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Edge | Add Trusted Sites [updated]

When you add a website to the Trusted Sites zone (via Windows Control Panel), you are telling Windows and Edge that the website poses no threat. This allows the site to:

Edge: Add Trusted Sites for Enhanced Browsing If you've ever encountered a website that won't load properly, blocks essential pop-ups, or constantly triggers security warnings in Microsoft Edge, you likely need to add it to your "Trusted Sites" list. While Edge is designed to keep you safe, overly strict default security can sometimes break the functionality of legitimate tools like university portals, corporate intranets, or financial dashboards.

Click the Add an exclusion button.

This guide will walk you through how to add trusted sites in Microsoft Edge via the Windows Security settings and how to manage exceptions for content like pop-ups and cookies. edge add trusted sites

To manage these, Edge provides edge://settings/content —a comprehensive dashboard where you can view and revoke permissions on a per-site basis. This is the modern equivalent of the Trusted Sites list, but far more surgical.

You can also add trusted sites in Edge using Internet Options:

Microsoft Edge (Chromium) does not use these zones for its own rendering engine. However, if your organization uses IE mode within Edge (a feature designed to run legacy IE-dependent apps), then the Trusted Sites zone comes roaring back to life. In IE mode, Edge spins up the Trident MSHTML engine, and that engine does respect the classic zone settings. When you add a website to the Trusted

Go to Update & Security > Windows Security . Alternatively, you can search for "Windows Security" in the Start menu.

Microsoft Edge is a browser of two eras. One foot is planted in the enterprise past, where “Trusted Sites” remain a necessary evil for old intranets. The other foot is firmly in the Chromium present, where trust is a fluid, revocable, capability-by-capability negotiation. The wise administrator or power user will learn to navigate both—and understand when using either is a risk worth taking.

When you want to “trust” a site in Edge today, you are likely performing one of the following actions: Click the Add an exclusion button

Microsoft Edge is a secure browser, but it knows that not all websites are created equal. By using the Windows Security settings to designate trusted sites, or by managing site-specific permissions directly in the browser, you can ensure that your essential websites run smoothly without compromising your overall digital safety.

In an era where web security is paramount, browsers are designed to be cautious. Microsoft Edge, by default, employs strict security protocols to protect your computer from malicious websites, pop-ups, and unauthorized downloads.