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Safari performance vs Chrome

I've been juggling between Chrome and Safari for over 10 years now. Although I'd prefer sticking to Safari exclusively, the reality is that I often find myself resorting to Chrome, especially when dealing with websites like financial, business and marketing tools/services. Some sites even display cautious warnings, signaling that Safari lacks full support.


My preference for Safari stems from its password management and seamless integration with my other Apple devices. Nevertheless, it's quite surprising that Safari's performance is still subpar in the year 2024. Additionally, I frequently encounter instances where websites load faster and more reliably on Chrome. The constant need to switch between browsers has become tiresome for me.

MacBook Pro 14″

Posted on Mar 1, 2024 2:31 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jun 1, 2024 6:18 AM

Never once had a problem with Safari not able to access a website and use it on many financial websites including Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Robinhood, and Charles Schwab. Some sites may require you to allow Pop-Up Windows, which is off by default. You will also find that Safari is much more secure than Chrome and consumes dramatically less resources. Safari turns off Cross-Site tracking and hides your IP address from trackers by default. You will find some websites that want to track you do not like this default behavior, but do you really want to be tracked. If so you can shut off these safety measures.


Just for fun, check the Trackers that Safari has blocked. Currently on mine I see:

  • Google - doubleclick.net blocked 122 times
  • Google - google.com blocked 113 times
  • Google - googletagmanafer.com blocked 103 times
  • Google - google-analytics.com blocked 87 times
  • Google - googlesyndication.com blocked 62 times
  • Google - 2mdn.net blocked 49 times
  • Google - googleadservices.com blocked 43 times
  • Google - googletagservices.com blocked 40 times


The choice is yours. Do you really think that Chrome is going to stop tracking from its own company?

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jun 1, 2024 6:18 AM in response to Henrik Carlsson

Never once had a problem with Safari not able to access a website and use it on many financial websites including Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Robinhood, and Charles Schwab. Some sites may require you to allow Pop-Up Windows, which is off by default. You will also find that Safari is much more secure than Chrome and consumes dramatically less resources. Safari turns off Cross-Site tracking and hides your IP address from trackers by default. You will find some websites that want to track you do not like this default behavior, but do you really want to be tracked. If so you can shut off these safety measures.


Just for fun, check the Trackers that Safari has blocked. Currently on mine I see:

  • Google - doubleclick.net blocked 122 times
  • Google - google.com blocked 113 times
  • Google - googletagmanafer.com blocked 103 times
  • Google - google-analytics.com blocked 87 times
  • Google - googlesyndication.com blocked 62 times
  • Google - 2mdn.net blocked 49 times
  • Google - googleadservices.com blocked 43 times
  • Google - googletagservices.com blocked 40 times


The choice is yours. Do you really think that Chrome is going to stop tracking from its own company?

May 1, 2024 11:38 PM in response to John Galt

John, your answer doesn't make any sense. Mac means a whole ecosystem with some better and worse apps. Henrik is correct that some websites are not handled well by Safari. Is this Safari's or developer's fault? I'd say both. Safari is not perfect, but web developers could do a better job to handle it. I suppose many web development teams don't use Mac to test their websites in Safari. I personally use Safari to save battery, but I'm not even sure if that's still the case in 2024. Web tools are much better in Chrome. JavaScript and CSS support is much better in Chrome too, but it's not that bad in Safari these days.

Safari performance vs Chrome

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