OpenAI Adds Chrome Extension to Codex, Letting Its AI Agent Access LinkedIn, Salesforce, Gmail, and Internal Tools via Signed-In Sessions


OpenAI has launched a Codex Chrome extension for Mac and PC to streamline browser-based workflows that were previously difficult to handle via APIs or plugins. This release follows a trend where most users preferred working in a browser after the launch of “Computer Use,” allowing Codex to operate more effectively across various web-based tasks.

What the Extension Actually Does

Before this release, Codex had access to an in-app browser — a sandboxed browser built into the Codex desktop app itself — and a growing library of dedicated plugins for services like GitHub, Slack, Figma, and Notion. The new Chrome extension fills a gap those two approaches couldn’t cover: tasks that require your real, signed-in browser state.

The Codex Chrome extension lets Codex use Chrome for browser tasks that need your signed-in browser state. It is intended for use when Codex needs to read or act on sites such as LinkedIn, Salesforce, Gmail, or internal tools. For everything else like local development servers, file-backed previews, and public pages that do not require a sign-in you can continue using the in-app browser, which keeps that preview and verification work inside Codex without touching your Chrome profile.

Codex now operates across three distinct tool tiers depending on the task: plugins when a dedicated integration is available, Chrome when it needs logged-in browser context, and the in-app browser for localhost. The agent selects which tier to use automatically, though users can also invoke Chrome directly in a prompt using the @Chrome mention syntax — for example: @Chrome open Salesforce and update the account from these call notes. If Chrome isn’t already open, Codex can open it.

On the functional side, the new browser-based capabilities of the plugin include testing web apps, collecting context from across open tabs, and using Chrome DevTools in parallel while the user performs other tasks. Critically, Codex works in task-specific tab groups, so it can gather context and take actions without taking over your active browsing session.

How to Install and Use Codex Chrome extension


Quick Start Guide

Installing and Using the Codex Chrome Extension

Five steps to connect Codex to your signed-in browser. Works on macOS and Windows. Not available in EU or UK yet.

Install the extension from the Chrome Web Store

Open Chrome and go to the Codex listing in the Chrome Web Store. Click Add to Desktop and confirm the prompt that appears.

Chrome Web Store listing for Codex by OpenAI Shows the Codex extension card with version, publisher, and Add to Desktop button > Codex by OpenAI · v1.1.4 · 109 KiB · Tools Control Chrome with Codex Add to Desktop

⚠ Codex does not support other Chromium-based browsers (Brave, Edge, Arc) at this time.

Add the Chrome plugin inside the Codex app

Open the Codex desktop app and navigate to Plugins. Find the Chrome plugin and click Add. Codex will walk you through the connection flow.

Codex App

Plugins

Chrome

Add