Firefox’s has been reimagined in 2025 to be fast, modern and inviting the first time you run it and every day after. We’ve always had your back on privacy, and still do. We think the browser should be a piece of software you can rely on to have your back, pleasant to look at and working seamlessly with the web.
Why is Firefox sending me notifications from websites I don’t have open?
Firefox supports web push notifications, which allow websites to send alerts even when they are not open. If you are receiving notifications from unwanted sites, go to Firefox’s settings, navigate to the Privacy & Security section, find the Permissions area, and review your Notifications settings. There, you can remove any sites you no longer wish to receive notifications from.
Does Firefox use Google as the default search engine?
Yes, Google pays hefty royalties to Mozilla for making them the default search engine in Firefox. That deal is worth around $500 million per year (as of 2024-2025) and makes up the vast majority of Mozilla’s total revenue.

Is Firefox better than Google Chrome?
Firefox and Chrome are updated every few weeks, so it’s hard to compare them over time. Many users consider Firefox better than Google Chrome for its strong focus on privacy, security, and user control. Unlike Chrome, which is developed by an ad-driven company, Firefox is built by Mozilla, a non-profit organization which nonetheless depends directly on Google search royalties to fund its projects.
In terms of performance, Firefox is often praised for being fast and responsive, especially on older hardware. It consumes less memory than Chrome in many cases and supports a wide range of extensions. At one point, Firefox has offered advantages over Chrome in terms of RAM usage, but that claim can go back and forth depending on the version (and the potential for regressions). Microsoft Edge and Apple’s Safari have also made such claims, but in general all browsers are continually improving and beating each other.
If you’re seeking the best customizability on a stock browser, you can also check out Vivaldi.
Is Firefox based on Chromium?
No, Firefox is not based on Chromium. In fact, Firefox is one of the last major browsers that isn’t. Firefox runs on its own Quantum browser engine.
Is Firefox selling my data?
No, Firefox does not sell your data. Mozilla, the organization behind Firefox, collects certain types of data to improve performance and user experience, but this data is used strictly in line with Mozilla’s privacy policy. Users who are concerned about data collection can adjust these settings within Firefox under the Privacy & Security options to limit or disable data sharing.
Features
A sleek, clean Firefox design backed by research
Going into the Firefox redesign, our team studied how people interact with the browser, observing their patterns and behaviors. We listened to feedback and gathered ideas from regular people who just want to have an easier experience on the web. We obsessed over distractions, extra clicks and wasted time. The resulting new design is simple, modern and fast and delivers a beautiful experience to support what people do most in Firefox.
Streamlined toolbar and menus
The toolbar is naturally where you start every web visit. It’s the place where you type a URL to go somewhere online. After web page content, it’s what you look at most in Firefox. The new toolbar is simplified and clutter-free so you get to the good stuff effortlessly.
Menus are where key Firefox actions and commands live. We’ve consolidated extra menus to reduce clutter and be more intuitive through the three bars menu in the upper right or by right-clicking to activate it on your computer screen. The new look reorganized and streamlined our menus to put the best actions quickly at your fingertips.
When privacy protections are engaged in Firefox, the shield icon in the toolbar glows subtly indicating that we’re working behind the scenes to protect you from nosy trackers. Fun fact: Firefox has blocked more than 6 trillion — that’s trillion with a T — trackers since we rolled out enhanced tracking protection, stopping thousands of companies from viewing your online activity.. We’re talking about tracking cookies, social media trackers, fingerprinters, cryptominers and more. Go ahead and click on the shield to see who and what Firefox is blocking… you might be surprised by what you find out.
A new look for tabs
Based on our research, we found out that more than half of you have 4+ tabs open all the time, and some of you have more, a lot more. And we feel that! Tab as much as you like, friends. Tabs got a makeover so they are now gently curved and float above the toolbar. It’s an exciting change that also serves as a reminder that tabs aren’t stationary. So grab those tabs, move them around and organize them as you like. Tabs also got a glow-up to be a touch brighter when active.
What’s New
New
- Vertical Tabs: You can now keep more – or fewer – pinned tabs in view for quicker access to important windows. Just drag the divider to resize your pinned tabs section.
- Custom Search Engines: Firefox now supports adding even more search engines. To add a custom engine, right-click a search field of a supported website and select “Add Search Engine”, or go to Settings > Search > Add (below the search shortcuts table) to manually enter a search URL.
- Firefox Extensions: Customize your toolbar with the option to remove the extensions shortcut, giving you more control over your browser. When the button is hidden, you can access the extensions panel again at any time from the Firefox menu by clicking the Extensions menu item.
- You can now unload tabs by right-clicking on a tab (or multiple selected tabs) and selecting “Unload Tab”. This can speed up performance by reducing Firefox’s memory and CPU usage.
- Full-Page Translations now prioritizes translating only the content near your current view, improving speed and responsiveness. Content outside your view is skipped unless you scroll to it, reducing unnecessary resource usage.
- Firefox builds in Arabic now come with a built-in Arabic dictionary for the Firefox spellchecker.
- Address autofill enabled for users in Italy, Poland, and Austria.
Fixed
Changed
- The Pocket toolbar icon, as well as the Pocket integrations on New Tab, have been removed per the service shutdown announcement.
Enterprise
- You can find information about policy updates and enterprise specific bug fixes in the Firefox for Enterprise 140 Release Notes.
Developer
- Improved the search feature in the Inspector panel to help developers more effectively search the DOM of the current page. Sorting the results by the number of matching elements, support “pseudo” selector state, etc.
Web Platform
- Added platform support for aria-keyshortcuts in Linux, macOS, and Windows.
- Added support for the CookieStore API, an asynchronous cookie API for scripts running in HTML documents and service workers.
- Added support for the Custom Highlight API, which allows styling arbitrary text ranges. Support for text-decoration is not included and is planned for an upcoming release.
- Added support for the pointerrawupdate event. This event provides lower-latency access to pointer movements by firing as soon as the pointer data is available, typically before the main pointermove event. Unlike pointermove, it performs an additional hit test to determine the target and fires more frequently, which may impact performance even if only a listener is added. This event is intended for applications that require high-precision input handling and cannot achieve smooth interaction using coalesced pointermove events alone.
- Service Workers are now available in Private Browsing Mode. This enhancement builds on our efforts to support IndexedDB and the DOM Cache API in Private Browsing through encrypted storage. With this change, more websites, especially those that rely on background tasks, will be able to benefit from Service workers.
- Firefox now applies a uniform user agent (UA) style to ‘h1’ elements, regardless of whether they are used inside ‘article’, ‘aside’, ‘nav’, or ‘section’.
- Firefox will now escape less-than (<) and greater-than (>) symbols when serializing HTML attributes, making certain mXSS attacks on websites more difficult.
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