Copy that Bookmarks file (no extension) to your new computer. Then, with Chrome , replace the same file in the new computer’s folder. When you reopen Chrome—voilà, perfect clone.

~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Bookmarks

⚠️ Warning: This replaces all existing bookmarks on the new computer. Use only if you’re starting fresh or making a full transfer. After you’ve moved your bookmarks, take 30 seconds to turn on Chrome Sync on the new computer. Next time you switch machines—or lose one to a coffee spill—you’ll just log in and smile. So go ahead. Fill that new computer’s bookmark bar with the good stuff: the obscure forum thread that fixed your printer, the travel blog for a trip you’ll totally take someday, and that one cat video you’ve been saving for a rainy Tuesday.

Go to Settings > You and Google > Sync and Google services . Make sure “Bookmarks” is toggled on. That’s it—your bookmarks are already floating in the digital ether.

Your bookmarks aren’t just links. They’re your internet memory. And now they’re home.