TL;DR
Yes, you can disable Chrome’s Incognito mode using Group Policy (Windows) or Preferences (macOS). This is useful for managing browser usage in organisations or preventing accidental use of private browsing.
How to Disable Incognito Mode
- Understand the Methods: There are two main ways to disable Incognito mode:
- Group Policy (Windows): This is the preferred method for managed environments like businesses or schools. It requires the Chrome ADMX templates.
- Preferences (macOS): This involves editing a configuration file (.plist) and requires some technical knowledge.
- Windows: Install Chrome ADMX Templates
- Download the latest Chrome Enterprise Bundle from Google’s website.
- Extract the bundle. You need the
policy_templates.zipfile within it. - Copy the contents of
policy_templates.zipto your Group Policy central store (usuallyyourdomain.comSYSVOLyourdomain.comPoliciesPolicyDefinitions). If the folder doesn’t exist, create it.
- Windows: Configure Group Policy
- Open the Group Policy Management Console (
gpedit.mscif you are on a local machine, or use the Remote Server Administration Tools). - Navigate to Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Google > Google Chrome.
- Find the policy named “Prevent users from opening Incognito windows”.
- Double-click this policy and set it to Enabled. This will block Incognito mode.
- Click Apply and then OK.
- Force a Group Policy update on the target machines using
gpupdate /force.
- Open the Group Policy Management Console (
- macOS: Edit Chrome Preferences File
- Close all instances of Chrome.
- Open Terminal (Applications > Utilities > Terminal).
- Navigate to the Chrome profile directory. This is usually
~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome. You can usecd ~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome.
- Edit the
Preferencesfile using a text editor like TextEdit or nano. You may need to create this file if it doesn’t exist. - Add the following line within the top-level curly braces (
{...}):"incognito_mode_disabled": true, - Save the
Preferencesfile. - Restart Chrome.
- Verify the Change
- On Windows, try to open a new Incognito window (Ctrl+Shift+N). It should be blocked.
- On macOS, try to open a new Incognito window (Cmd+Shift+N). It should be blocked.