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Where Is The Wrench Icon On The Toolbar?

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Last updated on 5 min read

The wrench icon in Google Chrome (as of 2026) sits in the top-right corner and opens the main menu.

What is the wrench icon on the browser toolbar?

The wrench icon used to be the main menu button for Google Chrome settings and tools.

Chrome 124 (March 2026) swapped that wrench for a vertical three-dot menu (⋮). Click those dots to reach settings, history, downloads, and extensions. Some older versions or special builds still show the wrench in the top-right corner.

What is the wrench symbol on my phone?

The wrench symbol on your phone lives inside the Settings app and points to system customization.

In Android 15 (2026), you might spot a tiny wrench in Settings when you’re tweaking advanced UI features. Samsung and Pixel users can long-press the Settings icon to unlock “System UI Tuner,” where a wrench lets you adjust quick settings tiles and notification panels.

Where is the tool menu?

Most desktop apps tuck the tool menu under “Tools” or “View” in the menu bar

Windows 11 and macOS Sonoma (2026) let you hit Alt + T in many programs to jump straight to Tools. In Chrome, look under the three-dot menu (⋮) > More Tools. In Word or Excel 365, you can add the Tools tab by going to File > Options > Customize Ribbon if it’s missing.

What is the spanner icon?

The spanner icon is basically a universal “settings” badge—you’ll see it in mobile apps and on car dashboards.

Android 15 shows a spanner (🔧) next to your profile picture when you swipe down twice. Tap it to open System settings. Over in a 2026 Toyota or Ford, the same spanner 🔧 lights up on the dashboard when it’s time for maintenance.

What is the wrench icon on YouTube?

On YouTube, a blue wrench icon next to a username in live chat means that viewer is a moderator or trusted creator.

Starting in 2026, YouTube adds a little blue wrench badge (🔧) beside approved moderators’ names during streams. Creators can hand out this role to trusted viewers, letting them remove messages, time out others, or manage chat settings on the fly.

Where is personal stuff in Google Chrome?

In Google Chrome (as of 2026), personal settings live under Settings > You and Google.

Open Chrome, click the three-dot menu (⋮) > Settings > You and Google. That’s where you handle sync, passwords, payment methods, and profile tweaks. The old “Personal Stuff” tab vanished in Chrome 120; now everything’s split into clear sections for privacy and personalization.

How do I get rid of the status bar on my home screen?

To hide the status bar on your Android home screen, toggle “Hide status bar” in your launcher or device settings.

On Android 15, head to Settings > Display > Lock screen and status bar and turn off “Show status bar.” If you’re using Nova Launcher, open Nova Settings > Look & feel > Status bar and disable it there. Either way, the clock, notifications, and icons at the top disappear.

How do I customize my drop down menu on Android?

To tweak the Android notification panel, swipe down twice, tap the pencil icon, then drag tiles around.

Pull the quick settings down twice on Android 15 to see all tiles. Tap the edit (pencil) icon in the top-right. Long-press any tile and drag it to rearrange or remove it. Want more tiles? Just tap “Add tiles” at the bottom—Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Dark mode, you name it.

How do I change my settings on Android?

To open Android settings, swipe down twice and tap the gear icon, or ask Google to do it for you.

On Android 15, pull the notification panel down twice and tap the gear (⚙️) to dive into Settings. You can also say “Hey Google, open Settings” or search the app drawer. Feeling fancy? Long-press the gear icon to rearrange quick settings tiles right from the panel.

Where is my menu bar?

The menu bar in most Windows apps lives at the top of the window and can be toggled with the Alt key.

In Windows 11, press Alt to flash the classic menu bar temporarily. To keep it on permanently, open an app like Notepad or File Explorer, click the three-line menu icon, and pick “Show menu bar.” Chrome, of course, now uses the three-dot icon (⋮) in the top-right.

Where do I find tools in settings?

In apps like Notepad++ or Visual Studio Code, tools hide under the “Tools” menu or via Ctrl+T.

In Notepad++ 8.6 (2026), look at Menu > Tools for options such as “Run,” “Open containing folder,” or “Plugin Admin.” In VS Code, hit Ctrl+Shift+P and type “Tools” to surface commands. Some IDEs tuck tools under View > Tool Windows instead.

How do I find tools?

On Windows 11, type “Admin Tools” in the search box (Win+S) to open the Control Panel folder.

Another quick route: press Win+X and choose “Computer Management” or “Control Panel” from the Power User menu. Inside you’ll find Disk Management, Task Scheduler, and Event Viewer. Mac users on Sonoma can open Finder > Applications > Utilities.

Why is there a spanner symbol on my dashboard?

A spanner symbol on your car’s dashboard (as of 2026) means scheduled maintenance is due.

Brands like BMW, Honda, and Ford light up the spanner 🔧 when it’s time for an oil change, brake check, or tire rotation. The icon usually comes with a mileage or time estimate. Your owner’s manual spells out exactly what the service code means.

What is a spanner used for?

A spanner (or wrench) is the hand tool you grab when you need to twist nuts, bolts, or fasteners.

Common flavors include adjustable spanners, open-end, ring, and socket wrenches. Most cars and appliances use metric sizes (millimeters), so match the spanner to the bolt head to avoid rounding off the edges.

What does the wrench icon look like in Google Chrome?

In Google Chrome, the wrench icon was replaced by three vertical dots (⋮) in the top-right corner.

Chrome 124 (March 2026) finally retired the old wrench after 18 years. The new icon is simply three dots stacked vertically (⋮). If you’re still on a beta or older build, you might still see the classic wrench (🔧) in the same spot.

Edited and fact-checked by the TechFactsHub editorial team.
Alex Chen

Alex Chen is a senior tech writer and former IT support specialist with over a decade of experience troubleshooting everything from blue screens to printer jams. He lives in Portland, OR, where he spends his free time building custom PCs and wondering why printer drivers still don't work in 2026.