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Angel Rojas
Angel Rojas

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Why Brave Uses Less RAM Than Chrome

Brave has gained a reputation for using significantly less RAM than Chrome—especially when you’ve got multiple tabs open. Here's a deeper look at why that's the case:
🔹 Smarter Process Management
Brave uses a multi-process architecture similar to Chrome, but it applies clever optimizations:
• Tab deduplication: When you have several identical tabs (like two Gmail inboxes), Brave combines them under fewer processes to cut down on memory usage.
• Sleeping background tabs: Brave aggressively suspends inactive tabs, freeing up RAM that Chrome would keep locked idle.
🔹 Built-In Ad & Tracker Blocking
Ads and trackers are often sneaky RAM-hogs, loading scripts and media in the background. Brave blocks these by default—meaning you're not paying a memory penalty to filter them out.
🔹 Real-World Results
According to benchmarks shared on Browserfy:
• With 10 tabs open, Brave used around 750 MB vs Chrome’s 1.2 GB.
• With 20 tabs, Brave stayed at ~1.3 GB, while Chrome jumped to ~2 GB.
• Even at idle, Brave hovered around 400 MB, compared to Chrome’s 700 MB.
🔹 Why It Matters
If you're on a lower-end laptop or often keep dozens of tabs open, Brave's efficient memory management means smoother performance, less lag, and reduced chance of slowdown or memory swapping.
In short, Brave’s combination of tab deduplication, background suspension, and built-in ad/tracker blocking leads to far less RAM usage compared to Chrome—making it a strong pick for anyone who values performance or runs on limited hardware.
For a detailed breakdown of how Brave achieves this and why it beats Chrome in memory efficiency, check out this in-depth guide: https://browserfy.net/index.php/2024/12/18/how-brave-reduces-ram-usage-compared-to-chrome/
Bottom line:
Brave isn't just about privacy—it’s engineered to be lean, fast, and RAM-friendly, especially when compared to Chrome under the strain of many tabs.

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