Your browser already keeps a complete history of everything you visit — but try finding "that article about sleep I read a couple weeks ago" in it and you'll hit a wall. Traditional history search only matches exact titles and URLs. AI-powered history search changes that: it lets you search by meaning, the way you actually remember things. Here's how it works, the main tools, and how to choose.
The core shift
Old way: search the exact words in a page title. New way: describe what you remember — a topic, a detail, a rough time — and let AI find the page even if your words never appear on it.
How AI browser history search works
Under the hood, these tools do three things:
- Capture: they record the pages you visit, including the content, not just the URL.
- Index by meaning: the content is processed so it can be matched semantically — by concept, not just keyword.
- Answer in plain English: you ask a natural-language question, and the tool returns pages whose meaning matches, ranked by relevance.
The single most important difference between tools is where that capture and indexing happen — on your own device, or uploaded to a company's cloud.
The main options in 2026
Chrome's built-in AI history search
Chrome has been rolling out AI-powered history search, letting you describe a page in natural language instead of recalling its exact title. It's convenient because it's built in — but availability varies by region and account, and you're working within Google's ecosystem and data practices.
AI history-search extensions
A wave of browser extensions now add natural-language search over your history. They vary widely on the thing that matters most: some index everything in the cloud, others keep data local. When comparing them, look past the demo and check where your data lives, what's captured, and whether you can exclude sensitive sites.
Full screen recorders
Tools like Screenpipe (and the now-discontinued Rewind) record your entire screen and audio, not just your browser. That's powerful for total recall but heavy and far more invasive than most people need if they only want to find things they saw online. See our Rewind / Limitless alternatives guide for that category.
What to look for in an AI history tool
- Where the data lives: local-first beats cloud for something as sensitive as your history.
- Scope of capture: just your browsing, or your whole screen? Match it to what you actually need.
- Control: can you exclude sites, topics, or content types, and delete easily?
- Search quality: can it handle vague, descriptive queries — "the recipe with the miso glaze" — not just keywords?
- Friction: does it just work in the background, or demand a new habit?
Where StashPad fits
StashPad is a free Chrome extension built for the everyday version of this problem: finding the things you came across online. It quietly remembers what you browse — shows, articles, songs, products — and lets you find them by asking in plain English, while keeping your stash local-first on your device.
- Search by meaning: "the song I played a lot last spring," "did I already buy a replacement filter?"
- Private by design: your stash stays on your device; exclude anything you don't want remembered.
- Zero setup: install it and keep browsing — no new workflow, no whole-screen recording.
Try AI history search that stays on your device
StashPad gives you plain-English search over everything you browse, stored local-first. Free, and nothing to set up.
Add to Chrome, it's freeRelated guides
- Private, local browser history search
- The best Rewind AI / Limitless alternatives (2026)
- How to find a TV show you watched but forgot the name of
Frequently asked questions
Can you search browser history with AI?
Yes. Where built-in history only matches exact titles and URLs, AI tools let you search by meaning, e.g. "the article about sleep I read a couple weeks ago." Chrome has been rolling out AI history search, and extensions like StashPad add natural-language search across what you browse.
How does AI browser history search work?
These tools capture the pages you visit, index the content so it can be matched by meaning, and answer plain-English questions by finding semantically related pages. The key difference between tools is whether indexing happens on your device or in the cloud.
Is AI history search private?
It depends. Cloud-based tools upload your browsing data to their servers; local-first tools like StashPad keep it on your device, which is far more private given how sensitive history is. Always check where your data is stored and processed.