Chrome is Google’s first iPhone app with Liquid Glass

With the launch of iOS 26 earlier this week, Google Chrome 141 rolled out with Liquid Glass tweaks on iPhone and iPad.

As a reminder, Chrome for iOS has a pretty different interface and experience from the Android version. Beyond getting the bottom address bar in October 2023 (vs. July 2025), there’s a unique Tab Grid and bottom sheet menu (see below). 

The Liquid Glass changes start on the Tab Grid with the Incognito (which is always visible), Tab, and Tab Group switcher, as well as search at the left. Edit and Done also get the same treatment below. 

Old vs. new

Advertisement – scroll for more content

Context menus have been updated to the new style for a more modern experience that doesn’t blur the background. 

The bottom sheet no longer goes edge-to-edge with more rounded corners, while menu items also pick up that additional curvature. That’s also the case in Settings, with a new Done/checkmark icon and updated on/off toggles.

There’s also a new tab loading indicator that adopts the iOS pinwheel style instead of the circle.

Meanwhile, iOS 26 introduces a new keyboard with a more rounded sheet and keys. Chrome has long tacked on an extra row with access to voice search, Google Lens, and other useful keys like .com and slash. This is now a floating rectangle above the main keyboard.

It remains to be seen how other Google apps will adopt Liquid Glass, but I’d venture that this fast implementation in Chrome is specific to the browser’s pre-existing/unique UI. For all other Google apps, I’d guess a recompile to the latest SDK that brings the new keyboard might be the extent of changes for some time (though that has yet to happen with any other app update that we checked this week).

iOS Google apps are still a mix of Material Theme (Keep, Calendar, Tasks) and Material 3 (Gmail, Chat, Home, Maps, Meet, Photos, and Search), with the former getting a bit old.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

NFL Betting Apps: Top Odds, Promos, Offers for Week 3 Sunday Games

This article contains references to products from our advertisers and/or partners, and we may receive compensation when you click on… This article contains references to products from our advertisers and/or partners, and we may receive compensation when you click on links to products and services The new NFL season is rolling right along as fans

The ‘citizen police’ apps are on fire. So what?

The MyStreet app is designed to encourage the public to report violations of seating limits by restaurants, bars and cafes on sidewalks and squares. Citizens have embraced the initiative, but critics point out that little will change unless enforcement is stepped up. [InTime News] If you believe the hype about the number of complaints submitted

iPhone 17 vs iPhone 16 – which entry-level mobile is best?

The iPhone 17 finally catches up with Android by having a 120Hz refresh rate. This makes all the difference, as does its upgraded ultra-wide and selfie cameras, while performance improvements are also appreciated. Pros A 120Hz refresh rate New cameras Very powerful Cons No change to design Same RAM as before Bigger and heavier than

These two apps are all I need to keep my productivity high

Andy Walker / Android Authority I’m all about productivity, trying to get as much done in the least amount of time. As an Editor here at Android Authority and someone who is involved in all sorts of projects outside of work, I have a lot of tasks to handle on a daily basis, and I

How GPT-5 Codex Handles Complex Coding Tasks & Real-Time Apps

How good is GPT-5 Codex, really? Imagine a tool so advanced it can generate functional code for complex applications in mere minutes, yet intuitive enough to seamlessly integrate into your existing development workflow. Bold claims like these have surrounded the latest iteration of OpenAI’s Codex, sparking both excitement and skepticism in the developer community. Is