Change Your Default Search Engine in Any Browser: Quick Setup Guide

Change your default search engine in Chrome, Firefox, Edge, or Safari in under 60 seconds — step-by-step desktop and mobile instructions so every query lands right.

When I got a new laptop last year, every search I typed into the address bar routed through Bing — the PC manufacturer had set it up that way, and Edge kept it going. It was a small annoyance that cost me two weeks of misdirected results before I took 60 seconds to fix it. Knowing how to change your default search engine in any browser is the fastest browser personalization you can make, and it carries over to every address-bar search and new tab you open from that point forward.

Every major browser — Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari — lets you swap your default search engine in its settings. Whether you’re switching to DuckDuckGo for privacy or reclaiming the engine you prefer after an update reset it, the steps below cover all four browsers on both desktop and mobile.

Quick Answer

Open your browser’s Settings, find the “Search engine” or “Search” section, and pick a new engine from the dropdown. In Chrome: Settings → Search engine. In Firefox: Settings → Search → Default Search Engine. In Edge: Settings → Privacy, search, and services → Address bar and search. On iPhone Safari: iOS Settings → Apps → Safari → Search Engine. Each change takes about 60 seconds.

Why Does Your Default Search Engine Matter?

Your default search engine handles every query you type into the address bar, so the choice affects your privacy, result quality, and which company receives your data. I switched to DuckDuckGo on my work machine last year because I wanted results that felt less filtered. Within a week, I noticed more varied perspectives on the same topics compared to what I had been getting before.

Here is a quick comparison of the most popular options:

Search Engine Privacy Strengths
Google Low Best relevance, Maps integration, image search
DuckDuckGo High No tracking, clean results, Bangs shortcuts
Bing Medium Strong image search, Copilot AI built in
Brave Search High Independent index, no Google dependence
Startpage High Google results without the tracking

Your default search engine runs every address-bar query you type — choosing deliberately means your data goes where you want and results reflect what you actually need.

How Do I Change the Default Search Engine in Chrome?

On desktop, the setting is three clicks away:

  1. Click the three-dot menu in the top-right corner and choose Settings.
  2. In the left sidebar, click Search engine.
  3. Open the dropdown next to “Search engine used in the address bar” and select your preferred engine.

On Chrome for iPhone or Android, tap the three-dot menu → SettingsSearch engine, then tap your choice from the list.

Pro tip: Chrome lets you add any search engine manually. Go to Settings → Search engine → Manage search engines and site search, click Add, and paste the search URL with %s where the query goes. I added Perplexity this way using https://www.perplexity.ai/search?q=%s.

If you use Chrome profiles for separate work and personal browsing, each profile stores its own search engine setting — you may need to update them individually.

Chrome’s search engine setting lives under Settings → Search engine, and each profile you run stores the preference independently.

How Do I Change My Default Search Engine in Firefox?

  1. Click the hamburger menu (three lines) and choose Settings.
  2. Click Search in the left sidebar.
  3. Under “Default Search Engine,” open the dropdown and select your engine.

On Firefox for Android or iOS, tap the three-dot menu → SettingsSearchDefault search engine.

Troubleshooting tip: If your Firefox search engine keeps reverting after you save it, a browser extension is almost certainly overriding your choice. Go to Settings → Extensions & Themes, disable extensions one at a time, and re-check after each one until the setting holds.

Firefox keeps its search engine setting under Settings → Search — if it keeps reverting, disable browser extensions one by one until the culprit reveals itself.

How Do I Change the Default Search Engine in Microsoft Edge?

  1. Click the three-dot menu and go to Settings.
  2. Select Privacy, search, and services in the left sidebar.
  3. Scroll to the bottom and click Address bar and search.
  4. Open the “Search engine used in the address bar” dropdown and choose your engine.

On Edge for mobile, tap the three lines → SettingsSearch engine and choose from the list.

Edge buries its search engine setting three levels deep under Privacy, search, and services → Address bar and search — more clicks than Chrome, but the change is just as permanent once saved.

Does Safari Let Me Change the Default Search Engine?

Yes, but the setting location differs by device.

On a Mac: open SafariSettingsSearch tab, then pick from the “Search engine” dropdown. Options include Google, Yahoo, Bing, DuckDuckGo, and Ecosia.

On iPhone or iPad: open the iOS Settings app — not Safari itself — then go to AppsSafariSearch Engine and tap your choice. This trips most people up because you have to leave the browser entirely to change it.

On iPhone, Safari’s search engine setting lives in the iOS Settings app under Apps → Safari — not inside the browser — which catches almost everyone off guard the first time.

What Are the Most Common Mistakes When Switching Search Engines?

  1. Changing desktop but forgetting mobile. Your phone browser stores its own setting. Update it separately, even if it’s the same browser on both devices.
  2. Looking inside the browser on iPhone. Safari’s setting is in iOS Settings → Apps → Safari, not in the browser itself. Chrome’s setting, however, is inside the Chrome app.
  3. Letting an extension override the change. Shopping helpers and toolbar add-ons commonly hijack search engines. If the setting reverts within a session, check your extensions first.
  4. Confusing the home page with the search engine. These are separate settings. Pointing your home page at google.com does not make Google your default search engine.
  5. Forgetting to test after saving. Type a query in the address bar right after saving — if the correct engine handles it, you’re done.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I add a search engine that isn’t in the default list?
Yes. Chrome and Firefox both support adding any search engine manually by entering its search URL with %s where the query goes. I use this to keep Perplexity available in my Chrome search engine list alongside Google and DuckDuckGo.

Will changing my default search engine affect saved passwords or bookmarks?
No — bookmarks, saved passwords, and browsing history are completely separate from the search engine setting. Nothing else changes when you update it.

Why does my search engine keep reverting to Google or Bing?
Almost always a browser extension is the cause — shopping assistants, price trackers, and toolbars are frequent offenders. Disable all extensions, set your engine, then re-enable them one at a time to find the one resetting your choice.

Can I use a different search engine just in private or incognito mode?
Most browsers apply the same default in both regular and private windows. Brave Browser is the exception — it lets you set a separate engine specifically for private browsing windows.

Conclusion

Changing your default search engine takes about 60 seconds and makes every address-bar search work exactly the way you want. Now that you know the path in each browser, you can revisit the setting any time an update quietly resets your choice. For more quick browser wins, learn how to sync your bookmarks across every device or see how the major browsers compare in our Chrome vs Edge vs Firefox privacy comparison.