Safari

Safari: Cult of Mac Superguide
Safari is Apple’s web browser for iPad, iPhone, Mac and Vision Pro.

Apple’s Safari browser is the company’s own competitor to Microsoft Edge, Google Chrome and Firefox. It’s the default web browser that comes on its own devices.

Safari runs on iPhone, iPad, Mac and Vision Pro.

Safari on iPhone

Safari on iPhone toolbar and user interface
The Safari user interface is simple, but there’s a lot of hidden features in the toolbars and interface.

Safari on the iPhone offers the full set of features, even in a mobile user interface.

  • Search the web or type in a URL in the address bar. Swipe left or right on the address bar to switch between tabs, or swipe up to go to the Tab Overview. On the bottom of the screen, it’s easy to reach one-handed.
  • The Page Menu on the left of the address bar brings up options for text size, web extensions, loading the desktop site, enabling Reader and more.
  • The Refresh button on the right of the address page will reload the page.
  • Back and Forward buttons let you navigate through the history. Swipe from the left edge of the screen to go back quickly. Tap and hold on the buttons to jump multiple pages at once.
  • The Share button lets you send a link to the page to someone else by AirDrop, Messages, or other apps. Scroll down in the share sheet to add the page to your bookmarks, reading list, favorites and more.
  • The Bookmarks button brings up your list of bookmarks, or saved websites. Use the tab bar to find your reading list (temporary bookmarks for things you want to read later) and browsing history.
  • Press the Tab Overview button to see all your open tabs and switch between tab groups.

Close All Tabs on Safari for iPhone

If you’re a tab hoarder, you can quickly close all your tabs at once. Tap and hold on the Tab Overview button on the right of the toolbar — it has an icon of two overlapping squares. Long-press on that icon and select Close All Tabs.

If you want to re-open a recently closed tab, go to the Tab Overview. Tap and hold (long-press) the + New Tab button in the bottom left. You’ll see a pop-up list of recently closed tabs; tap on one to restore the tab.

Download Safari for iPhone

Safari comes preloaded on the iPhone. But it may not appear on your Home Screen if you’ve removed it, and it may not be the default web browser. In the European Union, users are asked which browser they want to use when setting up the device. If you pick something other than Safari, links will open in the browser you chose.

To put the Safari icon back on your Home Screen, search for it in Spotlight. Swipe down on your Home Screen to bring up the search box, or tap the Search button towards the bottom of the screen. Type in “Safari.” Tap and hold on the icon, then drag it onto your Home Screen.

To make sure Safari is your default browser, open Settings > Safari > Default Browser App and select Safari.

History of the Safari web browser

Safari 1 running on Mac OS X Panther
Safari 1 running on Mac OS X Panther

From Mac OS 8 through early versions of Mac OS X, the default web browser was Internet Explorer for Mac. Other popular browsers for the Mac at the time included Netscape and Omniweb, the latter of which was made specially for Mac OS X.

The first version of Safari was introduced in 2003 as the fastest web browser for the Mac with the easiest interface to use. Even the first versions of Safari look strikingly simple and modern — except for the lack of tabs and the use of brushed metal.

Safari 3 brought tabbed browsing to the Mac, catching up with competitors OmniWeb and the new entrant, Firefox.

Apple announces Safari on iPhone
Safari was, famously, one of the top three selling points of the original iPhone.

In 2007, one of the top three selling points of the original iPhone was its desktop-class web browser, Safari. Other cellphones before the iPhone had much smaller screens and used a limited, text-based version of the web you had to navigate with tiny plastic arrow buttons. The iPhone gave you the same version of the web in your pocket that you had at home.

For more on Safari history, check out this article here.

Safari running on Mac, iPhone and iPad
Safari on Mac, iPhone and iPad.

In recent years, Safari has rolled out new features that connect the many devices people have and features that protect users against data tracking on the web.

  • iCloud Tabs and Continuity let you seamlessly continue reading the same pages on different devices.
  • iCloud Private Relay funnels your internet browsing through an Apple server, masking your identity and browsing from people trying to track you.
  • iCloud Keychain will create strong passwords for you, remember them and sync them across all your devices.

Read Cult of Mac’s latest posts on Safari:

How to change the default web browser on iPhone or iPad

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How to change default iPhone browser
Safari isn't the only options as default iPhone browser. You can change it.
Image: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac

Not a fan of Safari? You can change the default web browser on your iPhone or iPad quite easily. If you prefer Google’s Chrome, you can ditch Safari when tapping links on your phone or tablet. And that’s not the only option.

