WebExtension.net
WebExtension.net
Toggle dark mode
WebExtension.net
WebExtension.net
Cookiekill+

Cookiekill+

View on Chrome Web Store
View Cookiekill+ Chrome Extension on Chrome Web Store
Add to bookmarks
5.0 (1 ratings)
0 views
This extension has been viewed 0 times
0 downloads
This extension has been downloaded 0 times

Data is synced from the Chrome Web Store. View the official store page for the most current information.

Clear all cookies, localStorage, sessionStorage, and IndexedDB for the current site.
Type
Extension
Users
16 users
1
Site Detox Labs
View author page of Site Detox Labs
Published
Published on May 20, 2025
Version 1.0
Manifest version
3
Updated
Updated on May 20, 2025
make_chrome_yours/functionality
Extension Category
View on Chrome Web Store
View Cookiekill+ Chrome Extension on Chrome Web Store
Share This Extension
Share on Twitter
Share on Facebook
Share on LinkedIn
Share on Reddit
Share on Bluesky
Share on Pinterest
Cookiekill+ Chrome Extension Image 1
Cookiekill+ Chrome Extension Image 2

Description

Cookiekill+ helps you reset any site to a clean slate, instantly — and could give you back gigabytes of disk space.

We all know that websites use cookies to store information about you — your account information, what's in your shopping cart, your past browsing behavior, and so on. Many of us have gotten used to clearing the cookies belonging to a particular website in our browser.

But cookies aren't the only place where a website can store this sort of information. Modern websites can also deposit your user data in localStorage, sessionStorage, and IndexedDB databases — all forms of local storage within browsers that can be used to track your behavior.

And unlike cookies, which are tiny — Chrome limits them to 4 KB — these other types of storage can grow truly massive, easily eating up multiple gigabytes of disk space within a short span of time.

When you click Cookiekill+ while visiting a website, it:

•	Deletes all cookies for the current domain, including any subdomains
•	Deletes all localStorage and sessionStorage for that domain
•	Deletes all IndexedDB databases for that domain
•	Reloads the page with a fresh cache-busting query string, forcing it to load a fresh copy of the page

In effect, when that page reloads, it will be as if it was the first time you've ever visited it in that browser — without whatever baggage you've accumulated.

Use it when you want to:

•	Get a fresh start on a site that’s acting up — buttons not working, layouts looking screwy
•	Make a site forget your old username or other personal information it tracks
•	Do a quick privacy reset before sharing your screen or device
•	Debug a website you're building or working on
•	Break out of some site's A/B interface test
•	Clear your data off of a public machine you used temporarily
•	Reclaim some precious disk space

Normally, these types of data can only be cleared manually, deep in Chrome's settings or in DevTools. For most use cases, Cookiekill+ will give you a full in-browser reset.

Cookiekill+ runs entirely in your browser and makes no calls to any server anywhere. No data is ever collected or sent to anyone.

Finally, a couple caveats:

•	Deleting IndexedDB databases is only supported in web browsers that allow JavaScript to do so. Luckily, that includes all recent versions of Chrome, Edge, Brave, Vivaldi, Opera, and other Chromium-based browsers. (Safari and Firefox don't allow deletion.)

•	There are three types of browser storage that browsers won't allow Cookiekill+ to delete. These are: cross-origin cookies and storage (e.g. the data in an iframe embedded from one site into another); service workers (background scripts that can only be deleted by the sites that registered them), and HttpOnly cookies (which browsers make inaccessible to JavaScript for security reasons).
© 2025 WebExtension.net. All rights reserved.
Disclaimer: WebExtension.net is not affiliated with Google or the Chrome Web Store. All product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All extension data is collected from publicly available sources.
Go to top