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MicrosoftTech

Microsoft’s Edge browser now renders sites in less than 300ms

Backed by WebUI 2.0, Microsoft Edge is now faster at loading websites, opening tabs, and switching screens with minimal lag.

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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Jul 8, 2025, 4:43 AM EDT
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It was one of those mornings when you click a link, only to watch the browser sit there, cursor spinning, as though it’s pondering the meaning of life. For many of us, that half‑second—or worse—feels like an eternity. This week, Microsoft quietly declared war on that delay. In a post on its Windows blog, the Redmond giant celebrated a “major milestone”: Edge now renders the first bits of web content in under 300 milliseconds—fast enough that, for most users, it feels practically instantaneous.

This threshold isn’t arbitrary. In 2017, Google introduced First Contentful Paint (FCP) as part of its Web Vitals initiative to measure how quickly a page begins to display usable content. According to Microsoft’s post, “industry research shows that waiting longer than 300 to 400ms for the initial content can significantly impact user satisfaction.” In other words, shave off just a few hundred milliseconds, and web pages stop feeling sluggish—and users stay more engaged.

FCP measures the time from navigation start to the browser’s first render of any text, image, or UI element. It’s not the whole story—pages still need to fully load—but it’s the first impression. Nail that, and everything that follows feels that much snappier.

Edge’s newfound quickness stems from a multi‑month effort to migrate its user interface onto a new WebUI 2.0 architecture. The goal: minimize code heft and slash the amount of JavaScript executed during startup. As Microsoft’s engineers put it, the new system “minimizes the size of our code bundles, and the amount of JavaScript code that runs during the initialization of the UI,” allowing the browser to get out of its own way.

This isn’t a one‑off tweak. Back in February, Microsoft announced that actions like opening downloads, browsing history, or spinning up a private tab were on average about 40 percent faster. Since then, those gains have extended to 13 more features—everything from opening Settings and switching to split‑screen mode, to firing up the AI‑powered Read aloud feature.

Despite these technical triumphs, Edge still sits a distant runner‑up in the global browser race. According to StatCounter’s June 2025 figures, Chrome commands roughly 68.35 percent of desktop users, while Edge lags behind at just 4.96 percent. Safari, Firefox, and a handful of smaller players fill out the rest.

Why does that matter? A browser is only as popular as the extensions, integrations, and ecosystems that support it. Chrome’s dominance gives it an unbeatable network effect: developers optimize for Chromium first, and users stick with the browser everyone else uses. Edge, despite being Chromium‑based itself, must offer something markedly better—or different—to pry people away.

That’s where performance comes in. Faster initial paint times not only make pages feel slicker, they also reduce frustration in enterprise scenarios where every millisecond counts (think CRM dashboards or complex web‑based tools). Microsoft has long aimed to lure corporate IT departments with deep Windows integration, security features, and now, speed.

And speed isn’t the only front on which Edge is fighting back. With AI tooling like its Copilot integration, reading modes, and ongoing accessibility improvements, Microsoft is pitching Edge as more than just a “better Chrome.” The company even suggests that rival entrants—OpenAI among them—may soon roll out their own browsers, tying AI search agents directly into web navigation. If nothing else, a faster Edge could help blunt that defection.

According to Microsoft’s roadmap, today’s FCP milestone is merely one stop on a longer journey. Later this year, users can expect similar optimizations in Print Preview, better Extension performance, and further UI tweaks designed to cut down waiting times. Every little reduction in delay inches Edge closer to feeling frictionless.

For web developers, these changes also underscore an important point: browser-level improvements can complement—never replace—front‑end optimization. While trimming unused CSS or deferring heavy scripts remains essential, a leaner browser engine means that well‑built sites benefit from speed boosts out of the box.

In the end, this isn’t just about bragging rights. As browsers compete on performance, users reap the rewards: less waiting, fewer “interrupted loading” animations, and a smoother path to content. Even if you never consciously notice the difference between 300ms and 350ms, your brain does—and it translates into better engagement, lower bounce rates, and a web that feels more alive.


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Topic:Microsoft Edge browser
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