How people actually use it
One rule per scenario. That's usually all it takes.
Work and personal, separated
Work domains go to Chrome. Everything else goes to Safari. You stop thinking about it.
Most people use one browser for work and another for personal browsing. Without BrowserFairy, every link is a coin flip. One rule keeps the boundary clean, with no copy-pasting and no wrong-browser moments.
Slack links that just work
Your company runs on Chrome, but Slack keeps opening links in Safari. One rule fixes it forever.
BrowserFairy can match by source app, not just URL. So every link clicked inside Slack opens in Chrome, regardless of the domain. Works with any app: Notion, Teams, Figma, you name it.
Social media in a sandbox
Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram stay in Firefox with strict tracking protection. Your main browser stays clean.
Social media sites are tracking machines. Isolating them in a browser with strict privacy settings means their cookies and trackers can't follow you across the rest of the web.
Google accounts without the logout dance
Work Google in one browser, personal Google in another. No more signing in and out.
Google Docs, Drive, and Calendar in Chrome for your work account. Gmail and YouTube in Firefox for your personal account. Both stay signed in. Zero friction.
Localhost always in your dev browser
Hot reload, React DevTools, your extensions: all waiting in your dev browser. No more pasting URLs.
Developers often have a specific browser configured with DevTools extensions, console settings, and test profiles. BrowserFairy makes sure local development URLs always land there, even when clicked from docs or chat.
Banking in a clean browser
Financial sites open in Safari: no extensions, no trackers. Just you and your money.
Browser extensions can read page content, including form fields. For banking and financial sites, opening them in a clean browser with no extensions adds a meaningful layer of protection.
Video calls that just work
Google Meet works best in Chrome. Teams needs Edge. Set it once and stop fumbling when the meeting starts in 30 seconds.
Video call platforms are notoriously picky about which browser they run best in. BrowserFairy removes the guesswork so you join every call in the browser that actually works.