Gmail On Taskbar: Windows 11 !!hot!!
Priya pins Microsoft Edge to her taskbar. But instead of pinning a website, she customizes Edge’s behavior. She installs the Chrome Web Store extension Checker Plus for Gmail . This extension runs in the background even when the browser is closed (she enables "Continue running background apps when Microsoft Edge is closed" in Edge settings).
Best for power users who need a unified inbox and a true unread badge, at the cost of complexity and resource usage. Method 3: The "Notification Proxy" (Using Edge + Gmail Checker Extensions) The User Story: Priya is a social media manager. She doesn’t need a full window always open—she just wants a tiny, glanceable number on her taskbar that tells her if she has new mail, without cluttering her desktop. gmail on taskbar windows 11
Sarah opens Microsoft Edge (the default Windows 11 browser). She navigates to Gmail.com and signs in. In the top-right corner of the browser, she clicks the ellipsis menu ( ... ) → Apps → Install this site as an app . A dialog appears: "Install Gmail?" She clicks Install . Instantly, a standalone window appears—no address bar, no tabs, just her inbox. Windows 11 automatically adds a new icon to her Start Menu and, crucially, to the taskbar. Priya pins Microsoft Edge to her taskbar
Let’s dive into each method as if we’re a user trying to build the perfect workflow. The User Story: Sarah is a freelance writer who hates clutter. She doesn’t want a second browser window; she wants Gmail to feel like a native Windows app. This extension runs in the background even when
Notifications. By default, the PWA (Progressive Web App) asks for permission to show native Windows notifications. Sarah grants it. Now, when she gets a new email, a Windows 11 toast notification slides in from the bottom right, exactly like a real app. The taskbar icon, however, does not show a numbered badge (e.g., a red "3" for unread emails). That’s the trade-off.