Explorer++ — A Familiar File Manager That Doesn’t Need Installing
When you first run Explorer++, it feels like opening the regular Windows Explorer — same folder tree on the left, files on the right, no strange buttons to figure out. The difference? A tab bar at the top, bookmarks you can actually manage, and the fact that the whole thing can live on a USB stick without touching the registry.
It’s small, quick to start, and behaves predictably, which is why a lot of techs keep it in their portable toolkit.
The short version
A lightweight, tabbed file manager for Windows that looks like Explorer but is easier to carry and customize.
How it works in practice
You can keep half a dozen folders open in tabs and jump between them without cluttering your taskbar. Favorites act like proper bookmarks, so you’re not hunting through “Quick Access” guessing what’s where. It saves the session when you close — next time, your tabs are right where you left them.
Toolbars are customizable, so if you don’t use certain commands, you can strip them out. It also handles big directories faster than stock Explorer, which is handy when you’re browsing network shares.
Quick tech view
Feature | Detail |
OS | Windows |
Layout | Single-pane with tabs |
Portability | Fully portable — settings stored locally |
Customizing | Bookmarks, toolbars, colors |
License | GPL (open source) |
Extras | Save/restore tabs, file filters |
Why it’s worth using
– Zero learning curve if you already know Windows Explorer.
– Tabs mean fewer windows and faster navigation.
– Portable build makes it ideal for IT field work.
– Runs fine on older or locked-down systems.
Getting started
1. Grab the ZIP from the official site.
2. Unzip it somewhere — a USB stick is fine.
3. Run `Explorer++.exe` and set a couple of bookmarks for the folders you use most.
Where it shines
– Keeping multiple project or client folders open without the window mess.
– Running from a portable drive for quick fixes or file pulls.
– Maintaining a saved tab set for ongoing work.
A few notes
– No dual-pane mode — it’s a single-view tool.
– Doesn’t have a plugin system, so what you see is what you get.
Side-by-side
Tool | Strong point | Best for |
Explorer++ | Familiar UI, portable | Users who want Explorer with tabs |
FreeCommander | Dual-pane, more features | Advanced workflows |
Q-Dir | Multi-pane layouts | Heavy multitasking |
In the field
– A support tech keeps it on a USB stick to grab log files from customer PCs.
– A developer leaves build, source, and deployment directories open in tabs for the whole week.
Minimal checklist
– Portable copy extracted and ready.
– Bookmarks for frequent paths saved.
– Toolbar trimmed to just what you use.