Fedora browser guides

Install common browsers on Fedora with the right repository, package format, release channel, and update path.

Curated guides

Fedora browser guides

8 matched guides, best match first.

LibreWolf and Fedora logos over a browser privacy graphic

How to Install Librewolf Browser on Fedora 44

LibreWolf makes the most sense on Fedora when you want Firefox compatibility without starting from Mozilla's default telemetry, sponsored surfaces, and looser privacy settings. Fedora's default repositories do...

Published

Microsoft Edge and Fedora logos connected by dashed line on blue background representing browser installation guide

How to Install Microsoft Edge on Fedora 44

Fedora users who rely on Microsoft 365, SharePoint, Edge Sync, or Copilot often need Microsoft's browser instead of a generic Chromium build. You can install Microsoft Edge on...

Updated ( Published )

Yandex Browser and Fedora logos on a blue background with subtle technology icons

How to Install Yandex Browser on Fedora 44

Yandex keeps its Fedora build outside Fedora's default repositories, so the clean install path is the signed Yandex RPM repository rather than a loose package file. To install...

Updated ( Published )

Firefox Developer Edition blue logo and Fedora logo on a glowing blue background

How to Install Firefox Dev on Fedora 44

Firefox Developer Edition is the practical Fedora channel when you need Beta-cycle browser features, developer-focused defaults, and a separate profile without the daily churn of Nightly. Mozilla now...

Updated ( Published )

Chromium browser logo alongside Fedora Linux logo on a blue geometric background

How to Install Chromium Browser on Fedora 44

Chromium is the practical Fedora choice when you want Chrome-compatible rendering without installing Google's proprietary browser package. To install Chromium on Fedora, use Fedora's chromium package for the...

Updated ( Published )

Google Chrome and Fedora logo connected with a dashed line on a blue gradient background

How to Install Google Chrome on Fedora 44

Google Chrome is not part of Fedora's default open source repositories, so installing it on Fedora means enabling a third-party source or using the Flathub package. The usual...

Updated ( Published )

Firefox Nightly and Fedora logos connected on a blue gradient background with browser interface elements

How to Install Firefox Nightly on Fedora 44

Nightly is where Firefox changes land first, which makes it useful when you need to test new web platform features before they move into Beta or stable Firefox....

Updated ( Published )

Opera Browser logo and Fedora logo connected by dashed line on red background representing installation guide

How to Install Opera Browser on Fedora 44

Fedora's own repositories cover Firefox and Chromium, but Opera's built-in ad blocking, sidebar messengers, VPN toggle, workspace tools, and separate GX channel live outside Fedora's package set. To...

Updated ( Published )