Even though Chrome itself does not provide any autoplay disabling option, you can disable it if you wish to. You can conveniently tweak up the settings to turn it off with the actionable steps listed below.
Autoplay Policy in Chrome
Chrome has a metric called “Media Engagement Index” that determines which sites can place media that plays automatically. It tracks the user’s browsing behavior on each site and records if media is consumed on a regular basis on that site. If a user frequently consumes a content for more than 7 seconds in the previously opened tab and video size is larger than 200*140 px, their media MDI will go up. Depending upon the MDI score, Chrome decides whether to permit the site to include autoplaying videos on their sites or not. A user’s MEI can be accessed by typing about://media-engagement on Chrome Address bar. The autoplay settings also depend on whether you are using it from your PC/laptop or from a mobile device. Here’s the list of different methods for each type of device that you can try.
How to Stop Video Autoplay in Chrome
Chrome has no video autoplay disable feature in-built. So muting audio is one of the viable option. However, if you truly want to block both the video and audio, you can go through other fixes such as installing an extension and creating a shortcut discussed in this article.
Mute the Audio
Although you don’t mind the video playing in the background, you probably don’t want the audio. And, since video autoplay cannot be completely disabled specifically for Chrome, you can follow this method to at least mute the audio. On Desktop If you are using a desktop then you can go through the following methods to disable autoplay. Alternatively, you can also create a customized setting to choose which sites have the autoplay feature on or off. For that, you can do the following: Under the “Not allowed to play sound”, you can add the url of the sites which you absolutely do not want to play sound automatically. Likewise, you can give permission to desired sites to play audio automatically by adding their website url under “Allowed to play sound”. On Android Alternatively, you can add website urls of the sites to “Add to site exception”. This will allow only those specific sites to play the audio automatically while the audio is still disabled for other sites.
Use a Chrome Extension
There are only a handful of extensions that can resolve the video autoplay issue such as AutoplayStopper and HTML5 Autoplay Blocker. Here’s how you can disable video autoplay using Chrome Extension:: For more customized settings, go to settings and add the site url to include / exclude from autoplaying.
Create a Shortcut
Right click on the desktop and go to New > Shortcut. Click on “Browse” and paste, “C:\Program Files\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe” onto the search bar. Click on OK but do not click on “Next” yet. Append “–autoplay-policy=user-required” without quotes to the url. Also add exactly a single space after the file url. Click on “Next” and a dialog box will appear. Under “Type a name for this shortcut”, give any name you want. Lastly, click on “Finish.”
How to Stop Video Autoplay on Youtube
Depending upon the device type, you can simply open any video on Youtube and tap the Autoplay switch to on or off. It is located on the bottom of the video player for desktop/laptops whereas it lies on the top-right corner on mobile devices.
How to Stop Video Autoplay on Other Browsers
On Firefox You can quickly turn off autoplay in Firefox by selecting the “Block Audio and Video” option under Autoplay in the Settings>Privacy & Security>Permission. On Microsoft Edge Click on three horizontal dots on the top-right corner of the browser window and navigate to Settings. Then, under the Media Autoplay in Cookies and site permissions, set Control if audio and video play automatically on sites to limit. On Safari In the menu bar, click on “Settings for This Website” and set the dropdown next to “Auto-play” to the “Never Auto-Play” option.