170

Instead of "installing" User-Scripts I found many tutorials on the web to add it manually. All of them told me to do the same steps:

  • Make the directory C:\Users\Blabla\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\User Scripts
  • Place a .js file there, which contains the User-Script
  • Start Chrome with the parameter --enable-user-scripts

I did so - but my demo script does not do anything:

// ==UserScript==
// @name           Test
// @description    Test
// @include        http://example.com/*
// @version        1.0
// ==/UserScript==

alert(0);

What am I doing wrong?

1

5 Answers 5

249

The best thing to do is to install the Tampermonkey extension.

This will allow you to easily install Greasemonkey scripts, and to easily manage them. Also it makes it easier to install userscripts directly from sites like OpenUserJS, MonkeyGuts, etc.

Finally, it unlocks most all of the GM functionality that you don't get by installing a GM script directly with Chrome. That is, more of what GM on Firefox can do, is available with Tampermonkey.


But, if you really want to install a GM script directly, it's easy a right pain on Chrome these days...

Chrome After about August, 2014:

You can still drag a file to the extensions page and it will work... Until you restart Chrome. Then it will be permanently disabled. See Continuing to "protect" Chrome users from malicious extensions for more information. Again, Tampermonkey is the smart way to go. (Or switch browsers altogether to Opera or Firefox.)

Chrome 21+

Chrome is changing the way extensions are installed. Userscripts are pared-down extensions on Chrome but. Starting in Chrome 21, link-click behavior is disabled for userscripts. To install a user script, drag the *.user.js file into the Extensions page (chrome://extensions in the address input).

#Older Chrome versions:

Merely drag your *.user.js files into any Chrome window. Or click on any Greasemonkey script-link.

You'll get an installation warning:
Initial warning

Click Continue.


You'll get a confirmation dialog: ![confirmation dialog][8]

Click Add.


Notes:

  1. Scripts installed this way have limitations compared to a Greasemonkey (Firefox) script or a Tampermonkey script. See Cross-browser user-scripting, Chrome section.

Controlling the Script and name:

By default, Chrome installs scripts in the Extensions folder1, full of cryptic names and version numbers. And, if you try to manually add a script under this folder tree, it will be wiped the next time Chrome restarts.

To control the directories and filenames to something more meaningful, you can:

  1. Create a directory that's convenient to you, and not where Chrome normally looks for extensions. For example, Create: C:\MyChromeScripts\.

  2. For each script create its own subdirectory. For example, HelloWorld.

  3. In that subdirectory, create or copy the script file. For example, Save this question's code as: HelloWorld.user.js.

  4. You must also create a manifest file in that subdirectory, it must be named: manifest.json.

For our example, it should contain:

    {
        "manifest_version": 2,
        "content_scripts": [ {
            "exclude_globs":    [  ],
            "include_globs":    [ "*" ],
            "js":               [ "HelloWorld.user.js" ],
            "matches":          [   "https://stackoverflow.com/*",
                                    "https://stackoverflow.com/*"
                                ],
            "run_at": "document_end"
        } ],
        "converted_from_user_script": true,
        "description":  "My first sensibly named script!",
        "name":         "Hello World",
        "version":      "1"
    }

The manifest.json file is automatically generated from the meta-block by Chrome, when a user script is installed. The values of @include and @exclude meta-rules are stored in include_globs and exclude_globs, @match (recommended) is stored in the matches list. "converted_from_user_script": true is required if you want to use any of the supported GM_* methods.

  1. Now, in Chrome's Extension manager (URL = chrome://extensions/), Expand "Developer mode".

  2. Click the Load unpacked extension... button.

  3. For the folder, paste in the folder for your script, In this example it is: C:\MyChromeScripts\HelloWorld.

  4. Your script is now installed, and operational!

  5. If you make any changes to the script source, hit the Reload link for them to take effect:

Reload link




1 The folder defaults to:

Windows XP:
  Chrome  : %AppData%\..\Local Settings\Application Data\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions\
  Chromium: %AppData%\..\Local Settings\Application Data\Chromium\User Data\Default\Extensions\

Windows Vista/7/8:
  Chrome  : %LocalAppData%\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions\
  Chromium: %LocalAppData%\Chromium\User Data\Default\Extensions\

Linux:
  Chrome  : ~/.config/google-chrome/Default/Extensions/
  Chromium: ~/.config/chromium/Default/Extensions/

Mac OS X:
  Chrome  : ~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Extensions/
  Chromium: ~/Library/Application Support/Chromium/Default/Extensions/

Although you can change it by running Chrome with the --user-data-dir= option.

