Erasing your Google Chrome history is a two-click task through the Delete browsing data menu, available on desktop and Android devices with slightly different paths.
A single tap or click clears your tracks, but Chrome’s menu hides a few traps — like erasing your history but leaving search suggestions behind, or wiping more data than you meant to touch. The fix for each depends on knowing which menu does what, and the exact route changes depending whether you’re on a computer, an Android phone, or Chrome for iPhone. This guide covers every device’s official method, plus how to delete individual history entries when you only need to remove a few.
The Fast Way To Erase All Chrome History
Chrome’s built-in Delete browsing data tool clears your entire history in one action. The steps differ slightly by device, but the core flow is the same: open the menu, pick a time range, and confirm.
On A Desktop Computer
Click the three-dot More button in Chrome’s top-right corner, select Delete browsing data, choose All time from the Time range dropdown, make sure Browsing history is checked, then click Delete data. The Basic tab is enough for history alone — the Advanced tab adds checkboxes for passwords, cookies, and site settings that you probably want to leave alone unless you’re doing a full reset.
A faster shortcut: type @history into the omnibox (address bar), press Tab or Space, and Chrome shows your recent history entries. From that list you can delete individual items or jump straight to the full history manager.
On An Android Phone Or Tablet
Open Chrome, tap the three-dot More button, tap Delete browsing data, choose a time range, check Browsing history, and tap Delete data. Android’s time-range options include Last 15 minutes, Last hour, Last 24 hours, Last 7 days, Last 4 weeks, and All time — so you can clear just today’s activity without touching the rest.
after the data deletes, the browsing data section shows updated numbers, and your recent history list shrinks to match the time range you chose.
On Chrome For iPhone Or iPad
Google’s official instructions in this guide cover desktop and Android only. On iOS, open Chrome, tap the three-dot More button, go to History, then tap Clear browsing data at the bottom. The available time ranges and data types mirror the desktop version, but the exact option labels depend on your iOS Chrome version. Check the live product before assuming the button names match the Android flow.
| Device | Menu Path To Clear All History | Time Range Options |
|---|---|---|
| Desktop / Computer | More > Delete browsing data > check Browsing history > Delete data | Last hour, 24 hours, 7 days, 4 weeks, All time |
| Android | More > Delete browsing data > check Browsing history > Delete data | Last 15 min, Last hour, Last 24 hours, Last 7 days, Last 4 weeks, All time |
| iPhone / iPad (iOS Chrome) | More > History > Clear browsing data | Varies by version; last hour, all time common |
Erasing Individual History Entries (Without Wiping Everything)
Deleting one site or a handful of entries from your history is the smart move when you only want a few traces gone and don’t want to lose autofill, logins, or recent tabs. The method again depends on your device.
On Desktop
Open Chrome, press Ctrl+H (Windows) or Cmd+Y (Mac) to open the full history page. Browse or search, check the box next to each item you want removed, then click Delete at the top of the list. You can also right-click any single entry and choose Remove from history for a one-off deletion.
On Android
Tap More > History. Find the entry you want, tap the Remove icon (the x or trash icon next to it). To remove several at once, touch and hold one entry until it’s selected, then tap the others to add them. Tap Remove at the bottom. the selected entries vanish from the list immediately, and the total entry count shrinks.
On iPhone / iPad
Open Chrome, tap More > History. Tap Edit in the top right, select the entries you want gone, then tap Delete. Unlike Android, iOS Chrome uses a dedicated edit button rather than a touch-and-hold gesture.
Full step-by-step instructions are available directly from Google’s official Chrome browsing history help page.
Three Mistakes That Leave History Intact
Clearing Chrome history seems simple, but these common missteps leave your browsing trail mostly untouched.
- Forgetting to check the Browsing history box. The Delete browsing data dialog clears only the boxes you check. If you uncheck Browsing history and delete, your cookies and cache may vanish but your history stays put.
- Using the wrong time range. Selecting Last hour when you meant to clear everything leaves all earlier history intact. Always double-check the time range before confirming.
- Only clearing Chrome, not your Google Account. Deleting Chrome history on one device does not erase activity stored in your Google Account’s My Activity page. Visit myactivity.google.com to remove search and browsing data tied to your Google login across all devices.
What Actually Gets Erased (And What Doesn’t)
Chrome’s Delete browsing data clears whatever boxes you check on that specific browser on that device. It does not sync deletions to other signed-in devices unless you also delete from My Activity. The table below shows what the main checkboxes control.
| Data Type | What Gets Removed | Side Effects |
|---|---|---|
| Browsing history | URLs you visited, page titles, timestamps | Autocomplete suggestions stop showing old sites |
| Cookies & site data | Login sessions, site preferences, ad trackers | You’ll be signed out of most websites |
| Cached images & files | Saved copies of pages for faster load times | Pages load slightly slower on first visit afterward |
| Passwords | Saved login credentials | You’ll need to re-enter passwords |
| Site settings | Permissions (camera, location, notifications) | Websites will ask for permissions again |
Final Checklist: Erase Chrome History The Right Way
Before you click delete, run through these three things to make sure your history actually disappears.
- Confirm your device’s exact menu path — desktop uses More > Delete browsing data, Android uses the same, iOS uses More > History > Clear browsing data.
- Set the time range to All time if you want everything gone; pick a shorter range for today-only cleanups.
- Verify Browsing history is checked — uncheck everything else unless you also want to clear cookies, cache, or passwords.
When the deletion finishes, check your history by opening the History page (Ctrl+H on desktop, More > History on mobile). If old entries still show, repeat the steps with the correct time range and the Browsing history box checked.
References & Sources
- Google. “Check or delete your Chrome browsing history.” Official desktop instructions for viewing and deleting history entries.
- Google. “Delete browsing data in Chrome.” Official steps for clearing browsing data on desktop.
- Google. “Check or delete your Chrome browsing history – Android.” Official Android instructions for history deletion.
- Google. “Delete, allow, and manage cookies in Chrome – Android.” Official Android cookie and data management guide.
