You can have Chrome save your passwords for different sites.
The way Chrome saves your passwords depends on whether you want to store and use them across devices. When you're signed in to Chrome, you can save your passwords to your Google Account. You can use passwords in Chrome across your devices and in some apps on your devices.
Otherwise, you can store passwords locally on your computer only.
You can manage passwords saved to your Google Account at
passwords.google.com.
Learn more about on-device encryption for passwords.
Manage new passwordsAutomatically save or preview a new passwordIf you enter a new password on a site, Chrome will ask to save it. To accept, select Save.
Manually add a new password Start or stop saving passwordsBy default, Chrome offers to save your password. You can turn this option off or on at any time.
Check or remove sites that don’t save passwords Manage saved passwordsSign in with a saved passwordIf you saved your password to Chrome on a previous visit to a website, Chrome can help you sign in.
Tip: To delete all your saved passwords, learn how to delete browsing data in Chrome.
Check for compromised passwordsYou can check all your saved passwords at once to find out if they're exposed in a data breach or potentially weak and easy to guess.
To check your saved passwords:
You'll get details on any password exposed in a data breach and any weak, easy to guess passwords.
Learn what you can do with your passwordsUse biometric authentication with passwordsWhen biometric authentication is turned on, you can use your device's fingerprint sensor to increase privacy when you autofill passwords. You can also use biometric authentication to reveal, copy, or edit your passwords.
Important: By default, biometric authentication is off.
You can automatically sign in to any sites and apps where you've saved your info with "Sign in automatically." When you turn on "Sign in automatically," you don't need to confirm your username, password, or third-party sign-in credentials.
If you want to confirm your saved info when you sign in, you can turn off "Sign in automatically."
Tips:
For quick access, you can add Google Password Manager as a shortcut.
.
Manage password change alertsYou may get an alert from Chrome if you use a password and username combination that has been compromised in a data leak on a third-party website or app. Compromised password and username combinations are unsafe because they’ve been published online.
We recommend that you change any compromised passwords as soon as you can. You can follow the instructions in Chrome to change your password on the site where you’ve used that password, and check your saved passwords for any other site the password may be saved on.
Chrome makes sure that your passwords and username are protected so they can’t be read by Google.
To start or stop notifications: Dismiss notifications for specific sites: Tip:To restore site warnings, under "Dismissed warnings," select More
next to the site whose notifications you want to begin again. Then, select
Restore warning.
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