29
  • 2
    Great answer - updated to reflect the new Chrome "web store only" policy. You can only drag .user.js files into the Extensions window.
    – crb
    Jul 9, 2012 at 20:31
  • 2
    @ColonelPanic, Sadly, no you can't. The auto generated manifest is currently not compatible with the extension process! It doesn't use "manifest_version": 2, which is now required. Use the example in the answer as your starting copy (or at least don't forget the "manifest_version": 2). ... Google is setting up all "normal" userscripts to fail in a pending release, unless they change the auto-manifest process soon. Dec 18, 2012 at 0:34
  • 1
    @brock I just dragged and dropped my userscript into the extensions window like the second answer and now I don't have to worry about the vetting of Tampermonkey. It just worked. :)
    – Bjorn
    Aug 29, 2013 at 1:27
  • 2
    @brock I know you have that, but given your recommendation to use Tampermonkey, an extension that requires access to all of your banking sites information, your facebook, everything, the second answer is better. And as for 'vetted' there's absolutely nothing anyone can do to vet a chrome extension as you can update them automatically to do bad things anytime, and then update them again to hide this. You'd have to vet every change every time. It's permissions to everything. Everything.
    – Bjorn
    Aug 30, 2013 at 14:53
  • 1
    @marshmellooooooos, still works for me (Chrome 54.0.2840.99 m). If you can't get it to work, either install Tampermonkey or open a new question with EXACT details of what you tried. Nov 28, 2016 at 4:03
53

Update 2016: seems to be working again.

Update August 2014: No longer works as of recent Chrome versions.


Yeah, the new state of affairs sucks. Fortunately it's not so hard as the other answers imply.

  1. Browse in Chrome to chrome://extensions
  2. Drag the .user.js file into that page.

Voila. You can also drag files from the downloads footer bar to the extensions tab.

Chrome will automatically create a manifest.json file in the extensions directory that Brock documented.

<3 Freedom.

7
  • 15
    be sure that the file name is like <scriptname>.user.js, otherwise chrome doesn't recognize it as extension
    – Paco
    Dec 31, 2012 at 12:09
  • 1
    @AlexTracer It works for me on Chromium 33. Maybe you are doing something wrong.
    – user7610
    Mar 13, 2014 at 9:37
  • 5
    Doesn't work anymore in Chrome 36. User scripts added this way come with the message: "this extension is not listed in the Chrome Web Store and may have been added without your knowledge", and the enable-checkbox is disabled. Aug 12, 2014 at 18:28
  • 2
    This works for me in Chrome 51, and I'm not using any command line parameters. Maybe they changed it back again?
    – Miscreant
    Jun 10, 2016 at 8:09
  • 7
    I just tried this (Chrome 60) and was sent to a page which says "Extensions that have not been published on the Chrome Web Store are grayed out and you won't be able to turn them back on." Sounds like the August 2014 behavior. Not sure if they re-disabled this or it's just me missing something.
    – Pops
    Sep 1, 2017 at 5:06
12

This parameter works for me:

--enable-easy-off-store-extension-install

Do the following:

  1. Right click on your "Chrome" icon.
  2. Choose properties
  3. At the end of your target line, place these parameters: --enable-easy-off-store-extension-install
  4. It should look like: chrome.exe --enable-easy-off-store-extension-install
  5. Start Chrome by double-clicking on the icon
5
2

Share and install userscript with one-click

To make auto-install (but mannually confirm), You can make gist (gist.github.com) with <filename>.user.js filename to get on-click installation when you click on Raw and get this page:

Installation page

How to do this ?

  1. Name your gist <filename>.user.js, write your code and click on "Create".
    Make file on gist

  2. In the gist page, click on Raw to get installation page (first screen).
    Raw button

  3. Check the code and install it.

1
  • Nice idea. But in dec 2020, Chrome is giving this message: Apps, extensions and user scripts cannot be installed from this website.
    – Rehmat
    Dec 21, 2020 at 3:57
0

April 2020 Answer

In Chromium 81+, I have found the answer to be: go to chrome://extensions/, click to enable Developer Mode on the top right corner, then drag and drop your .user.js script.

1
  • 9
    In Chrome (not Chromium) this doesn't work for me. It says it's not from the chrome web store and forces it to be disabled. Apr 27, 2020 at 15:37

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