Home

How to Set a Browser in Windows 10

|
|  Updated:  
2018-08-30 16:21:12
Windows 10 All-in-One For Dummies
Explore Book
Buy On Amazon
When you get Windows 10, Edge is set up as the default browser: Click a web link in a document, for example, and Edge jumps up to load the web page on your Windows 10 device. But, if you prefer to use a different browser with Windows 10, you can set the one of your choice.

Both Firefox and Chrome offer to become your default web browser, as soon as you install them. Internet Explorer has the option, but it isn’t so in your face. They also have a check box that basically tells them to quit asking.

It’s easy to change your default browser and set the browser of your choice in Windows 10. Here’s how:

  1. Click Start, then click the Windows 10 Settings icon (which looks like a wheel).
  2. Click the Apps icon. Then, on the left, choose Default apps.

    You see the Default Apps dialog box.

    set browser Windows 10 Set your default browser here.
  3. On the right, scroll down to the web browser entry; chances are good it says Microsoft Edge. Click Microsoft Edge.

    You see a list of all browsers currently installed on your computer.

  4. Choose the browser that you want to turn into your default browser. Then click Switch anyway when Microsoft tries to convince you to continue using Edge.

    This tells Windows 10 to associate with the browser almost all filename extensions that the browser can handle.

  5. Don’t trust Microsoft’s re-assigning your browser defaults? Good. Down at the bottom, click the link that says Set Defaults by App.

    The pick list appears. Whoa! When Windows 10 sets defaults for Google Chrome, it doesn’t shuffle PDF files to Chrome. Instead, it keeps PDF files inside Edge. A little bit of dirty pool here.

    Windows 10 chrome Chrome can handle these kinds of files and protocols.
  6. Select the boxes next to whichever files you want to open in your new browser, and then click Save.

    Your chosen Windows 10 program (in this case, Google) becomes the default for that particular kind of file. If you change the PDF box over to Chrome, for example, double-clicking a PDF file will open it in Chrome — not in Edge.

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Woody Leonhard is a bestselling author and has been a Microsoft beta tester since Word for Windows 1.1. He covers Windows and Office topics on his popular Web site, AskWoody.com.