A tiny icon, a surprising ripple: Chrome’s Home icon quietly changed on Android
It’s funny how a tiny symbol can feel like the end of the world — or the start of a fresh design language. In mid-February 2026 Google rolled Chrome 145 out to Android devices, and if you updated (or simply noticed), you might have seen a small but noticeable tweak: the Home icon in the address bar was redesigned. It’s just a house, right? But the new one drops the rounded corners, adds a visible door, and aligns the roof differently — and some people are already nostalgic for the old, softer mark.
This post looks at why this matters, what else is in Chrome 145, and why UI micro-changes like this land with more force than their pixel count suggests.
Why a little Home icon matters
- Visual cues are anchors. The Home icon sits next to the omnibox where your eye naturally goes when you want to return to a start point. Changing that mark—even subtly—affects familiarity.
- Consistency across platforms. The new house matches an icon style Chrome has used on desktop for a while, which suggests Google is nudging toward a unified Chrome look across form factors.
- Perception of polish. Small changes telegraph intent: either a careful refinement or a UI team experimenting with tone. Users interpret those signals emotionally (comfortable, modern, robotic, cold), not just functionally.
What changed (and what didn’t)
- The icon swap: The old Home icon had rounded corners and a softer silhouette. The Chrome 145 update replaces it with a sharper, squarer house with a visible door and a roof that sits flush with the side. The difference is subtle at typical phone-screen sizes, but visible when you look closely. (9to5google.com)
- How to remove it: If you dislike the Home icon or want a slightly wider address bar, you can disable the homepage shortcut in Chrome’s Settings > Homepage (or set the Home action to a custom URL or New Tab). (9to5google.com)
- Bigger picture of Chrome 145: Beyond the icon tweak, Chrome 145 for Android was released as a stable update that includes stability and performance fixes; the icon swap is the most visible user-facing change reported. Google’s Chrome Releases blog lists the rollout and version numbers. (chromereleases.googleblog.com)
A small change, bigger implications
- Design language and platform parity
- Matching desktop iconography hints at Google’s continued effort to harmonize Chrome’s visual language across desktop, Android, and other platforms. For people who use multiple devices, consistent icons reduce friction.
- Accessibility and legibility tradeoffs
- Sharper geometry can improve legibility on high-contrast displays and when icons are shown at small sizes. But some users prefer softer shapes because they feel friendlier—so any change risks alienating part of the audience.
- User reaction cycle
- Minor UI swaps are easy to notice and easy to mock online. The reaction usually follows a predictable arc: quick complaints and comparisons, then either acceptance or a request for a toggle. Google already exposes a way to hide the home icon, so power users have an escape hatch. (9to5google.com)
Quick tips for users
- Don’t like the new Home icon? Disable the Home button in Chrome Settings > Homepage to reclaim address-bar space. (9to5google.com)
- Want the address bar in a different place? Chrome has been gradually giving Android users more address-bar positioning options (bottom vs top) across recent updates — explore the long-press options or Settings if the placement matters to you. (theverge.com)
- If you want to confirm your Chrome version after an update, check Chrome in your Android app list or the Play Store to see the version number (Chrome 145 began rolling out in late January/February 2026). (chromereleases.googleblog.com)
A few broader design lessons
- Microcopy and micrographics matter. Tiny things—icons, labels, spacing—drive user trust and perceived care.
- Test with the real world. What looks great on a desktop mockup can feel cramped or weird on a 6.8-inch phone held in one hand.
- Give users control. Optional toggles (show/hide Home, move the bar, choose homepage) turn a forced change into a configurable preference, smoothing backlash.
My take
Design is negotiation: between brand voice, usability, platform consistency, and a noisy audience. This Home icon tweak is the kind of low-risk, high-visibility change that reveals how much weight users place on familiar pixels. It’s not a paradigm shift, but it’s a reminder that small interface elements are part of a larger conversation about how software communicates personality. For those who care — and many do — the option to hide the icon keeps everyone reasonably happy.
Sources
-
Yes, Chrome’s Home icon changed on Android — 9to5Google.
https://9to5google.com/2026/02/17/chrome-145-home-icon/ -
You’re not having a stroke, Google simply changed the Home icon on Chrome for Android — PhoneArena.
https://www.phonearena.com/news/google-changes-the-home-icon-on-chrome-for-android_id178318 -
Chrome for Android Update — Chrome Releases (official blog).
https://chromereleases.googleblog.com/2026/01/chrome-for-android-update_01981585122.html
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.
Related update: We published a new article that expands on this topic — MagSafe Wallet w/ Kickstand and Find My.