If you opened Chrome recently and found uBlock Origin disabled or flagged as unsupported, you're not alone. Millions of users are in the same position right now, and the frustration is completely valid. uBlock Origin was arguably the best browser extension ever built - free, open source, lightweight, and devastatingly effective at blocking trackers and ads.
But Chrome's shift to Manifest V3 changed everything.
The new extension standard removes the real-time blocking API that made uBlock Origin so powerful. The developer has confirmed there won't be a full MV3-compatible version. So if Chrome is your browser and you're not ready to switch to Firefox, you need a replacement — and you need one that actually works.
I've tested the most popular options so you don't have to. Here's an honest breakdown.
Why uBlock Origin Broke on Chrome (Quick Explanation)
Chrome used to let extensions use something called the webRequest API - essentially letting extensions watch and intercept every network request your browser made in real time. uBlock Origin used this to block trackers and scripts the moment they tried to load.
Manifest V3 replaced this with a more restricted system called declarativeNetRequest. It's less flexible, has rule limits, and can't react dynamically the way the old system could. The result: the original uBlock Origin can no longer do what it used to do on Chrome. It still works perfectly on Firefox, which is worth keeping in mind.
The Best uBlock Origin Alternatives for Chrome in 2025
1. uBlock Origin Lite — The Official (But Limited) MV3 Version
Best for: Users who want to stay as close to uBlock Origin as possible.
The original developer, Raymond Hill, built a Manifest V3 version called uBlock Origin Lite. It works within Chrome's new restrictions, uses the declarativeNetRequest system, and maintains the open-source philosophy that made the original great.
The catch? It's genuinely less powerful. Dynamic rule updates are slower. Some advanced filtering modes from the original are gone. You lose the real-time, adaptive blocking that made uBlock Origin untouchable.
That said, it's still free, still open source, and still blocks a respectable amount. If your priority is staying close to the uBlock Origin legacy, start here.
What it does: Blocks trackers and malicious scripts via static rulesets
What it doesn't do: Dynamic real-time blocking, advanced filtering modes
Price: Free
Rating: ⭐ 4.3/5
2. Ghostery — Best for Visibility Into What's Tracking You
Best for: Users who want to understand their trackers, not just block them.
Ghostery has been around since 2009 and has rebuilt itself into one of the most polished privacy extensions available. It blocks trackers and ads, but what makes it genuinely different is the transparency layer — it shows you exactly which trackers are running on every page, what they do, and which companies own them.
If you've ever wondered why you searched for sneakers once and then saw sneaker ads everywhere for two weeks, Ghostery will show you the exact companies making that happen. There's something satisfying about seeing 34 blocked trackers on a news homepage and knowing precisely who they are.
The free version covers the basics well. Ghostery Plus adds a built-in VPN and extended blocking for around $4.99/month — decent value if you want an all-in-one privacy tool without juggling multiple extensions.
What it does: Blocks trackers and ads, shows detailed per-site tracker reports, cookie banner auto-rejection
What it doesn't do: Breach alerts, parental controls, password management
Price: Free / Plus at $4.99/month
Rating: ⭐ 4.6/5
3. Privacy Badger — Best "Set It and Forget It" Tracker Blocker
Best for: People who don't want to configure anything.
Privacy Badger was built by the Electronic Frontier Foundation — the same non-profit organisation that fights for digital rights worldwide. That pedigree matters. They have no business model that involves selling your data, which is more than you can say for a lot of "free" privacy tools.
What makes Privacy Badger different is how it learns. Instead of relying on a fixed blocklist, it watches how trackers behave across websites. If a third party tracks you across three or more different sites without your permission, Privacy Badger automatically blocks it. No lists to maintain. No settings to tweak. It gets smarter the longer you use it.
The downside is it's purely a tracker blocker. It doesn't block ads unless those ads are doing the tracking. It has no breach alerts, no family protection features, nothing beyond its core purpose. But for that core purpose, it does the job quietly and honestly.
