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AppsChromeGoogleTech

Chrome now grabs saved account details so forms fill in quicker on any device

Google has upgraded Chrome autofill so it can suggest addresses, names, passport numbers and travel info from Wallet entries across desktop, Android and iOS.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Dec 5, 2025, 1:55 PM EST
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A checkout screen on a website shows autofill suggestions from Chrome, including a person’s name, home address, loyalty card number, vehicle details, and flight confirmation. Small icons for home, car, airplane and a contact symbol appear around the form, while a mouse cursor points to a blue profile icon, illustrating Chrome automatically filling personal information from a Google account.
Image: Google
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Google is quietly nudging Chrome from a “just a browser” box to something a little more like a personal concierge: the latest autofill changes let Chrome pull a wider range of details straight from your Google account and Wallet, so filling checkout pages and travel forms feels less like admin and more like clicking “done.” For anyone who hates juggling tabs to copy a flight time or rifling through an app for a loyalty number, the update is a welcome bit of friction removal — and it’s rolling out across desktop, Android and iOS.

The biggest, most obvious tweak is that Chrome can now suggest the basics — your name, email, and home or work addresses — directly from the profile attached to your signed-in Google account. That removes the awkward extra step of creating Chrome-only address profiles; if your address already lives in your Google account, Chrome can surface it as an autofill option at checkout. In practice, that means fewer profile duplicates and one less place to update when you move.

On phones, Google has also rethought those tiny autofill suggestion chips that appear above the keyboard. Instead of squashed, single-line items, suggestions now expand to two lines so you can see more context — for example, two contacts with the same name but different addresses — which helps you pick the right entry without guessing. It’s a small interface change, but the kind that saves a few frustrating taps a day.

Perhaps the handiest upgrade for travelers is Wallet integration. Chrome can now reach into Google Wallet and pull travel data saved there — upcoming trips, flight arrival times, confirmation numbers — and drop that info into relevant booking forms (say, when you’re reserving an airport rental car). That stops the tab-hop dance between inbox, Wallet, and the booking site and makes multi-step checkouts feel closer to single-step.

This is also the rollout that expanded what Chrome calls “enhanced autofill”: beyond addresses and card numbers, Chrome can optionally store and fill fields like passport and driver’s license numbers, loyalty card details, and vehicle information such as license plates or VINs — again, only if you enable the feature. Google frames this as helping you finish forms faster and understand complex field formatting, but it’s worth noting that these are more sensitive data types, which is why the company treats enhanced autofill as an opt-in setting.

A quieter but important thread here is internationalization: Google says it’s teaching Chrome to better understand how addresses and name formats work outside the U.S., from Mexican cross-street conventions to plans for phonetic-name handling in Japan. For anyone who shops across borders or books travel internationally, those fixes are what make autofill genuinely useful rather than occasionally wrong.

Timing matters: Google is clearly rolling this out in time for the holiday season, when people juggle gifts, flights, and last-minute bookings and any saved second counts. The combination of Wallet data, address improvements, and clearer mobile suggestions is the kind of under-the-hood polish that won’t make headlines but will shave repeated friction from busy checkout flows.

That convenience does come with an obvious trade-off. Chrome isn’t suddenly grabbing new categories of data without your say-so, but it is connecting pieces you’ve already given Google — profile details, Wallet entries, any IDs you chose to save — and making them available inside more web forms. If you’d rather keep things compartmentalized, treat enhanced autofill and Wallet access as settings worth auditing: Chrome provides controls to enable or disable enhanced autofill, to review what’s saved, and to delete entries you no longer want the browser to offer. For anyone who stores passports or driver’s license numbers, the safe play is to confirm you’re comfortable with where that data is kept and to use device-level screen locks and account protection.

If you want to try it or check what’s already available to your browser, look under Chrome’s Autofill settings (and Wallet settings) for the Enhanced Autofill toggle and the lists of saved addresses, IDs, and payment methods. Flip things on if you want the convenience; flip them off if you prefer to paste manually or keep things siloed. Either way, the update is a neat example of how browsers can quietly swallow more of the workflow around shopping and travel — helpful if you like speed, a nudge to tidy your privacy settings if you don’t.

These changes don’t reinvent the web, but they do make the repetitive parts less annoying. Chrome is slowly learning the shape of the information you carry around online and trying to hand it back at the right moment; for many users, that will mean shaving seconds off a checkout, and for a lot of small things added together, that honestly feels like progress.


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