Enter multiple URLs (Each URL must be on separate line or separated by commas):
A bulk URL opener is a browser-based tool that opens multiple website links at once in separate tabs, saving you the repetitive work of copying and pasting each one individually. ToolsPivot's Bulk URL Opener processes your entire list with a single click, requires no sign-up or software download, and keeps all URLs in your browser memory only, so nothing is stored or transmitted to external servers.
Allow pop-ups first: Before anything else, tell your browser to allow pop-ups from this site. Without this step, your browser will block the new tabs from opening. Look for the small pop-up icon in your address bar and click "Always allow."
Paste your URLs: Copy your list of links from a spreadsheet, text file, or document and paste them into the large text area. Put one URL per line, or separate them with commas.
Click "Open All": Hit the button and every link launches in a new browser tab. A list of 25 URLs opens in roughly 3-5 seconds depending on your connection speed.
Review and close: Work through your open tabs, finish your analysis, and close them as you go.
That's the entire process. No accounts, no configuration, no waiting.
Batch tab launching: Paste anywhere from 2 to 50+ URLs and open them all with one click. The tool triggers your browser's native tab system, so pages load exactly as they would if you typed each address manually.
Flexible input parsing: The tool accepts URLs separated by line breaks, commas, or spaces. Copy a column from Google Sheets, Excel, or a CSV file and paste it directly. No reformatting needed.
Automatic protocol handling: Type "example.com" and the tool adds https:// before opening. You don't need to worry about missing prefixes when pulling URLs from raw data sources.
Duplicate filtering: If your list accidentally contains the same URL twice (or five times), the tool catches it and opens each unique page only once. Saves tabs, saves RAM.
Clear and reset: One button wipes the input field clean. Useful when you're running through multiple batches during a long audit session.
Cross-browser support: Works in Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, and Opera on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android.
No account walls: Most productivity tools ask for your email before you can do anything. This tool skips all that. Open the page, paste your links, click the button. Done.
Cuts repetitive work by 80%+: Opening 30 links manually takes 3-4 minutes of copying, pasting, and waiting. The bulk opener does it in seconds. Over a week of daily audits, that's hours you get back.
Pairs with other audit tools: Run a backlink check, export the referring domains, and paste them into the bulk opener to visually inspect each linking site. Or pull URLs from a sitemap generator report and open every page for manual review.
Works from any device: Desktop, laptop, tablet, or phone. No app installation, no browser extension, no software download. If you have a browser and an internet connection, the tool works.
Privacy by design: URLs are processed entirely client-side. Nothing gets sent to a server, stored in a database, or logged. Important when working with confidential client URLs or staging environments.
Spreadsheet-friendly: SEO professionals and marketers live in spreadsheets. Copy an entire URL column from Excel or Google Sheets and paste it straight in. The parser handles formatting automatically.
This tool isn't for everyone. If you open 2-3 links a day, bookmarks work fine. But once you regularly handle lists of 10, 20, or 50+ URLs, manual opening becomes a bottleneck.
SEO consultants use it during site audits. Pull URLs from a crawl report or link analysis, paste them in, and review every page's title tags and content quality. An audit covering 40 pages goes from a 20-minute setup to a 30-second one.
Digital marketers verify campaign landing pages. Launched the same offer on 15 ad networks? Paste every landing page URL and confirm they all load correctly in one pass.
Content teams open competitor articles side by side. Need to scan the top 10 Google results for content gaps? Paste those URLs and have them all loaded in under 5 seconds.
E-commerce managers track competitor pricing weekly. Maintain a spreadsheet of 20 product page URLs across Amazon, Walmart, and Shopify stores. Paste the list each Monday and compare prices across all open tabs.
QA engineers load staging URLs in bulk before a release. When a deploy touches 25 pages, manual opening is the slowest part of the process.
Pop-up blockers are the number-one reason bulk URL openers fail on the first try. Every modern browser blocks pop-ups by default (good for security), but it means you need to whitelist the site before the tool can open multiple tabs.
Here's how to do it in each major browser:
Chrome: When you click "Open All" and nothing happens, look for a small icon with a red X in the address bar. Click it and select "Always allow pop-ups from this site." Reload and try again.
Firefox: Go to Settings, then Privacy & Security. Scroll to Permissions, find Pop-up Windows, and click Exceptions. Add the site to the allowed list.
Safari: Open Preferences, click Websites, then Pop-up Windows. Find the site in the list and set it to "Allow."
Edge: Go to Settings, then Cookies and Site Permissions, then Pop-ups and Redirects. Add the site to the Allow list.
This is a one-time setup. Once you allow pop-ups, the setting sticks across sessions.
The tool itself has no hard limit. But your browser and computer do, and ignoring those limits causes freezes or crashes.
