If you're like most people juggling AI tools, research, and work projects, your browser probably looks like a digital warzone. Apple might have a fix coming.
Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports that Safari could get an Organize Tabs feature in the next major software update. The tool would automatically group your open tabs, presumably using some smart logic to figure out what belongs together.
This matters because context switching kills productivity. When you're bouncing between ChatGPT, Claude, research papers, and documentation, having your browser automatically sort that chaos could save real time. No more hunting through 47 tabs to find that one prompt you were testing.
The feature would likely arrive with iOS 19 and macOS 16, though Gurman didn't share specifics on exactly how the grouping logic works. Will it sort by topic? By time? By domain? Those details matter for whether this actually helps or just creates different clutter.
For AI power users who keep multiple tools and references open simultaneously, automatic tab organization could be genuinely useful. It's the kind of small quality-of-life improvement that compounds when you're deep in workflow.
Safari has been playing catch-up to Chrome and Edge on features, so this could be Apple's attempt to make their browser more appealing to heavy multitaskers. Whether it works better than existing tab management extensions remains to be seen.