Yes | Yes (if signed in) |
| School/employer network visibility | Visible | Visible |
Leave Incognito Mode: Quick Checklist
When you’re done with your private browsing session, here’s the exact sequence to end it cleanly. No cookies, no history, no leftover session.
- Look at the top-left corner for the Incognito icon.
- If you see a number next to it (like “1” or “2”), multiple Incognito windows are open.
- Click the Close button on each Incognito window — or press Ctrl + Shift + W to close the active Incognito window.
- When the Incognito icon disappears entirely, the session is over and its cookies are deleted.
That’s it. Your Chromebook is back to normal browsing mode, and no trace of the Incognito session remains in your local history.
References & Sources
- Google Chrome Help. “Browse in Incognito mode – Computer” Official steps, shortcuts, session behavior, and closing rules for Chrome OS and desktop.
- ASUS Support. “[Chrome OS] Incognito mode (browse in private)” Chromebook-specific guidance on steps, shortcuts, and privacy caveats.
- Google Chrome Help. “Browse in Incognito mode – Android” Android-only variations, including the lock-tabs feature; noted for platform differences.
