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Chrome Extension to Auto Apply for Jobs: The 6 Best Options in 2026

Looking for a Chrome extension that auto-applies to jobs? Here are the 6 best browser-based tools in 2026, how they work, what they cost, and which ones are actually worth installing.

By Amine Barchid·
chrome extensionauto applyjob searchbrowser extensionautomation
Chrome Extension to Auto Apply for Jobs: The 6 Best Options in 2026

Your Browser Is the Best Job Search Tool You're Not Using

Every job application starts in a browser. You open LinkedIn, Indeed, Greenhouse, Lever, Workday. You read the listing. You click "Apply." Then you spend the next 15 minutes typing your name, email, phone number, work history, and education into form fields that already exist on your resume.

Multiply that by 20 applications a day and you've burned three hours on data entry. Not networking. Not interview prep. Not tailoring cover letters. Just retyping the same information into slightly different form layouts.

That's the problem Chrome extensions solve. Instead of switching between your browser and some external dashboard, the extension lives right where you already are. It reads the page, understands the form, and fills it. Some even click submit for you.

But not all of them work the same way. Some are glorified autofill tools. Some use AI to match you with jobs. Some are connected to full platforms that track your applications and customize responses. And some are free while others will run you $99 a year before you've sent a single application.

This post breaks down the six best Chrome extensions for auto-applying to jobs in 2026. What they do, what they cost, where they work, and which ones are worth the install.


Why Chrome Extensions Beat Standalone Apps for Job Applications

There's a reason the most popular job application tools are all browser extensions. It comes down to three things:

1. Context matters. A standalone app needs you to paste URLs or import job listings. A Chrome extension can see the page you're already on. It knows you're looking at a Greenhouse application form or a LinkedIn Easy Apply popup. That context makes the automation smarter and faster.

2. Form filling requires page access. To actually fill out an application, a tool needs to interact with the DOM (the structure of the web page). Chrome extensions have that access natively. External tools have to use workarounds like browser automation scripts, which are slower and break more often.

3. Lower friction, higher usage. If applying to a job takes one click instead of switching to a separate app, copying a URL, waiting for it to process, and then reviewing the result, you'll actually use it. The best tool is the one you don't think twice about using.

That said, not every Chrome extension is equal. The gap between the best and worst is massive. Here's what separates the good ones from the ones you'll uninstall in a week.


What to Look for in a Job Application Chrome Extension

Before we get into specific tools, here's the checklist that actually matters:

Job board coverage. Does it work on the sites where you actually apply? LinkedIn, Indeed, and direct company career pages are the big three. Beyond that, support for Greenhouse, Lever, Workday, Ashby, and other applicant tracking systems (ATS) is what separates a useful tool from a novelty.

AI matching vs. dumb autofill. Basic autofill tools just jam your saved data into form fields. Better tools use AI to understand the job description and tailor your answers. The difference shows up in your response rate.

Application tracking. Once you've sent 50 applications, you need to know where you applied, when, and what happened. Some extensions track this automatically. Others leave you to build your own spreadsheet.

Privacy and data handling. You're giving these extensions access to every page you visit (or at least every job board page). That's a lot of trust. Check what data they collect, where it's stored, and whether they sell it.

Pricing transparency. Some tools advertise as "free" and then hit you with a paywall after three applications. Others have genuine free tiers. Know what you're getting before you install.


The 6 Best Chrome Extensions for Auto-Applying to Jobs

1. ApplyGhost

ApplyGhost takes a different approach than most extensions on this list. Instead of just filling forms faster, it combines AI job matching with one-click applications through a browser extension.

How it works: You upload your resume and set your preferences (role, location, salary range). ApplyGhost's AI scans job listings from sources like Ashby and Greenhouse, scores them against your profile, and shows you a curated feed of relevant jobs. When you find one you like, the Chrome extension handles the application, filling forms and submitting on your behalf.

The key difference: ApplyGhost filters before you apply, not after. Instead of blasting 200 applications and hoping for 5 responses, you're applying to 20 well-matched roles and getting a higher hit rate. That's the quality over quantity approach that actually leads to more interviews.

What it costs: 10 free applications with no credit card required. Paid plans start at €29/month.

Works on: Greenhouse, Ashby, Lever, and expanding. Direct company career pages.

Best for: Job seekers who want AI-driven matching plus one-click apply, not just faster form filling.

