Microsoft is preparing a notable change for Edge that could make the browser more flexible for many users. Soon, Edge will allow sign-in with a Google account, not just a Microsoft account as it has for years.
The update matters because Microsoft is not framing this as a forced switch between ecosystems. Instead, Edge is being prepared to support Google account sign-in alongside Microsoft account access, giving users more than one way to log in.
What is changing in Edge
Until now, anyone signing in to Edge had to use a Microsoft account. That distinction has long separated Edge from browsers such as Chrome, especially for people who already spend most of their time in Google services.
With the upcoming change, users will be able to sign in to Microsoft Edge using a Google account through the browser’s profile menu and login screen. Microsoft says the feature will be available on both Windows and macOS.
The important detail is that this is not replacing Microsoft account support. Google account access is being added as an extra option, so Microsoft’s own account system remains part of the experience.
Roadmap entry points to a wider rollout
The information surfaced in the Microsoft 365 Roadmap, which Microsoft uses to give business customers an early look at changes in development. The entry appears under the name “Microsoft Edge: Sign in to Edge with a Google account.”
Although the wording may suggest a feature that is already live, Microsoft still describes it as in development. In other words, the capability has not yet rolled out to users.
Microsoft is targeting a launch starting next month. If that schedule holds, Edge users on Windows and macOS should begin seeing the update in a future browser release.
Admin controls are already planned
Microsoft is also preparing policy controls for managed environments. Administrators will be able to control availability through a policy called NonMicrosoftAccountSignInEnabled.
That matters for companies that manage browser settings closely. With this policy, organizations can decide whether sign-in using non-Microsoft accounts, including Google accounts, should be enabled or restricted.
For IT teams, login features often require more than a simple product update. They also affect identity management, internal compliance rules, and how browsers are deployed across company devices.
Why the change stands out
Since moving to Chromium, Edge has become much closer to the modern browser experience many users expect. Even so, there have still been gaps compared with rivals, and Google account login has been one of them.
This update suggests Microsoft is trying to make Edge more accommodating for people who live between ecosystems. Many Windows users still rely heavily on Gmail, Google Drive, and other Google services, so a Google sign-in option could remove friction when they start using Edge.
The move also points to a more open product strategy. Rather than forcing one account identity, Microsoft appears to be allowing a broader mix of use cases that better reflects how people actually work today.
For now, the feature remains in development and is not widely available. But with a roadmap entry already in place, Google account support in Microsoft Edge now looks close to becoming a real option on Windows and macOS, with admin controls ready for organizations that need them.
