Guides5 min read

Best Chrome Extensions for Job Searching in 2026

Justin Bartak

Justin Bartak

Founder & Chief AI Architect, Orbit

Building AI-native platforms for $383M+ in enterprise value

You live in your browser. Your tools should too.

If you're job searching in 2026, your browser is where it happens: scrolling boards, researching companies, submitting applications, managing your pipeline. Chrome extensions live inside that workflow. No app switching. No context loss.

Here are the extensions worth installing, with honest takes on what each does well and where it doesn't.

1. Orbit

What it does: One-click job capture from boards. Pulls title, company, location, salary, and the full JD into your pipeline.

Best for: Anyone using Orbit who wants to stop copy-pasting between tabs like it's 2015.

Honest take: Works great on LinkedIn, Indeed, Glassdoor, and most major boards. Smaller niche sites sometimes need manual entry. The real value is that jobs appear instantly in your pipeline with full metadata. No data entry. Requires an Orbit account (free tier available).

2. Simplify

What it does: Auto-fills application forms. Name, email, phone, work history, education, common questions.

Best for: Anyone applying on company career sites (Greenhouse, Lever, Workday) who's tired of typing their address for the 47th time.

Honest take: Supports most major ATS platforms. Handles multi-page forms well. Multiple profiles for different role types. The catch: it's not always accurate on complex forms, so review before submitting. Free tier has a monthly cap. Custom questions still need manual answers.

3. Huntr

What it does: Save jobs from listings with a button. Organizes them into a Kanban board.

Honest take: Clean interface. Works across many boards. Simple setup. But limited contact management, no AI features, no follow-up reminders, and the free tier caps active jobs. Good for people who want something simple and don't need a full CRM.

4. Glassdoor Salary Estimator

What it does: Shows estimated salary ranges on listings that don't disclose comp.

Honest take: Useful for filtering before you invest time in an application. But estimates come from reported data, which skews. Less reliable for niche roles or small companies. Requires a Glassdoor account for some features.

5. LinkedIn Sales Navigator Lite

What it does: Hover-card on LinkedIn profiles showing mutual connections, recent activity, shared groups.

Honest take: Great for networkers who want quick context without clicking into every profile. Mutual connections are especially valuable for warm introductions. But full features require the expensive Sales Navigator subscription.

6. Grammarly

What it does: Real-time writing assistance everywhere you type in Chrome.

Best for: Everyone. Clear writing is a competitive advantage at every stage of the search. Every email, every cover letter, every LinkedIn message.

Honest take: Catches errors spell-check misses. Tone detection helps calibrate professional communication. Premium features require a subscription. Suggestions aren't always right, so use judgment. Can slow down some pages.

7. Toby

What it does: Organizes tabs into collections. Save your "Job Search" tabs and restore them later.

Honest take: If you end every day with 40 tabs and start every morning hunting for the right one, install this. Simple drag-and-drop. Collections persist across sessions. Doesn't integrate with search tools, but that's not its job.

8. Clockify

What it does: Time tracking for your search activities.

Best for: People who want data on where their hours actually go. Especially valuable if you're searching while employed with limited time.

Honest take: Free. Simple start/stop timer. Useful reports. But it adds one more thing to manage, and categorization is manual. Only worth it if you'll actually look at the data.

The stack I'd recommend

You don't need all eight. For most seekers:

  • One job saver (Orbit or Huntr) for capturing listings
  • Simplify for auto-filling applications
  • Grammarly for writing quality
  • Toby if tab chaos is a problem

Start with two or three. Add more only when you identify a specific need.

The philosophy

Extensions should reduce friction, not add complexity. If one requires more setup time than it saves, uninstall it. The goal is a faster, more organized search. The best tools are the ones you actually use consistently.

Orbit's extension was built on this principle: one click to save a job, zero configuration, immediate pipeline integration. That's the bar.

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