FeatureDetails
Free tier10 applications, no credit card
AI matchingYes, profile-to-job scoring
Auto-fillYes, via Chrome extension
Application trackingBuilt-in dashboard
ATS supportGreenhouse, Ashby, Lever

2. Simplify Jobs

Simplify started as a YC-backed autofill extension and has grown into one of the most-installed job search Chrome extensions with over 1 million users.

How it works: Install the extension, create a profile with your resume data, and Simplify adds an "Autofill" button to job application pages. Click it and your information populates the form fields. You still review and submit manually.

Simplify also has a job board (simplify.jobs) that aggregates listings and lets you apply with one click to some positions. The extension and the job board work together but can be used independently.

The catch: Simplify's autofill is solid but it's primarily a form filler. It doesn't use AI to match jobs to your profile or tailor your responses to specific postings. For a deeper comparison of how Simplify stacks up, we've written a full breakdown.

What it costs: Free tier with limited autofills per month. Premium plans for unlimited access.

Works on: LinkedIn, Indeed, Greenhouse, Lever, Workday, and most major ATS platforms.

Best for: Job seekers who want reliable autofill across the widest range of job boards.


3. LazyApply

LazyApply is one of the oldest auto-apply Chrome extensions and leans heavily into full automation. Instead of helping you fill forms, it tries to handle the entire application process.

How it works: You set filters (job title, location, experience level) and LazyApply's extension automates applications on LinkedIn Easy Apply, Indeed, and other platforms. It clicks through multi-step applications, fills fields, and submits.

The reality check: LazyApply's approach is spray-and-pray. It optimizes for volume, not relevance. That means you might send 100 applications in a day, but many of them won't match your actual qualifications or interests. We've covered why some job seekers are looking for LazyApply alternatives and the tradeoffs of mass applying.

What it costs: No free tier. Plans start at around $99/year.

Works on: LinkedIn Easy Apply, Indeed, ZipRecruiter, Glassdoor.

Best for: Job seekers who prioritize volume and want full automation, even at the cost of precision.

ToolFree TierAI MatchingAuto-SubmitStarting Price
ApplyGhost10 apps freeYesYes€29/mo
SimplifyLimited autofillsNoNo (manual submit)Free / Premium
LazyApplyNoneNoYes~$99/yr

4. LoopCV

LoopCV is a bit different from the others because it's more of a platform than a pure extension. It works by connecting to your email and job board accounts, scanning listings, and either auto-applying or sending your CV directly to company email addresses.

How it works: You upload your CV, set your target roles and locations, and LoopCV runs daily scans of job boards. For some positions, it auto-applies through the boards. For others, it finds company email addresses and sends your CV directly. The Chrome extension supplements this by helping with manual applications.

The email approach is LoopCV's unique angle. Instead of filling out forms, it bypasses the ATS entirely by emailing hiring managers. Whether that's an advantage depends on the market. In some industries and countries, a direct email works. In others, it ends up in spam.

What it costs: Free tier with limited applications per day. Paid plans for more volume and features.

Works on: LinkedIn, Indeed, Glassdoor, and direct email outreach.

Best for: Job seekers in European markets where direct email outreach is more common.


5. JobCopilot

JobCopilot markets itself as an "AI autopilot for job applications" and consistently ranks for competitive keywords in this space.

How it works: Similar to LazyApply, JobCopilot automates the entire application flow. You set your preferences, and the tool applies to jobs matching your criteria. It fills forms, generates cover letters, and submits applications across multiple platforms.

What stands out: JobCopilot uses AI to generate custom cover letters for each application, which is a step up from tools that just reuse the same template. The question is whether AI-generated cover letters actually perform better than a well-written generic one. The data on that is mixed.

What it costs: No meaningful free tier. Premium plans required for auto-apply.

Works on: LinkedIn, Indeed, Glassdoor, and various ATS platforms.

Best for: Job seekers who want AI-generated cover letters included with each application.


6. AI Hawk (Open Source)

AI Hawk is the odd one out on this list because it's not a Chrome Web Store extension. It's an open-source Python bot on GitHub that automates LinkedIn Easy Apply.

How it works: You clone the repository, install Python dependencies, configure your LinkedIn credentials and job preferences in a YAML file, and run the script. It opens a browser instance, navigates to LinkedIn, and auto-applies to Easy Apply positions that match your filters.

