Slumber

Free up RAM by automatically suspending inactive tabs.

As of June 2026, Slumber has users in the Productivity category.

Usersno change0%
Ratingno change0%
— reviews
Reviewsno change0%
Version
1.0.0
Manifest V3

History

1 snapshots

Tracking since May 9, 2026.

Not enough history yet for this metric — the chart fills in as we collect more snapshots.
View as table
DateUsersRatingReviewsVersion
May 9, 20261.0.0
Now1.0.0

Permissions & access

Permissions
tabsstoragealarms
Host access
None declared

Screenshots

Slumber screenshot 1

About

Slumber automatically suspends inactive tabs to free up RAM and keep Chrome running fast, especially if you keep dozens of tabs open at once.

How it works: When a tab hasn't been viewed for a set amount of time, Slumber puts it to sleep. The tab stays in your browser but uses virtually no memory. Click it any time to instantly wake it back up.

Features
- Auto-suspend inactive tabs after 5, 10, 20, 30, or 60 minutes
- Suspend all tabs instantly with one click
- Keyboard shortcut (Ctrl+Shift+S / Cmd+Shift+S) to suspend the current tab
- Whitelist: keep important tabs like Gmail or Spotify always awake
- See exactly how many tabs are suspended and how much RAM is saved
- Clean suspended page shows the original tab title and URL

Privacy
Everything runs locally on your device. No browsing data, URLs, or tab content is ever sent anywhere. No account required.

Why Slumber?
The most popular tab suspender extensions were abandoned or caught injecting malware. Slumber is actively maintained, fully open about what it does, and built on Chrome's latest Manifest V3 platform.

Technical

Version
1.0.0
Manifest
V3
Size
23.91KiB
Min Chrome
88
Languages
1
Featured
No

Metadata

ID
cmnjmadicbieeoidmlghncoigboaaega
Developer ID
u810c1cd7b4e29b4ef870ea431f21e95e
Developer Email
[email protected]
Created
May 8, 2026
Last Updated (Store)
May 8, 2026
Last Scraped
Jun 7, 2026
Website
Privacy Policy

Data sourced from the Chrome Web Store · last verified Jun 7, 2026.