Making the switch is easy, though the setting is somewhat hidden. Here’s what you do.

iPhone will soon let EU users replace default phone and messaging apps

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iOS 18 default apps section in Settings for EU users
A new default apps section is coming to Settings with iOS 18 ... but only in the EU.
Image: Apple

European iPhone and iPad users will be able to kick Apple’s Phone and Messages apps to the curb if they wish. The same goes for an array of other applications that iOS currently makes the default options.

These join a long list of other changes being forced on Apple by the EU’s Digital Markets Act.

Now anyone can experience Apple Podcasts on the web

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Apple Podcasts on the web
Now even PC users can experience Apple Podcasts a lot like someone who uses the app for macOS.
Image: Apple

As an alternative to using the Apple Podcasts app, as of Monday anyone can browse, hear, sync and share Apple Podcasts in 170 countries on all major web browsers, including Safari, Chrome, Edge and Firefox.

So now Apple Podcasts joins the likes of Podbay and Podurama in offering its own online player for anyone on any platform.

Here’s what’s new in Safari on iPhone and iPad in iOS 18

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New iPhone Safari Features in iOS 18
Safari on iPhone gets some much-needed attention in iOS 18 with a few great features.
Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

Apple added several nifty new features to Safari in iOS 18. The iPhone’s redesigned web browser boasts an all-new Page Menu. Plus, two big new features help surface what you’re looking for on the web.

The last big Safari redesign for iPhone, which arrived three years ago, moved the address bar to the bottom of the screen by default. It also shoved several useful features into a menu in the address bar, which made it difficult to discover them. Apple tries to reverse that second problem in the new Safari.

Here’s what’s new in iOS 18 in Safari on iPhone — keep reading or watch our video.

New Opera One browser for iOS brings AI with voice input, image generation

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Opera One browser for iOS
The new Opera One on iOS brings a raft of appealing features for iPhone users.
Photo: Opera

The Opera browser’s new mobile version for iPhone, dubbed Opera One for iOS, integrates artificial intelligence features like image generation and voice input, a free VPN for private browsing and other elements to offer a fresh alternative to pre-installed browsers on Apple devices like Safari, the company said Tuesday.

“Our research shows mobile phone users are six times more likely to be happy than not, after switching away from their system’s default browser,” said Jona Bolin, product manager at Opera. “So with Opera One for iOS, we want to further raise the bar and deliver a better browsing experience versus what users will find pre-installed.”

Why Apple’s dodgy deal with Google should have ended years ago

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Apple Google privacy meme
Google can no longer pay Apple to weaken iPhone's privacy protections.
Graphic: Imgflip

Apple should never have entered into the deal that had Google paying billions every year to be the default search engine for iPhone, Mac and iPad. And it’s shameful that it’ll take a court order to finally make Apple do the right thing

A company that claims to carefully protect the privacy of its users shouldn’t be part of an arrangement that steered those users toward Google, whose business is built on privacy violation.

Paying Apple to be Safari default search engine makes Google a ‘monopolist’

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Google search on iPhone
Google paying Apple to be Safari's default search engine is a big no-no.
Photo: Rajesh Pandey/Cult of Mac

A U.S. federal judge ruled Monday that Google paying Apple billions to be the default search engine on iPhone and other devices is a violation of antitrust law. He said it makes Google a monopolist.

This is the result of a court case brought by the Department of Justice against Google. Apple isn’t directly involved, though its annual income may have just dropped by $15 billion or $20 billion. Or more.

Apple’s new Distraction Control in Safari is not an ad blocker

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Apple's new Distraction Control in Safari is not an ad blocker
While Distraction Control in Safari will be useful, don't call it an ad blocker.
Photo: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac

Apple added Distraction Control to the Safari web browser in the iOS 18, iPadOS 18 and macOS Sequoia 15 betas released Monday. The new feature allows users to remove elements they find irritating or distracting from web pages.

Some have called Distraction Control an ad blocker. It’s not. Or certainly not a very good one.

iOS 18: All the Safari improvements

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Safari app shortcut on iOS 18 dock
Safari is getting some big improvements in iOS 18.
Photo: Rajesh Pandey/Cult of Mac

Apple is updating Safari this year for a cleaner, faster web browsing experience on iPhones, iPads and Macs. While the enhanced Reader mode and Highlights stand out as key additions to Safari in iOS 18, iPadOS 18 and macOS Sequoia, several other changes will come to Apple’s web browser as well.