The tradeoff is obvious. AI Hawk is completely free and highly customizable. But it requires technical setup, breaks when LinkedIn changes their UI, and runs the risk of getting your LinkedIn account flagged or restricted. It's not a "install and go" solution.

If you want the power of automation without the technical overhead, hosted tools are a better fit for most people.

What it costs: Free (open source).

Works on: LinkedIn Easy Apply only.

Best for: Developers and technical users who want full control and don't mind maintaining the setup.


Full Comparison Table

FeatureApplyGhostSimplifyLazyApplyLoopCVJobCopilotAI Hawk
TypeExtension + PlatformExtension + Job BoardExtensionPlatform + ExtensionExtensionOpen Source Bot
Free Tier10 appsLimitedNoneLimitedNoneFully free
AI Job MatchingYesNoNoBasicBasicNo
Auto-SubmitYesNoYesYes (email)YesYes
Cover Letter GenNoNoNoNoYesYes
Application TrackingYesYesBasicYesBasicNo
ATS CoverageGreenhouse, Ashby, LeverWide (most ATS)LinkedIn, IndeedLinkedIn, Indeed, EmailLinkedIn, IndeedLinkedIn only
Setup Time5 minutes5 minutes10 minutes15 minutes10 minutes30-60 minutes
Risk of Account FlagsLowLowMediumLowMediumHigh

Which Extension Should You Actually Install?

The answer depends on where you are in your job search and what frustrates you most.

If you want quality over quantity: ApplyGhost. The AI matching means you apply to fewer but more relevant jobs. Start with the 10 free applications to see if the matches fit your profile.

If you just want faster form filling: Simplify. It's the most reliable autofill tool with the widest job board support. You still control what you submit.

If you want maximum volume: LazyApply or JobCopilot. They'll send more applications than you could manually, but read about the risks of mass applying first.

If you're technical and want free: AI Hawk. But understand you're signing up for maintenance, not just installation.

If you're in Europe and open to email outreach: LoopCV's direct-to-inbox approach might work in markets where that's culturally acceptable.


Common Questions About Auto-Apply Chrome Extensions

Will using an auto-apply extension get me banned from job boards?

It depends on the tool and the platform. Extensions that interact with the page at human-like speeds (filling forms, clicking buttons) are generally fine. Bots that blast through hundreds of applications in minutes raise red flags. LinkedIn is particularly aggressive about detecting automation. We wrote a full guide on how to auto-apply without getting blacklisted.

Are these extensions safe to use with my personal data?

Chrome Web Store extensions go through a review process, but that doesn't guarantee safety. Check the privacy policy of any extension before installing. Look for: what data is collected, where it's stored, and whether it's shared with third parties. Open-source tools like AI Hawk let you inspect the code yourself. For a deeper look at safety concerns, read our piece on whether job application bots are safe.

Can a Chrome extension apply to jobs on any website?

No. Each extension supports specific job boards and ATS platforms. No single extension covers every career page on the internet. The most common support is for LinkedIn, Indeed, Greenhouse, Lever, and Workday. If you apply mainly through one platform, make sure the extension you choose covers it.

Should I use multiple extensions at the same time?

Generally no. Multiple extensions trying to interact with the same page can conflict, filling fields incorrectly or triggering errors. Pick one primary extension and stick with it. If your main tool doesn't cover a specific job board, you can use a second extension selectively, but don't run them simultaneously.

Is autofill the same as auto-apply?

No. Autofill means the extension fills form fields with your saved data, but you still review and click submit. Auto-apply means the tool handles the entire process including submission. Simplify is primarily autofill. LazyApply and ApplyGhost are auto-apply. The right choice depends on how much control you want over each application.


The Bottom Line

The Chrome extension market for job applications has matured significantly. In 2026, you have real options ranging from simple autofill to full AI-driven application automation.

The best extension is the one that matches how you search. If you're selective about roles, you want smart matching. If you're casting a wide net, you want speed. If you're technical, open source gives you control.

What all of these tools share: they eliminate the most soul-crushing part of job searching, which is typing the same information into the same fields hundreds of times. That alone is worth the install.

Start with a free option. See how it fits your workflow. Scale up from there.

The goal isn't to apply to every job. It's to stop applying and start interviewing.

Ready to try the smart approach? ApplyGhost gives you 10 free applications with AI matching, no credit card required.

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