Private Browsing mode in Safari lets you view sites without adding anything to your history on your iPhone and iPad. Here are four different ways to open a private tab in Safari when you need it.

When you use a private tab, Safari doesn't store your browsing history, AutoFill your information, suggest recent searches, or save cookies once you close the tab.

With iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 arrived several changes, including how you can use private browsing mode in Safari. That said, there are easier and lesser-known ways to quickly open a private tab in Safari on your iPhone or iPad.

RELATED: How Private Browsing Works, and Why It Doesn't Offer Complete Privacy

Use the Drop-Down on Safari's Toolbar

To get started, open Safari on your iPhone or iPad. On the iPhone, tap the "Pages" button (cascading squares icon) in the bottom-right corner.

Tap the "Pages" button (Cascading squares) in the bottom-left corner of Safari.

You'll see a windows or webpages management screen with the grid of thumbnails representing the open tabs. The toolbar at the bottom will show the "Tab Groups" option with a drop-down button next to it. Tap the drop-down button.

Tap the drop-down next to the "Tab Groups" button.

Select the "Private" option from the menu that pops up to switch to the private browsing mode.

Select "Private" option from the menu that pops up.

Select the "+" icon in the bottom-left to open a new private tab. Or tap "Done" in the bottom-left corner if you're opening a private tab for the first time.

Select the "+" button to open a new private tab.

On the iPad, you'll need to tap the "Sidebar" option on the upper-left corner.

Tap the "Sideboard" button in the top-left of Safari on iPad.

When the sidebar panel slides open, choose the "Private" option to turn on the private browsing mode and open a new private tab.
Tap "Private" to switch to a private browsing mode and open a new private tab.

RELATED: How to Always Start Any Browser in Private Browsing Mode

Use the Pages Button on Safari's Toolbar

A quick way to open a private tab in Safari is to use the "Pages" button on the bottom toolbar on your iPhone.

Fire up Safari. Long-press or hard-press the "Pages" button (cascading squares icon).

Long-press the "Pages" button to open a menu.

Select the "New Private Tab" option with a hand icon next to it from the menu that pops up.
Select "New Private Tab" from the menu that pops up.
You'll need to follow the same method on the iPad by tapping the "Pages" button (four squares) in the top-right corner and then select "New Private Tab."

Long-press the "Pages" buttons (four squares) to open a menu up.

RELATED: How to Open Chrome's Incognito Mode with a Keyboard Shortcut

Use 3D Touch or Haptic Touch

You can open a private tab directly from the Safari app icon using the hard-press or long-press gesture powered by 3D Touch or Haptic Touch feature. The 3D Touch is available only on the older (pre-iPhone 11) modes.

Long-press or hard-press the Safari app icon on the homescreen.

Select "New Private Tab" from the menu that pops up.

Follow the same on the iPad.

Note: The iPhone models from iPhone 6s to iPhone X (including XS) support 3D Touch. All iPhone models from iPhone XR and higher support Haptic Touch.

Say a Siri Command

Another neat method to launch a private tab in Safari is to use Siri commands on your iPhone and iPad. This method works if you have the "Listen For 'Hey Siri'" option enabled from the Settings app.

While your iPhone or iPad is unlocked, say "Hey Siri" and ask it to open a private Safari tab. Here's an example of what you can ask Siri:

  • Open a private tab in Safari

That's it! Have fun opening the private tab quickly in Safari on iPhone and iPad.

RELATED: How to Set Up and Use "Hey Siri" on iPhone and iPad


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