Link Extractor

Copy all links &
open tab URLs.

When your research spans 40 open tabs or a massive reference page, copying URLs one by one is painful. Learn the fastest way to extract everything at once.

Stop jumping between tabs. Use Link Extractor to instantly capture the URL of every open tab in your window, or every link on your current page.
Target
Page links or Open tabs
Output
Clean copied lists
Cost
Free tier available

Tab overload

Research sessions inevitably lead to having dozens of open tabs. When you need to share these references or save them for later, standard browser features fall short.

The manual dance

The default workflow is: click tab, click address bar, copy, switch to document, paste, repeat. For 20 tabs, this takes minutes.

Bookmark clutter

Using "Bookmark All Tabs" just buries the links in your browser UI. It doesn't help when you need to paste them into an email or report.

Extracted
https://site.com/page-1
https://site.com/page-2
https://site.com/page-3
i
Why not just use history? Browser history mixes in searches, redirects, and irrelevant pages. You only want the final, curated tabs you currently have open.

The Tab Extraction Workflow

To capture your research efficiently, you need a tool that can read the state of your browser window.

Open the extension

Keep all your relevant tabs open in the current Chrome window. Click the Link Extractor icon.

Switch to Tab Mode

Instead of scanning the current page, switch the tool to scan 'Open Tabs'. It will instantly grab the URL and title of every tab.

Copy the list

Click copy to grab the entire list to your clipboard, formatted perfectly for your report or email.

Using an Extractor

  • One click captures all tabs
  • Includes both URL and page title
  • Ready to paste anywhere instantly

Manual Copying

  • Requires visiting every single tab
  • Easy to lose your place
  • Misses the page title entirely

Capture your research instantly

Install Link Extractor and turn your messy browser windows into clean, shareable lists.

Add to Chrome

Best for

  • Saving a deep research session
  • Sharing a reading list with colleagues

Not ideal for

  • Extracting links from a closed window
Last updated: May 2026