Edge Opens the Door for Google Account Sign-In, Chrome Users Get a Simpler Switch

Author: Qoo Media

Microsoft Edge is making one of its biggest moves yet to attract Chrome users: it now allows sign-in with a Google account. The change removes a long-standing barrier for people who wanted to try Edge without giving up the convenience of their existing Google-based setup.

With the new sign-in option, users can bring over bookmarks, browsing history, and other content with fewer steps. For many, that means switching browsers no longer requires building a separate Microsoft account workflow just to keep data in sync.

A more direct path for Chrome users

Until now, Edge could be used without a Microsoft account, but syncing data still depended on one. That extra step was often enough to keep long-time Chrome users from moving over, especially those already comfortable inside Google’s ecosystem.

The latest update changes that experience by allowing Google account login from both the profile menu and the Edge sign-in screen. Microsoft says the feature is available on Windows and macOS, which makes the transition easier for users across platforms.

The rollout is not immediate for everyone. Microsoft is releasing the feature in a controlled launch on Edge version 150.0.4078.48, so some users may need to wait before the option appears on their devices.

Enterprise control remains in place

Microsoft has also kept an administrative control in place through the NonMicrosoftAccountSignInEnabled policy. That gives organizations the option to decide whether non-Microsoft sign-ins are allowed in managed environments.

This matters for companies that need tighter account policies, even as consumer users gain more flexibility. It shows Microsoft is trying to widen Edge’s appeal without removing enterprise oversight.

More than just account flexibility

The update also includes a clearer cookie setting path under Settings > Privacy, search, and services > Cookies. Microsoft has revised the wording there so users can understand third-party cookie choices more easily.

For Intune MAM Protected Downloads, Edge now saves downloaded files to Documents > Microsoft Edge > Downloads in OneDrive. The change gives managed users a more defined storage location for protected downloads.

Microsoft also added DowngradeVersion support for the WebView2 runtime in enterprise environments. The policy can temporarily reduce the runtime version of an app to limit the impact of critical regressions, but it applies only to company-managed devices.

Another update affects the View in File Explorer feature in SharePoint document libraries. Microsoft added extra validation and restrictions when the feature is triggered by a web page, which is meant to improve security.

Update Area What Changed Who It Affects
Google Account Sign-In Users can sign in to Edge with a Google account Windows and macOS users
NonMicrosoftAccountSignInEnabled Administrators can control non-Microsoft sign-ins Managed enterprise environments
Intune MAM Protected Downloads Downloads save to a OneDrive folder path Managed users
WebView2 DowngradeVersion Temporary runtime downgrade support Company-managed devices

Security and management stay central

Microsoft has also added Security Update Alerts in the Edge management service. Administrators can choose a severity threshold and receive alerts when Edge updates include security fixes that meet that level, including zero-day patches.

The alert feature is still in public preview and is available through Targeted Release in the Microsoft 365 admin center. Microsoft positions it as a way for organizations to focus on important security updates without being overloaded by routine notifications.

At the same time, the company has flagged other changes, including the end of the Sidebar app list. Among all the updates, Google account support stands out most for everyday users because it directly removes a friction point that has long made Chrome feel easier to keep using.

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