Brave browser starts testing agent AI mode for automated tasks

Brave is upgrading its Leo AI, giving it the ability to browse the internet for you. This Agentic AI mode can do many tasks on its own without the user’s intervention. By adding these agentic features to the browser, Brave finally takes its first step towards becoming an AI-powered Agentic browser. The new agent mode gives Brave’s AI the ability to act for the user instead of just offering answers or summaries. This could mean it can fill out online forms, complete repeated website actions, or even browse pages on your behalf while keeping privacy intact. Brave says the goal is to make web browsing faster and more useful by combining smart automation with strict privacy protections. In the future, users may ask Leo to compare prices on different sites, book appointments, or handle small research tasks automatically. It turns the browser into something more active and useful beyond just a scrolling tool. Brave has been adding AI features for some time. Previously, it introduced Leo, an AI chatbot built right into the browser that can summarize pages, answer questions and rewrite text while keeping data private. The agent mode now builds on that idea, making the assistant more intelligent and action-oriented. The feature is still in testing, and Brave has not announced when it will be publicly released. But as interest in agentic AI continues to grow, this move shows how browsers are beginning to evolve into more capable, privacy-first tools. Brave Browser has always been one of the first choices for privacy for users. And if these features live up to their promise, Brave could soon become the first browser to bring true AI automation to everyday browsing.

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