Each open tab consumes roughly 50-150 MB of RAM depending on page content. A simple text page might use 50 MB; a media-heavy e-commerce page could eat 200 MB. On a laptop with 8 GB of RAM (3 GB used by the OS and apps), you've got about 5 GB free. That's roughly 30-50 tabs before slowdowns start.
Practical recommendations based on system specs:
| RAM Available | Recommended Batch Size | Max Before Slowdown |
|---|---|---|
| 4 GB | 10-15 URLs | ~20 tabs |
| 8 GB | 20-30 URLs | ~40 tabs |
| 16 GB | 40-60 URLs | ~80 tabs |
| 32 GB+ | 60-100 URLs | 100+ tabs |
If your list exceeds what your system can handle, split it. Open the first 30, review them, close the tabs, then open the next 30. Setting an interval delay of 200-500 milliseconds between tab openings also helps reduce the load spike on slower machines.
Chrome Web Store has several extensions that do the same thing, like Bulk URL Opener Extension and Open Multiple URLs. Why use a web-based tool instead?
Extensions require installation, and every extension you add gets access to your browsing data. Some request permissions to read browsing history or modify page content. A web-based tool runs in a single tab, doesn't touch any extension API, and leaves zero footprint once you close the page.
Extensions also break when browsers push major updates. A browser-based tool relies on standard JavaScript, so updates don't affect it.
The trade-off: extensions can save URL lists for later and auto-batch openings. For persistent list storage, an extension might be worth it. For quick, one-off batch opening with zero setup, the web-based approach wins.
Skipping the pop-up step. This causes 90% of "it doesn't work" complaints. Always allow pop-ups before your first batch. The tool shows a warning at the top of the page reminding you.
Pasting malformed URLs. If your list includes URLs with extra spaces, trailing characters, or broken encoding, some tabs might load error pages. Run your URLs through a URL encoder/decoder first to clean up any encoding issues.
Opening too many tabs on a low-spec machine. With 4 GB of RAM, trying to open 50 tabs at once will freeze your browser. Start small (10-15 links) and scale up.
Not checking links first. Opening 30 URLs and finding 10 are dead wastes time and browser resources. Run your list through a broken link checker first to validate everything.
Forgetting to close tabs afterward. Leaving 40 tabs open in the background eats RAM all day. Close them as you finish each review.
Yes, 100% free with no hidden fees, usage caps, or premium tiers. You can open as many URLs as your browser can handle, as often as you need. No email, no sign-up, no account required.
Everything is processed client-side in your browser. URLs are never transmitted to an external server, stored in any database, or logged. The tool runs on JavaScript within your browser tab, so your data stays on your machine.
Start with 20-30 URLs per batch on most computers with 8 GB of RAM. Each browser tab uses 50-150 MB of memory depending on page content. If your system handles 30 tabs without slowing down, try 40 next time and adjust from there.
Yes. Select and copy the column in Google Sheets, then paste directly into the text area. The parser reads each line as a separate URL. This also works with Excel, LibreOffice Calc, and any app that copies data line by line.
Your browser is blocking pop-ups. Look for a small notification icon near the address bar, click it, and allow pop-ups from the site. This is a one-time browser setting that persists across sessions.
It works on mobile browsers that support JavaScript, including Chrome and Safari on iOS and Android. But mobile devices have less RAM than desktops, so keep batches small (5-10 URLs) to avoid crashing your mobile browser.
Bookmark folders store a fixed set of links you open regularly. A bulk URL opener handles dynamic, changing lists, like fresh crawl data from a website SEO checker or a new list of referring domains. You paste a different list every time.
It's one of the most common use cases. Export page URLs from Google Search Console, a crawl tool, or your page speed checker results, paste them into the bulk opener, and review every page's on-site optimization in one session. Pair it with a meta tags analyzer to check title and description tags across all opened pages.
It accepts full URLs (https://example.com/page), URLs without protocol (example.com/page), and www variations. The tool adds https:// automatically when no protocol is specified. Separate URLs with line breaks, commas, or spaces.
Yes, if you exceed your available RAM. Each tab allocates 50-150 MB of memory. Close unnecessary applications before bulk opening, and use batches of 20-30 URLs on an 8 GB system. For SEO work, run a domain authority check before opening to prioritize which sites to inspect first.
The bulk opener supports interval timing between tab launches. Setting a delay of 200-500 milliseconds between openings prevents the browser from trying to load all pages at the exact same instant, which helps on slower internet connections or older hardware.
Yes. If your list contains the same URL multiple times, the tool opens each unique page only once. This prevents wasted tabs and duplicate resource use, especially useful when working with raw data exports.
Browser extensions like Bulk URL Opener Extension (Chrome) and Open Multiple URLs offer similar functionality but require installation and browser permissions. Web-based alternatives include OpenAllURLs.com and WebsitePlanet's Multiple URL Opener. ToolsPivot requires no install, no sign-up, and processes URLs entirely in your browser. Verify your links afterward with the SSL checker and keyword density checker.
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