SAFE BROWSING CHECK · PRIVATE BROWSING Incognito works on exactly one audience. The people who share your computer. Everyone else — sites, networks, advertisers — still sees you. What closes the gaps.

Incognito Mode Leaves Three Gaps. One Tool Closes Them.

Marta Lane · Updated April 26, 2026 · 5 min read

Incognito mode does one job well. It hides your browsing from the other people who use your computer. Close the window and the history clears, the cookies vanish, the half-typed searches disappear. For keeping a surprise-gift search off the family laptop, that's plenty.

For anything past your own front door, it's a stage set.

In 2024, Google agreed to destroy billions of browsing records covering more than 136 million people in the US, data it had collected while those people sat in Incognito, to settle a lawsuit arguing the mode was never as private as it looked. The company that built Incognito chose to delete the records rather than stand up in court and call the mode private. That tells you most of what you need to know.

What Incognito actually hides (and from whom)

Think of Incognito as a locked drawer in your own house. It keeps the people you live with from seeing what you've been reading. It does nothing about the street outside.

Google says as much on its own Chrome support page: your activity is still visible to the websites you visit, to "your employer or school," and to "your internet service provider." That's the maker's own fine print, in the maker's own words.

Who it hides you from, and who still sees you A locked drawer in your own house. It does nothing about the street. ✓ Incognito covers this ✗ Incognito does nothing past here NEAR — your keyboard FAR — the open web your front door You / your keyboard history & cookies cleared on close Network / Wi-Fi logs where you go Your ISP logs the sites The websites fingerprint you; ads load THE MOVE — close the three gaps past your door: VPN + blocker + antivirus.
The scope boundary, per Google's own fine print. Source: Chrome support pages.

So when you open a private window, three things are still wide open:

Those three gaps are the whole story. Real alternatives are the tools that actually close them.

The 5 real alternatives, ranked by effort

Most "best alternatives" lists hand you a pile of tools and wish you luck. The same five, sorted by how much work each one costs you against what it actually closes:

AlternativeWhat it closesEffortBest for
Private search engine (DuckDuckGo, Startpage)Stops your searches feeding an advertising profileTwo minutes, freeEveryone — the easiest win there is
Privacy browser (Brave, DuckDuckGo)Blocks most trackers and ads, resists fingerprintingA few minutes, freeEveryday browsing on one device
A VPNHides your IP and the sites you visit from your provider, your network, and snoops on public WiFiOne install, paidAnyone on shared, work, or café networks
Tor BrowserNear-anonymous browsing through layered relaysSlow, with a learning curveJournalists, whistleblowers, high-risk research
Virtual machineA sealed, disposable computer inside your computerA genuine tech projectPower users testing risky software

Two honest notes. Tor is the gold standard for anonymity, but it's slow and it's overkill for checking your bank balance. A virtual machine gives you total isolation, and it's a weekend project most people start and never finish. The search engine and the browser are free and worth doing today, yet each closes only part of the gap: switch both and your provider and your network can still see every site you open.

The move most people actually need

The pattern is hard to miss. The free options are easy but partial. The thorough options are powerful but a chore. And almost nobody runs all five. A privacy setup you abandon protects no one.

For everyday browsing, three gaps are the ones that count, and they happen to be the exact three Incognito leaves open: the network can see where you go, sites can track and fingerprint you, and ads and malware come in with the pages you load. Close those three and you've covered what a normal person needs. Chase the rest and you're building a hobby, not protecting yourself.

This is the case for one all-in-one tool instead of a stack. Stitching together a VPN, a tracker blocker, and antivirus from three different companies means three installs, three subscriptions, and three things to keep updated. One bundle closes the same three gaps in a single setup.

Total VPN is built that way. The VPN hides your IP and encrypts the sites you visit, so your provider, your work network, and the café WiFi see scrambled traffic instead of your destinations. Its built-in ad and tracker blocker strips out the trackers and ad slots that shadow you from site to site. The included antivirus scans for the malware Incognito never touched. Three gaps, one tool, one setup.

Close the three gaps Incognito leaves — in one setup →

Annual plans come with a 30-day money-back guarantee, so you can set it up, test it on your own network, and back out if it isn't for you.

If your only frustration is the ads and the trackers, and you're not worried about who sees your network traffic, you don't need the whole bundle. A standalone blocker like Total AdBlock handles that one piece on its own. But if you want all three gaps closed in a single move, the all-in-one is the simpler call.

What to do this week

You don't have to overhaul anything today. Switch your default search engine first; it's free and takes two minutes. Then make one real decision: whether to close the network gap too. That's the gap Incognito most pretends to handle and least actually does, and it's the one a free browser tweak can't reach.

Most people don't need the five-tool stack. One tool that covers the three gaps that matter, then gets out of your way, is the honest answer.

Cover your connection, your trackers, and your malware in one move →

Backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee on annual plans.

Incognito was only ever a locked drawer in your own house. The tools above are the ones that face the street.