Below we’ll look at all the improvements coming to Safari later this year.

Google wants iPhone users to stop using Safari for web search

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Google search on iPhone
Google wants iPhone users to move away from Safari for web search.
Photo: Rajesh Pandey/Cult of Mac

A new report details that Google wants to reduce its reliance on Apple for search revenue. Despite being the leader in search, Google pays Apple billions of dollars yearly to remain the iPhone’s default search engine.

iPhone searchers comprise about 36% of Google’s total search revenue.

Today in Apple history: Safari lands on Windows with a ‘meh’

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Safari on Windows
Safari on Windows wasn't quite the smash hit Apple hoped for.
Photo: Apple

June 11: Today in Apple history: Safari lands on Windows with a meh June 11, 2007: At Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, CEO Steve Jobs unveils Safari 3 for Windows, bringing the company’s web browser to PCs for the first time.

Apple pitches Safari as the world’s fastest and easiest-to-use web browser, capable of rendering web pages up to twice as fast as Internet Explorer and 1.6 times faster than Firefox. Safari for Windows lasts until 2012, but never becomes a major player on Microsoft’s dominant operating system.

Safari surfaces web page highlights, summaries and video control

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Safari browser web page Reader
New Safari features will help you get a lot more out of your visits to websites.
Photo: Apple

Apple Let Loose Event:Apple’s Safari web browser will learn a few new tricks across Apple devices, including web page highlights and summaries, as well as better-integrated control of videos online, the iPhone giant pointed out Monday in its Safari updates at WWDC24 section of the Keynote.

“In this release, we’re making it even better with easier ways to discover content and streamline your browsing. When you’re on a site Safari can now help you discover more about the page with highlights,” said Beth Dakin, Apple’s senior manager, Safari Software Engineering.

How to translate an entire website to English directly from Safari

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Translate With One Button
Get the whole page in your native language with a single button.
Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

If you stumble across a webpage or a link in a different language, you can instantly translate the website to English directly from Safari. Unlike Google Chrome, Safari even translates the text inside images using Live Text.

And, if you accidentally change the language of a website to one you don’t speak, you can turn this feature on to help you change it back. At Cult of Mac, we use the feature to translate rumors or blog posts often written in Chinese, Korean or Japanese, like this.

You don’t need to select the words paragraph by paragraph and copy them into Google Translate (or even Apple’s own Translate app). Get the entire page in English at the tap of a button. Here’s how to make the most out of this handy Safari feature.

Crank up Safari’s privacy to the max

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Mind Your Own Business
Keep your browsing private.
Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

Apple’s Safari web browser packs loads of privacy features that will keep your online activity hidden from ad networks, user tracking and data farms. But are you sure you have everything turned on? Some of Apple’s most important privacy-protecting features don’t come enabled by default.

In light of Google baking ever-more invasive user tracking into Chrome, there are even more reasons to use Safari instead. If you want to make the most out of the best and most secure mainstream browser, here’s how.

Apple will allow alternative browser defaults and engines in EU

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Screenshot of default browser screen in iOS.
EU users are about to get a lot more choice for their default browser and browser engines.
Screenshot: Apple

Apple is further opening up iOS to alternative browsers and browser engines, as part of Cupertino’s plan to comply with the European Union’s Digital Markets Act.

In iOS 17.4 — launched Thursday as a beta — iPhone users in the EU will have a lot more choice over the default browser and browser engines.

The biggest change will be the ability to use alternative browser engines, like Google’s Blink renderer instead of Apple’s WebKit.

Today in Apple history: OS X Panther claws its way onto Macs

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Mac OS X Panther brings Exposé and other new features.
OS X Panther brought cool new features to Macs.
Screenshot: Gudebookgallery/Apple

October 25 Today in Apple history: Mac OS X Panther arrives on Macs October 25, 2003: Mac OS X Panther arrives on Macintosh computers, bringing several useful new features and making Safari Apple’s default web browser for the first time.

The new Exposé feature in OS X Panther lets Mac users instantly view all open windows at once. And the new iChat AV allows people to talk with audio and video as well as text.

