Reading articles on websites can quickly get overwhelming with images, videos, and ads sprinkled throughout the text (hey, everyone’s got to pay their bills). Like many ofour other favorite web browsersbefore it, Chrome is trying to tackle this issue with a reading mode, even if it’s arguably the worst implementation we’ve seen, with the original website always in view next to it. Now, we have word the feature’s user interface is in for a minor redesign on desktop.
Old reader mode UI on Chrome

Browsers like Firefox and Apple’s Safari have had a Reader Mode for years now, but Chrome has enabled anddisabled it frequently. The latest version available today wasintroduced with Chrome 114. Reading mode on Chrome isnestled in the sidebarthat hosts other experiences like Search Journeys, and it should be enabled by default. However, if that’s not the case, you can try pasting the following flag addresses in the Chrome address bar and setting both of them to Enabled, forcing the feature live for you:
chrome://flags/#read-anything
chrome://flags/#read-anything-with-screen2x
When you pull up Reading mode on Chrome for desktop, you’ll find a neat settings strip above the text window, giving options to change the typeface, increase or decrease the font size, apply themes (to the sidebar), and modify the line height and letter spacing. This strip gives you ready access to all the controls you may need while reading. However, reputable Chrome feature spotter@Leopeva64 on Twittersays the strip is gone in Chrome Canary (v116), replaced by a single gear icon.
The new UI undergoing testing in Chrome Canary
As demonstrated above, clicking the gear icon reveals a drop-down menu with nested sub-menus for all the options, which were neatly incorporated in the settings strip of the old UI. The new UI doesn’t seem like a step in the right direction because it now takes at least one additional click to access any setting you want. Moreover, exiting the menu or going back to the parent menu is quite a chore.
However, this is a change in Chrome Canary and Google could have greater plans for the tight space in the sidebar. We wouldn’t mind the new UI if other additions to the space are afoot, but in its current form, we are hoping it doesn’t make the cut to Chrome 117 stable. While Google is at it, perhaps there’s a better place to house Reading mode than a cramped sidebar?