For ex-Arc users

The European alternative to Arc Browser

Arc was sunset in 2025. The Browser Company moved on to Dia, an AI-first browser that sees your tabs and your typing. If you loved Arc for its modern design and don't want a browser that's also an AI assistant, Dazr is the version that picks up where Arc left off: actively maintained, designed to stay out of your way, and built in Europe.

Why ex-Arc users are looking around

If any of these sound familiar, you're in the right place.

Arc isn't being actively developed anymore

The Browser Company announced in late 2024 / early 2025 that they were moving development off Arc and onto Dia. Arc still runs, but it's not getting meaningful new features or major security updates. For a daily-driver browser, that matters.

Dia leans heavily into AI

Dia is interesting if you want an AI-first browser, but its core feature is an assistant that watches your tabs and your typing. If your reason for using Arc was "a clean, modern, design-first browser", Dia is a different product entirely.

The Browser Company is US-based

Both Arc and Dia are made by a New York company. For European users, US-based browsers can put your data in reach of US laws. Dazr is European, full stop, no US parent company, no US cloud underneath.

You don't want a browser that needs the cloud

Arc relied on cloud sync for tabs, spaces, and pinned content. If sync went down or your account had a problem, your workflow broke. Dazr stores everything locally by default. There's no account to lose access to.

You want better tracking protection

Arc didn't ship a built-in ad blocker or fingerprint defense. Dazr does, and both are on by default. The web feels lighter and faster the moment you switch.

You like vertical tabs

One of the best things about Arc was the vertical tab sidebar. Dazr has vertical tabs built in too, you can switch them on in settings.

Dazr vs Arc

Side by side, no spin.

Feature Arc Dazr
Active developmentSunset 2025Actively maintained
Country / jurisdictionUSA (The Browser Company)EU
Browser engineChromiumChromium
Vertical tabsYes (sidebar)Yes
Built-in ad blockerNoYes, by default
Stops fingerprintingNoYes, by default
AI featuresSome (Max)None
Account requiredYes (sync, Spaces)No account at all
Cloud-dependent featuresYesLocal-first, no cloud needed
Diagnostic data sent to vendorYesNone
Streaming (Netflix, Spotify, etc.)YesYes
FreeYesYes

What changes when you switch

A browser that's actually getting updates

Arc is in maintenance mode. New features go to Dia. Security fixes for Arc are limited. Switching to a browser that's actively developed isn't optional for long, it's the whole point of using a browser. Dazr ships updates regularly and security patches the moment they're needed.

  • Active development, not maintenance mode
  • Security patches shipped quickly
  • Public release notes and changelog

No AI assistant watching you

Dia's whole pitch is an AI that watches your browsing context to help you. Some people love that. If you don't, Dazr is the opposite philosophy: a browser that doesn't see your tabs, doesn't read your typing, doesn't summarise your pages, doesn't talk to AI providers. It's just a browser.

  • No AI sidebar, no AI summaries, no AI tab grouping
  • No third-party AI provider in the data path
  • You can use any AI website you want, that's the open web

Local-first, no account

Arc tied a lot of its features to a Browser Company account. Spaces, pinned tabs, sync, all of it depended on the cloud. Dazr stores everything on your machine. There's no account to forget the password to, no account to be locked out of, no service to go down.

  • Local bookmarks, history, and settings
  • No account required to use any feature
  • Cross-device sync is delegated to a password manager (Bitwarden, 1Password) that you control

What Arc still does that Dazr doesn't (yet)

  • Spaces. Arc's Spaces (separate themed workspaces with their own tabs, bookmarks, and look) don't have a direct equivalent. Pinned tabs and bookmark folders cover a lot of what Spaces was for, but the workflow is different.
  • Easels and Notes. Arc's built-in whiteboard and note-taking aren't part of Dazr. We think those belong in dedicated tools (Notion, Obsidian, anything you already use).

Frequently asked questions

Is Arc actually shut down?

Arc isn't fully gone, but The Browser Company has stopped active development. They've moved their focus to Dia, an AI-first browser. Arc still works for now, but it isn't getting new features or significant security updates. If you want a browser that's actively maintained, you need to move.

What's wrong with switching to Dia?

Nothing's wrong with it as a product, but Dia is built around an AI assistant that sees your tabs, your typing, and your browsing context. If your reason for using Arc was "a thoughtful, design-led browser", Dia is that plus a lot of AI you didn't ask for. Dazr is the version with the modern feel, no AI, and European hosting.

Does Dazr have vertical tabs like Arc?

Yes. Vertical tabs are built in (you can toggle them in settings). It isn't quite Arc's full sidebar workflow, but the vertical-tabs experience is there.

What about Arc's Spaces and Easels?

Dazr doesn't have direct equivalents to Spaces (workspace switching) or Easels (the whiteboard feature). Most ex-Arc users find that bookmark folders and pinned tabs cover most of what they used Spaces for.

Will my Arc bookmarks come over?

Yes. Export your bookmarks from Arc as an HTML file (Bookmarks → Export) and import them into Dazr from Settings → Import bookmarks. We're also working on direct Arc bookmark detection so the import is automatic on first launch.

Is Dazr based on Chromium like Arc was?

Yes. Both Arc and Dazr use the Chromium engine, which means websites render the same way they did in Arc. Extensions, web apps, and saved logins all work identically.

An actively-maintained home for ex-Arc users

Modern feel, vertical tabs, no AI, no account, built in Europe. Bring your bookmarks across in two minutes.

Download Dazr