
Perplexity Comet: Why an AI Company Built a Browser – And What It Means
TL;DR: „Perplexity Comet turns the browser from a passive window into an active AI agent. It's Chromium-based, deeply integrated with Perplexity's search, and represents a strategic land grab for the most valuable real estate in computing: the browser."
— Till Freitag30-Second Summary
Perplexity launched Comet in July 2025 – an AI-native browser built on Chromium that turns passive browsing into active task execution. Available on Mac, Windows, iOS, and Android, it integrates Perplexity's search engine directly into the browsing experience. Seven months in, it's the clearest signal yet that the browser is becoming the AI agent.
What Is Comet?
Comet is a Chromium-based web browser with Perplexity's AI baked into every interaction. Not as a sidebar chatbot – as the core interaction model.
Key capabilities:
- Contextual AI: Highlight any text on any page, ask questions about it – Comet understands the page context
- Agentic browsing: Tell Comet to "find the best flight to Berlin next week" and it navigates, compares, and presents options
- Email and drafting: It reads your inbox context and drafts replies matching your tone
- Web building: Ask it to "build a basic website" and it uses external tools to execute
- Research synthesis: Cross-reference multiple sources in real-time as you browse
All Chrome extensions work. Your bookmarks import. The switch from Chrome is frictionless – by design.
The Strategic Logic
Why would a search company build a browser? Because search is dying as a standalone destination.
Think about it: Google built Chrome not because they loved browsers, but because they needed to control the window through which people accessed search. Perplexity faces the same strategic imperative – but with a twist.
Traditional search works like this:
- Open browser → 2. Go to search engine → 3. Type query → 4. Click result → 5. Find answer
Comet collapses this to:
- You're already browsing → 2. Ask a question in context → 3. Get an answer
The browser is the search engine. There's no step 2 anymore.
The Data Flywheel
Here's the deeper play: every page you visit, every question you ask, every task you execute teaches Comet what you need. Unlike traditional search engines that only see your queries, Comet sees your entire browsing context. That's an enormous data advantage for improving AI responses.
Comet vs. The Competition
The AI browser market exploded in late 2025. Here's where things stand:
| Browser | Philosophy | Strength | Weakness |
|---|---|---|---|
| Comet | Browser as AI agent | Deep search integration, agentic tasks | Perplexity ecosystem lock-in |
| Arc / Dia | Browser as workspace | Beautiful UX, Spaces for context switching | Smaller team, less AI depth |
| ChatGPT Atlas | GPT-powered browsing | OpenAI model strength | Late to market, limited agentic features |
| Google Disco | Search reimagined | Google's data moat | Privacy concerns, ad model tension |
| Opera Neon | AI-enhanced classic | Familiar UI, built-in VPN | Less ambitious AI integration |
Comet vs. Chrome
The comparison most people make – and it's the wrong one. Chrome is a rendering engine with a search bar. Comet is an AI agent that happens to render web pages. They look similar. They're architecturally different.
Chrome's business model requires you to click ads in search results. Comet's business model requires you to stay in the browser and never visit a search engine at all. These incentives produce fundamentally different products.
Comet vs. Arc
Arc (and its AI evolution, Dia) pioneered the idea that browsers should be workspaces, not just windows. Spaces, profiles, and a focus on tab management were genuinely innovative. But Arc's AI features feel bolted on. Comet's feel foundational.
The key difference: Arc redesigned the browser chrome. Comet redesigned what the browser does.
What This Means for Workflows
The End of Tab Hoarding
If the browser can synthesize information across pages, you don't need 47 tabs open "for reference." You ask Comet what you need, and it pulls from your browsing context.
Research Workflows
Before Comet: Open 12 tabs, read each one, copy-paste into a doc, synthesize manually. With Comet: Browse normally, ask "summarize what I've read about X in the last hour," get a synthesis with citations.
The Perplexity Product Ecosystem
Comet doesn't exist in isolation. It's part of a three-product strategy:
- Perplexity Search – the core AI search engine (the brain)
- Comet – the AI browser (the interface)
- Computer – the multi-model agent platform (the hands)
Search finds information. Comet surfaces it in context. Computer acts on it autonomously. Together, they form a complete research → understand → execute pipeline.
Pricing
Comet is free to use as a browser. AI features are tied to your Perplexity subscription:
| Tier | AI Features |
|---|---|
| Free | Basic AI search, limited queries |
| Pro ($20/month) | Full Comet AI, unlimited search |
| Max ($200/month) | Comet + Computer agent access |
The strategic genius: the browser is free, but the AI that makes it valuable requires a subscription. It's the razor-and-blades model applied to browsers.
Our Take
Comet is the most interesting browser launch since Arc. Not because it's the best browser – Chrome's ecosystem is still unmatched – but because it's the clearest articulation of where browsers are heading.
The browser has been a passive window for 30 years. Comet makes it active. You don't browse the web anymore – you work with the web through an AI that understands context.
For teams already using Perplexity for research, Comet is a no-brainer. For everyone else, it's worth installing alongside Chrome just to experience what AI-native browsing feels like.
The bigger question: How long before Chrome, Safari, and Edge copy this model? Google has Disco. Microsoft has Copilot in Edge. Apple is... Apple. The AI browser war is just getting started.
What to Watch
- Enterprise rollout – Comet for teams with shared research context would be transformative
- Extension ecosystem – Will AI-native extensions emerge that only work in Comet?
- Privacy positioning – Perplexity needs a compelling answer to "you see everything I browse"
- Computer integration – When Comet and Computer merge, the browser becomes the agent
Comet launched July 2025 for desktop, November 2025 for Android. This analysis reflects the state as of March 2026.
Related: Perplexity Computer – 19 AI Models, One System
→ Need help building AI-native workflows for your team? Book a free consultation









