With Vivaldi 7.2 for Android, we’re giving you even more ways to fine-tune the browsing experience. This update is all about giving more control to the user. At a time when digital power is increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few tech giants, Vivaldi stands firm as a European alternative, championing choice, privacy, and customization.
Sometimes, you just want a little more space. Now, you can hide the navigation bar when scrolling for a cleaner, more immersive browsing experience. Whether you’re reading an article, watching a video, or simply enjoying a distraction-free view, this setting lets you focus on what matters most.
Smarter Notes with Custom Titles
Notes in Vivaldi are a great way to save ideas, snippets of text, or reminders. With Vivaldi 7.2, you can now add and edit titles for your notes, making it easier to organize and find them later. No more scrolling through a long list of untitled notes, just give them a name and keep everything neatly structured.
A More Personalized Address Bar
The Address Bar is your control center, and you get to decide what’s in it. We’ve added options to enable or disable Bookmarks and History suggestions, aligning Vivaldi on Android with its Desktop counterpart. Want fewer distractions when you search? Turn off history suggestions. Prefer to see your favorite sites pop up first? Enable bookmarks instead. It’s all about browsing on your terms.
If you use Vivaldi on desktop and mobile (and have an active sync account), your settings will be automatically synced.
About Vivaldi Technologies
Vivaldi Technologies is an employee-owned company that creates products and services for discerning web users. In everything it does, it believes in putting its users first.
Vivaldi is a powerful, personal, and private browser that adapts to you, not the other way around.
With its flexible, and fully customizable interface, the browser strives to offer the best Internet experience on any device and currently covers platforms such as Windows, Mac, Linux, Raspberry Pi, iOS, Android, and Android Automotive.
Vivaldi has two ground rules: privacy is a default, and everything’s an option. In practice, this means building software that protects users’ privacy but also does not track how they use it. It believes private and secure software should be the rule, not the exception.
Vivaldi is headquartered in Oslo, with offices in Reykjavik, Boston, and Palo Alto.