Tuckd
Tuck away tabs you're not using. Auto-archive idle tabs and restore them anytime.
As of June 2026, Tuckd has 2 users and a 5.00/5 rating from 1 reviews in the Productivity category.
Usersno change0%
2
2
Ratingno change0%
5.00
1 reviews
Reviewsno change0%
1
Version
1.1.2
Manifest V3
90-day change · In the last 90 days this extension 1 version update.
History
4 snapshotsTracking since Apr 7, 2026.
View as table
| Date | Users | Rating | Reviews | Version |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 7, 2026 | — | — | — | 1.0.0 |
| May 9, 2026 | — | — | — | 1.0.0 |
| May 14, 2026 | 2 | — | — | 1.1.2 |
| Jun 8, 2026 | 1 | — | — | 1.1.2 |
| Now | 2 | 5.00 | 1 | 1.1.2 |
Changelog
- May 9, 2026description
Tuckd keeps your browser tidy by automatically archiving tabs you haven't used in a while — the same way Arc handles inactive tabs, but for Chrome. How it works: Set an idle threshold (1 hour to 30 days). When a tab hasn't been visited for that long, Tuckd closes it and saves it to your local archive. Restore any archived tab with one click whenever you need it back. Core features: • Auto-archive — tabs idle longer than your threshold are silently closed and saved. Runs every 15 minutes in the background. • Command bar — press Cmd+E (Mac) or Ctrl+E (Windows/Linux) on any page to search across your open tabs, archived tabs, bookmarks, and browser history — all in one place. • Quick actions — type > in the command bar for commands like Close Duplicates, Focus Mode (archive everything except your current tab), Group by Domain, and Save/Restore Workspaces. • Workspaces — save your current set of tabs as a named workspace and restore it later with one command. • Smart protection — pinned tabs, tabs playing audio (music, video calls), and tabs in groups are never archived. • Frecency ranking — search results are ranked by a combination of visit frequency and recency, so your most relevant tabs appear first. • Archive management — browse archived tabs grouped by date, search them, restore individually, or set auto-cleanup (7, 30, 90 days, or never). • Zero external dependencies — no accounts, no servers, no tracking. Everything stays in chrome.storage.local on your machine. Perfect for anyone who ends the day with 50+ open tabs and wants a cleaner, faster browser without losing anything.
Tuckd keeps your browser tidy by automatically archiving tabs you haven't used in a while — the same way Arc handles inactive tabs, but for Chrome. How it works: Set an idle threshold (1 hour to 30 days). When a tab hasn't been visited for that long, Tuckd closes it and saves it to your local archive. Restore any archived tab with one click whenever you need it back. Core features: • Auto-archive — tabs idle longer than your threshold are silently closed and saved. Runs every 15 minutes in the background. • Command bar — press Cmd+E (Mac) or Ctrl+E (Windows/Linux) on any page to search across your open tabs, archived tabs, bookmarks, and browser history — all in one place. • Quick actions — type > in the command bar for commands like Close Duplicates, Focus Mode (archive everything except your current tab), Group by Domain, and Save/Restore Workspaces. • Workspaces — save your current set of tabs as a named workspace and restore it later with one command. • Smart protection — pinned tabs, tabs playing audio (music, video calls), and tabs in groups are never archived. • Frecency ranking — search results are ranked by a combination of visit frequency and recency, so your most relevant tabs appear first. • Archive management — browse archived tabs grouped by date, search them, restore individually, or set auto-cleanup (7, 30, 90 days, or never). • Zero external dependencies — no accounts, no servers, no tracking. Everything stays in chrome.storage.local on your machine. What’s new in Tuckd (1.1.2) Command bar (⌘/Ctrl + E) • Opens reliably on more pages, including Chrome’s own pages (chrome://, New Tab–style URLs, etc.): when the site can’t run the overlay, Tuckd opens a dedicated command-bar screen instead of failing silently. • Typing in the command bar no longer “leaks” into search boxes, docs, or other fields on the page behind it. • Follow-up fix: the page behind the palette is fully non-interactive while the command bar is open, so background sites shouldn’t capture your keystrokes. Popup & settings • Refreshed popup and settings design, with clearer layout and light/dark styling that follows your system/browser theme. • Impact this month on the settings page: see how many tabs were tucked away this month and a rough estimate of memory freed (approximate, for illustration). Other • Privacy policy and listing updates (1.0.1). • Ongoing fixes and internal cleanup for reliability. Perfect for anyone who ends the day with 50+ open tabs and wants a cleaner, faster browser without losing anything.
Permissions & access
- Permissions
- tabstabGroupsstoragealarmsscriptingbookmarkshistory
- Host access
- <all_urls>
Screenshots
About
Tuckd keeps your browser tidy by automatically archiving tabs you haven't used in a while — the same way Arc handles inactive tabs, but for Chrome.
How it works: Set an idle threshold (1 hour to 30 days). When a tab hasn't been visited for that long, Tuckd closes it and saves it to your local archive. Restore any archived tab with one click whenever you need it back.
Core features:
• Auto-archive — tabs idle longer than your threshold are silently closed and saved. Runs every 15 minutes in the background.
• Command bar — press Cmd+E (Mac) or Ctrl+E (Windows/Linux) on any page to search across your open tabs, archived tabs, bookmarks, and browser history — all in one place.
• Quick actions — type > in the command bar for commands like Close Duplicates, Focus Mode (archive everything except your current tab), Group by Domain, and Save/Restore Workspaces.
• Workspaces — save your current set of tabs as a named workspace and restore it later with one command.
• Smart protection — pinned tabs, tabs playing audio (music, video calls), and tabs in groups are never archived.
• Frecency ranking — search results are ranked by a combination of visit frequency and recency, so your most relevant tabs appear first.
• Archive management — browse archived tabs grouped by date, search them, restore individually, or set auto-cleanup (7, 30, 90 days, or never).
• Zero external dependencies — no accounts, no servers, no tracking. Everything stays in chrome.storage.local on your machine.
What’s new in Tuckd (1.1.2)
Command bar (⌘/Ctrl + E)
• Opens reliably on more pages, including Chrome’s own pages (chrome://, New Tab–style URLs,
etc.): when the site can’t run the overlay, Tuckd opens a dedicated command-bar screen
instead of failing silently.
• Typing in the command bar no longer “leaks” into search boxes, docs, or other fields on the
page behind it.
• Follow-up fix: the page behind the palette is fully non-interactive while the command bar
is open, so background sites shouldn’t capture your keystrokes.
Popup & settings
• Refreshed popup and settings design, with clearer layout and light/dark styling that
follows your system/browser theme.
• Impact this month on the settings page: see how many tabs were tucked away this month and a
rough estimate of memory freed (approximate, for illustration).
Other
• Privacy policy and listing updates (1.0.1).
• Ongoing fixes and internal cleanup for reliability.
Perfect for anyone who ends the day with 50+ open tabs and wants a cleaner, faster browser without losing anything.Technical
- Version
- 1.1.2
- Manifest
- V3
- Size
- 40.51KiB
- Min Chrome
- 88
- Languages
- 1
- Featured
- No
Metadata
- ID
- ldnldaekeeeadpicmejeblieiedpgejo
- Developer ID
- u27b2021998542a5bee8e3090f31519c9
- Developer Email
- [email protected]
- Created
- Apr 7, 2026
- Last Updated (Store)
- May 4, 2026
- Last Scraped
- Jun 8, 2026
- Website
- —
- Support URL
- —
Data sourced from the Chrome Web Store · last verified Jun 8, 2026.