Opera has unveiled its new agentic web browser, ‘Neon’, built to assist users by understanding their intent and performing actions for them. Neon is centered around three key features: Chat, Do, and Make.
The Chat function works similarly to an AI chatbot, capable of answering questions, conducting web searches, translating text, and generating context-aware responses. The Do feature brings agentic web browsing to life, allowing Neon to actively navigate the web and carry out tasks much like OpenAI’s Operator AI agent.
With Opera Neon, you can rely on its AI agent to navigate websites, fill out forms, and handle tasks like booking tickets or making purchases. The third core feature, Make, transforms your prompts into creative outputs it can generate content, build games, or even develop web apps. Whether you want to visualize an idea with code or play a custom retro game, Neon can bring your request to life.
Opera Neon is currently available by invitation only, and interested users can join a waitlist to gain early access to the agentic browser. While Neon will be a subscription-based product, Opera has yet to reveal its pricing tiers.
It’s also worth noting that Opera isn’t alone in this space. Other companies are racing to build AI-first web browsers Perplexity is preparing to launch its agentic Comet browser, and The Browser Company is developing its AI-powered Dia. Meanwhile, Google has introduced Gemini’s Agent mode in Chrome, although it’s limited to Google AI Pro and AI Ultra subscribers in the U.S.