What it does: Automatically learns and blocks trackers, blocks third-party cookies
What it doesn't do: Ad blocking, breach monitoring, parental controls
Price: Free (always)
Rating: ⭐ 4.5/5
4. AdGuard — Best for Power Users Who Want Maximum Control
Best for: People who want granular control over exactly what gets blocked.
AdGuard is the closest thing to a "professional grade" tracker and ad blocker that works properly on Chrome's Manifest V3. It has over 15 million users, a 4.7-star rating with 64,000 reviews, and it genuinely earns that reputation.
Where AdGuard shines is customisation. You can choose from dozens of filter lists, create custom rules, enable stealth mode to hide your device information from websites, and block trackers at a level of precision most casual users will never need — but power users absolutely love.
It also works across Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari, iOS, and Android, which is useful if you want consistent protection everywhere without managing different tools per device.
The free browser extension covers most use cases. The premium app ($2.99/month) extends protection beyond the browser to cover apps system-wide on mobile.
What it does: Blocks trackers, ads, malicious sites; stealth mode; custom filters; cross-platform
What it doesn't do: Breach monitoring, parental controls, password management
Price: Free extension / Premium app at $2.99/month
Rating: ⭐ 4.7/5
5. DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials — Best for Beginners
Best for: Non-technical users who want privacy without any learning curve.
DuckDuckGo is the search engine that made "we don't track you" a mainstream idea. Their Privacy Essentials extension brings that same philosophy to your browser — tracker blocking, HTTPS upgrading, and a simple A–F privacy grade for every site you visit.
The appeal is pure simplicity. You install it, and it works. There are no settings to configure, no dashboards to understand, no lists to manage. It's the fastest path from "I'm being tracked" to "I'm being protected."
It's not the most powerful option here, and technically savvy users will quickly notice the limitations. But if you're recommending a privacy extension to a non-technical friend or family member, DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials is the one that won't overwhelm them.
What it does: Blocks trackers, upgrades connections to HTTPS, privacy grades per site, email tracker removal
What it doesn't do: Advanced filtering, breach monitoring, parental controls, password management
Price: Free
Rating: ⭐ 4.4/5
6. Digital Shield — Best If You Want More Than Just Tracker Blocking
Best for: Users who want tracker blocking PLUS breach alerts, parental controls, and privacy tools — without running six separate extensions.
Here's where I'll be transparent: I built Digital Shield. But I'm including it here because it genuinely fills a gap none of the above cover.
Every extension listed so far does one or two things well. Ghostery shows you trackers. Privacy Badger learns and blocks them. AdGuard gives you control. None of them tell you if your email password was leaked in a breach last year. None of them let you pause your child's browsing with a PIN. None of them show you a real-time exposure score — a live percentage of how much of your digital footprint is currently visible to third parties.
Digital Shield was built on Manifest V3 from the ground up, so it works properly on modern Chrome. It combines:
Real-time tracker blocking — stops third-party scripts and invisible trackers
Data breach alerts — checks if your email or passwords have been exposed in known leaks
Website Safety Score — a 0–100 security rating and Privacy Grade (A–F) for every site
SpyGraph Visualizer — shows which companies your data is being shared with, visually
Parental controls — Safe Search enforcement, age filters, bedtime scheduling, and pause browsing
Zero-knowledge password manager — stored locally, never on our servers
Universal dark mode — one click, any website
Browser cleaner — clears cache without logging you out of your accounts
The PRO version adds anti-fingerprint protection, an AI privacy policy summariser, email alias generation, and a network-level firewall.
It's not a replacement for someone who needs uBlock Origin's pure ad-blocking power. But if you were running uBlock Origin alongside Have I Been Pwned, a password manager, and a parental control tool — Digital Shield replaces all of them.
What it does: Tracker blocking, breach alerts, parental controls, safety scoring, dark mode, password manager, browser cleaner
What it doesn't do: Ad blocking (we're honest about this)
Price: Free / PRO available
Rating: ⭐ 4.6/5 on Chrome Web Store
→ Try Digital Shield on Chrome Web Store
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