![The best web browsers for Android phones and tablets [2023] 4](https://www.talkandroid.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/TA-best-web-browsers-1-1-847x424.png)
Apps are synonymous with smartphones, but you're still going to need a good web browser. Sometimes a site doesn't have an app yet, or you just prefer Reddit's web interface. And since some of the best web browsers for Android feature extension and add-on support, you can get a very good experience from a more traditional browsing experience instead of downloading an app for everything.
But there are a ton of browsers to pick from, so we're sorting through the best of the best to help you pick out your next default internet browser. Check it out.
Google Chrome
It's hard to talk about web browsers without mentioning Google Chrome. It commands a crushing amount of market share, beating 2nd place Safari with 65% market share compared to Apple's 18%. It's easily the most popular browser in the world, and for good reason; it's a great browser.
It's built off of Chromium, which virtually every website you'll run into takes into consideration. You'll get a fast, well-built browsing experience, and sites can easily take advantage of some of Chrome's advanced features like native notifications. But what really makes Chrome work so well is its ability to seamlessly sync up the rest of your Google information.
So all those bookmarks and passwords you've been collecting over the years? They're right there in Chrome no matter where you use it. It handles filling in usernames and passwords, saved card details, addresses, and real-time language translation, and it does it all while monitoring your Google account for security issues.
It lacks some of the fancy features from the desktop version of Chrome like extensions and theme support, but if you just want a solid browser day in and day out, Chrome can't be beat. It's probably already installed on your Android phone, too.
Mozilla Firefox

You can't tell the history of the modern web browser without mentioning Firefox a few times. Back in the day when Internet Explorer was the de facto browser, Firefox came out swinging and modernized the concept of a browser with things like extensions and multiple tabs. It's only natural that Mozilla would eventually bring their award-winning browser to mobile, and you can download it right to your Android phone.
The current major selling point of Firefox is its ability to keep your data private. With Mozilla being a non-profit, they're not out to sell access to your data on the internet, so anyone that's wary of Google collecting more information should be intrigued.
It's still an incredibly feature-rich browser, offering data sync across devices, password management, multiple search engines, custom themes, and even add-on support. Yep, unlike Chrome, you can bring some of your favorite Firefox extensions with you on the go instead of only on desktop. Mozilla earns quite a few points for that alone.
Microsoft Edge

Internet Explorer was a joke. It was bad, constantly outclassed by its competitors, and Microsoft was content to let it get smoked by whatever Google and Mozilla were doing.
Microsoft Edge, its successor, doesn't have those problems. In fact, depending on who you ask, it might just be the best browser around.
With Edge being based on Chromium, it's just as compatible with the modern internet as Google Chrome. That was an issue in the beginning, but since then Microsoft has gotten their browser caught up to Chrome, and sometimes it manages to even squeeze ahead in some benchmarks over the competition. This is very likely because all of the Google syncing and tracking gets traded out for Microsoft account syncing, and Microsoft isn't quite as interested in selling ads as Google is.
It still offers all the same features as Chrome, like password management, translations, and private browsing, but Edge does offer a few things to stand apart like tab groups and collections, integration with Bing rewards, and more granular privacy controls. If you're using Microsoft Outlook and OneDrive to keep your Android phone synced up with a Windows 11 PC, well, Edge might just be the browser for you.
DuckDuckGo

Maybe you just aren't comfortable with Google or Microsoft keeping up with what you're browsing. That's totally understandable, and you've still got options for using the internet without a multi-billion dollar corporation snooping in on your.
DuckDuckGo, which started as a Google-alternative search engine, has their own browser for Android, and it's also very, very good. It's built more for privacy than features, so you're trading some of those rewards points and password syncing for a browser that enforces HTTPS connections, prevents fingerprinting across the web, and can even block trackers from following you via email and hiding your existing email address while signing up for things.
If you don't care about all the bells and whistles but you do want a more private browsing experience, give DuckDuckGo a shot.
Kiwi Browser

If you're a power user looking for a little more than these other apps offer, Kiwi Browser is worth a spin. It's based off of Chromium, so you get all of the compatibility you'd expect from a browser, but Kiwi throws in some extra stuff you're just not getting from Chrome or Edge.
It's customizable, with a bottom address bar tweak, forced dark mode, and a pop-up blocker, but where Kiwi Browser really shines is its ability to use regular Chrome extensions. Yep, with a couple clicks you can actually get full-blown extensions from the Chrome Web Store installed right on your mobile browser. There are tons and tons of extensions at this point that can make your browser almost a fully featured platform on its own, and Kiwi is one of the only browsers that will natively support this on your phone or tablet.
It's fast, free, and pretty simple to use. Give it a chance next time you're looking outside of Chrome.
what about Brave or Vivaldi? – both with malware/adblocking built in and NO tracking like with Chrome
No mention of Samsung browser? It’s really good and has ad-block support, etc.