
When OpenAI launched its AI-centric browser, ChatGPT Atlas, last year, it promised a new way to interact with the web. However, early adopters quickly noticed that while the browser was smart, it lacked some key QoL features that make modern browsing manageable. To bridge this gap, OpenAI has committed to a brisk update schedule for ChatGPT Atlas, and this week’s release tackles a major pain point: multi-account login support.
Until now, OpenAI’s ChatGPT Atlas already allowed users to create different profiles. However, those profiles were frustratingly tethered to a single ChatGPT account. This created a friction point for anyone who uses different accounts for their office, their studies, and their personal projects. Now, users can finally sign in to separate ChatGPT accounts across different browser profiles, ensuring that work data, school research, and personal chats stay in their own lanes.
OpenAI Atlas browser let’s you create multiple profiles across ChatGPT accounts
According to Adam Fry, the product lead for ChatGPT Atlas, this specific limitation was more than just a minor annoyance. In a recent post on X, Fry noted that the inability to sign in to multiple accounts was one of the primary reasons users weren’t adopting Atlas as their primary, “everywhere” browser.
The update allows for a much cleaner workflow. A user can now have a dedicated “Work” profile connected to a corporate ChatGPT account—maintaining its specific history and security settings—while a “Personal” profile runs an individual account. It eliminates the tedious process of signing in and out several times a day just to change contexts.
Catching up
Since its debut, Atlas has been playing a bit of catch-up with established browsers like Chrome or Safari. Its “agentic” capabilities—AI that can perform tasks across tabs—are its main selling point. Still, the team has spent the last few months focused on the fundamentals of a browser.
Recent weekly updates have checked several items off the community’s wishlist. These include the ability to import extensions, rename tabs, and organize pages into groups.
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