EU Digital Markets Act will open iPhone to sideloading of apps

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European Union
The European Union takes another step toward tough regulations on tech giants like Apple.
Photo: Freestocks.org

Now that iOS and the App Store have been labeled “gatekeepers” by the European Commission, the EU’s Digital Markets Act requires Apple to allow users to install applications directly onto iPhones. And sideloading is just one of the sweeping changes resulting from the DMA. Users apparently will be able to replace Siri with one of its rivals, for example. Other services, like iMessage, might require modification later.

One thing’s clear: The iPhone won’t be the same after the Digital Markets Act goes into effect in spring 2024.

iOS 17 beta 7: All the new features and changes

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iOS 17 preview
The fourth iOS 17 developer beta is here with some minor changes.
Photo: Apple

Apple continues beta testing iOS 17, with the seventh beta dropping on August 22nd. As the beta program has progressed, the company has made fewer and fewer user-facing changes to new builds.

It’s the same story with iOS 17 beta 7, which hardly packs any meaningful changes or improvements. Below is everything new in the latest iOS 17 and iPadOS 17 beta.

5 reasons to use Safari instead of Chrome

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Chrome isn't as good as you think
You should reconsider using Safari
Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

A lot of Mac owners use Google Chrome as their web browser, and personally, I don’t get it. For Apple fans, it seems like a total disconnect not to use Safari instead of Chrome.

For starters, Apple markets its products as privacy-forward and seamlessly integrated with each other. And the web browser is an essential component of your computer, whether we’re talking Mac, iPhone or iPad. You have a lot to gain by using Safari on all your devices.

But look at the numbers: Although the Mac has 20% market share, second to Windows, Apple’s web browser Safari only captures 8.9% of the market.

Here’s my attempt to sway it the other way — the top five reasons I use Safari instead of Google Chrome.

10 more sweet tweaks and changes in iOS 17

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Text:
These are smaller features, but they’re no less awesome.
Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

iOS 17 has a lot of great headlining features — and many more features Apple didn’t have time to mention during the WWDC23 keynote. Today, I’m going one level deeper: Here are 10 more tweaks and smaller changes that could have a big impact on daily life with your iPhone after you update to iOS 17.

Hands on with Safari Profiles, Apple’s latest attempt to curb tab clutter

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Hands on with Safari Profiles
Safari Profiles make it easier to keep work and personal browsing separate. But the upcoming feature can also simplify sharing an iPad.
Photo: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac

With Safari Profiles, Apple takes another swing at helping us organize all the browser tabs we have open. The new feature lets users put tabs and tab groups into separate areas, helping keep work and our personal lives from interfering.

Beyond that, Safari Profiles also could enable two or more people to more easily share the web browser, which can be a huge benefit for iPad users.

I’ve been testing the new feature in the first betas of iOS 17, macOS Sonoma and iPadOS 17, all of which Apple unveiled at WWDC23 this week.

How to improve security in Safari Private Browsing with iOS 17 and macOS Sonoma

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How to make Safari Private Browsing much more private
Safari Private Browsing mode will soon get multiple new features to prevent online tracking.
Photo: Killian Bell/Ed Hardy
WWDC23

Private Browsing mode in Apple Safari will soon get even more secure. It’ll be locked against someone else accessing it, and incorporate new tools to prevent websites from tracking users.

The additional privacy features are coming in iOS 17, macOS Sonoma and iPadOS 17, all of which were unveiled at WWDC23 this week.

Safari 17 in macOS Sonoma beefs up user privacy

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Enhanced Private Browsing helps protect against online trackers as well as folks who gain access to your computer.
Enhanced Private Browsing helps protect against online trackers as well as folks who gain access to your computer.
Photo: Apple
WWDC23

Along with macOS Sonoma and its new features will come Safari 17, the new iteration of Apple’s web browser. It brings an enhanced browsing experience with an even greater emphasis than before on privacy, and most changes will probably apply to iOS and iPadOS, as well.

The changes aren’t terribly glamorous, but beefed-up Private Browsing protects against prying eyes online and off, in addition to some other security enhancements.

And in terms of organization, the new Profiles feature helps you keep separate parts of your life separate and website apps keep your favorite sites at your fingertips.

How to manage browser tabs so they don’t stress you out

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How to manage browser tabs so they don't stress you out
Browser clutter can be stressful, no matter what device it happens on.
Image: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac

A recent study found that web browser clutter is a source of stress for many people. It’s a result of keeping large numbers of tabs open and disorganized.

Here are some tips for managing the number of browser tabs you keep open, including using Safari’s system for organizing them.