Getting a Chromebook is a bit different from picking up a Windows laptop or a Mac. ChromeOS is built around the browser, which means the ecosystem leans on web-based tools and lightweight apps rather than software downloaded from a disk.
That’s actually good news — most of the best tools for Chromebook are free and work well without much setup.
Whether the goal is editing a photo with Canva, video chatting with someone on Aveola, or just keeping passwords organized, the tools below cover the essentials worth having from day one.
Productivity Tools
Getting work done on a Chromebook is more straightforward than many people expect, especially with the right tools in place early.
Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides
Google’s office suite is free with any Google account and runs natively in Chrome with no installation needed. Docs handles most of what Microsoft Word does, Sheets covers spreadsheet work, and Slides takes care of presentations.
Files save automatically to Google Drive and sync across devices — a particularly good fit for ChromeOS’s cloud-first approach. The suite also opens and edits Microsoft Office formats, so .docx and .xlsx compatibility isn’t an issue.
Notion
Notion’s free tier covers note-taking, task management, databases, and lightweight project tracking. It works as a progressive web app — installable from the browser and behaving like a native application without using local storage.
For students or anyone managing multiple ongoing projects, it’s one of the more flexible free options available.
Google Keep
Keep is an underrated quick-capture tool. It lives in the Chrome sidebar, syncs instantly, and organizes notes with labels and colors. For fast notes, saved links, and short checklists, it stays out of the way while doing its job.
Together, these three essentials cover most day-to-day productivity needs.
Communication Tools
A Chromebook’s browser-first design makes it a solid device for calls, messaging, and staying in touch.
Google Meet
Meet works particularly well on ChromeOS, accessing the camera, microphone, and screen share without friction.
It’s free for personal use, supports up to 100 participants on free calls, and doesn’t require the other person to have a Google account to join a meeting.
WhatsApp Web
WhatsApp’s web interface now supports linking up to five devices simultaneously, so a Chromebook can run it independently once linked to a phone. Messaging, voice notes, file sharing, and calls all work through the browser or as an installed PWA.
Discord
Discord has a solid browser version and an Android app available through the Google Play Store. Besides gaming, it hosts interest-based communities, study servers, and professional groups.
The free tier covers voice channels, text chat, and video calls. For Chromebook users curious about pairing communication tools with AI assistants on ChromeOS, there’s a good overview of what’s available and how it works on ChromeOS.
Aveola
For one-on-one video conversations with people who share similar interests, this tool is worth checking out. It runs in the browser, requires no download, and is built around the idea of meaningful conversation rather than group calls or broadcast-style interaction that dominate most social platforms.
A reliable set of communication tools turns a Chromebook into a genuinely capable primary device, not just a machine for documents.
Creative Tools
ChromeOS handles creative work better than its reputation suggests, thanks to several strong browser-based options.
Photopea
Photopea is a browser-based photo editor with an interface nearly identical to Adobe Photoshop. It supports PSD files, layers, masks, and most editing features a non-professional user would need — all without an account or download.
For Chromebook users who need real image editing without paying for Creative Cloud, it’s the strongest free option available.
Canva
Canva’s free plan covers social media graphics, presentations, posters, and documents through a template-driven approach.
The Chromebook experience is smooth, and the free tier is genuinely usable without running into paywalls constantly.
Both of these tools address most creative tasks that Chromebook users commonly run into.
Security and Utility
The two tools that don’t get much attention in roundups like this — but probably should.
Bitwarden
Bitwarden is a free, open-source password manager with an Android app that works on Chromebooks. It stores passwords, card details, and secure notes in an encrypted vault.
The free tier has no meaningful limitations for personal use — for anyone still reusing passwords or keeping them in a notes app, switching is one of the most practical improvements available.
uBlock Origin
uBlock Origin is a Chrome extension that blocks ads and trackers. It’s lightweight, has no noticeable impact on browsing speed (often the opposite), and takes about 30 seconds to install from the Chrome Web Store.
Small utility tools like these stay invisible until needed, and then become hard to imagine going without.
The takeaway is that ChromeOS handles browser-based apps better than most people expect when they first open the box — and the free tier of most tools here is enough to get started with most of your daily tasks.


