The simplest, most secure way
to sign in to your accounts without a password
Passkeys are an easier and more secure alternative to passwords. They let you sign in with just your fingerprint, face scan or screen lock.
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One step closer to a passwordless future
Enabling a safer ecosystem
Bringing passkeys to businesses and governments
Partnering for a passwordless, safer sign-in across the Internet
Common questions about passkeys
Our vision is to progress towards a passwordless future since passkeys make signing in easier and safer. As we make this transition, passwords will still be available for use whenever you want.
Yes, you can use your password and a second factor, if you have one set up to sign in. With passkey, you gain the ability to sign in faster than with your password and your second factor.
If Google detects that you don't have a passkey on a device yet, we'll prompt you to create one. You'll need one passkey per device, unless the device has some mechanism to "synchronize" passkeys to other devices already, like with Apple iCloud. In this case, only a single passkey for all your iCloud devices is required.
Yes, you can continue to log in using your traditional login method, which in most cases would be using your username and password.
You can always fall back to legacy authentication options such as passwords and traditional two-step verification. If you can no longer remember your password, you can also go through Google's account recovery flow. We encourage you to add your email and phone number to ensure you can always access your account.
If you're using "Sign in with Google," then no. You only need the passkey to get you into your Google Account. If you're using direct "password-based" sign-in with a website/service/app today, you will likely be prompted to create a separate passkey for that service the next time you log in, if the service supports passkeys.
Passkeys can be stored either on a physical security key or on your computing device (phone, PC, Mac, etc.). For years, the only place where users could store passkeys was on physical security keys. Now, for added convenience, you can get the same level of protection from phishing that you get with passkeys on security keys, from the passkeys that are now stored on your phone and other devices. You don't need to do anything differently; things are just more convenient. Instead of needing the passkey on your physical security key when signing in, you can now also use the passkey on your laptop or desktop.
No, you can decide to keep using your password to sign in. However, over time, as users become more accustomed to passkeys, we might limit where we allow passwords to be used because they're less secure than passkeys.