Vivaldi’s latest desktop update, version 7.9, feels like a love letter to people who actually live in their browser all day, but are tired of staring at browser chrome instead of the content they came for. The headline act is a new Auto-hide UI mode that can literally pull the entire interface out of sight until you need it, turning your screen into almost pure web with just a flick of the mouse. Around it, Vivaldi wraps in smarter tab workflows and a nicer built‑in mail experience, rounding out a release that leans heavily into productivity and focus instead of gimmicks.
If you have ever hit full-screen in another browser and thought, “This is close, but I still wish I had my tools one cursor‑move away,” Vivaldi’s new UI Auto-hide feels like the feature that should have existed years ago. Once enabled, it can hide practically everything — tab bar, address bar, panels, status bar, bookmarks — so the page you’re reading, watching, or working on quite literally stretches from edge to edge. Move your cursor to any edge of the window and the entire interface slides back into view, ready for you to change tabs, open a panel, or type in a URL, then politely steps out of the way again the moment you move back to the content.
Vivaldi being Vivaldi, this isn’t a one‑size‑fits‑all toggle; you can decide exactly how aggressive the feature should be. Maybe you only want to hide the tab bar because you like the cleaner look but still want a fixed address bar, or you go all‑in and make the browser itself practically disappear, leaving nothing but the page and the faint muscle memory of where your UI will reappear. There’s also an option to have this behavior kick in automatically when you enter full‑screen, which turns what used to be a pretty basic mode into something that feels more like a distraction‑free reader, but for every site, not just articles.
What makes Auto-hide interesting is that it’s less about minimalism for aesthetics and more about reclaiming attention. Modern browsers are packed with things constantly calling for action — extensions, icons, badges, rows of favicons, and, of course, that endless horizon of tabs — all of which are useful, but also quietly exhausting when you’re trying to focus on a long report, a dense documentation page, or that inevitable Wikipedia deep dive. With Vivaldi 7.9, the browser essentially invites you to step onto the other side of that line: you keep the power tools, but hide the workshop until you actually need to pick something up.
The other big change in this release tackles a different kind of cognitive load: link rabbit holes. Vivaldi calls the new feature “Follower Tab,” and it’s designed for that classic scenario where you’re reading one great article and, a dozen clicks later, your tab strip has turned into archaeological layers of where you’ve been, but not where you started. Now, right‑clicking a link and choosing “Open Link as Tiled Follower Tab” opens that page side‑by‑side with the original, and every subsequent link you click from the original tab keeps loading into that follower tile — the first page never moves, effectively becoming your anchor.

You can see how this instantly becomes addictive in research workflows. Imagine a long guide with a table of contents: keep the index on the left, open each section in a follower tab on the right, and jump through the piece without ever losing your place. Or picture a shopping session where the product list stays pinned in the original tab while every promising item opens in the follower tile, letting you compare details quickly without spawning a mess of background tabs you’ll forget to close. It’s not that other browsers can’t technically do something like this — you can always open things in a new window or split view — but Vivaldi’s version packages that behavior into a single, memorable action aimed squarely at how people actually browse.
Follower Tabs aren’t perfect yet; some early hands‑on impressions point out that the mechanics can feel a bit undercooked when you start expecting complex multi‑tile layouts or more advanced behaviors. But even in this first iteration, there’s a clear idea: your main tab is the narrative, the follower tab is the footnote, and you never have to choose between staying in the story and chasing a side thread. In a world where tab overwhelm is a constant meme, that alone is a thoughtful step.
Vivaldi Mail also gets a quieter but meaningful upgrade in 7.9, aimed at people who spend serious time in their inbox. The composer can now pop out into its own window, which sounds minor on paper but is a big deal in practice if you like drafting long messages next to reference material, or if you work on multiple monitors. Switching between rich text and plain text is now just a single toggle, and there are under‑the‑hood optimizations to reduce memory usage in large mail lists, helping the interface feel less sluggish when you’re juggling big archives.

Beyond composing, Vivaldi has tuned how mailing lists are handled so replies end up where they’re supposed to without you having to fuss with headers, and it has added the option to save selected messages directly to disk as individual files. These kinds of changes don’t scream for attention the way Auto-hide does, but they’re the sort of small, pragmatic touches that make an integrated mail client feel like a serious alternative to separate apps. For people already using Vivaldi as a “work hub” — browser, feeds, mail, calendar — this release nudges that vision forward a bit more.
Taken together, Vivaldi 7.9 feels like a browser doubling down on a specific philosophy: the browser should be powerful, but not constantly visible; flexible, but aligned with how you work rather than how advertisers wish you did. Auto-hide UI is almost the literal manifestation of that, letting you tuck away the heavy machinery so the web itself occupies center stage without sacrificing the control that power users care about. And in an era where many competitors are racing to bolt AI on top of everything, Vivaldi’s pitch of “no AI, no tracking, no BS” — and now, optionally, hardly any chrome — makes this release stand out as a quietly contrarian one.
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