If you use Microsoft,UK you will soon be required to ditch your passwords and create a passkey. This is part of a strategy shift at Microsoft to get rid of passwords altogether — and the deadline is quickly approaching.
Microsoft has laid out its plans on its website. As of June — aka right now — users are no longer able to add passwords to Microsoft Authenticator. In July, you will no longer be able to use autofill, which is the primary utility of a password manager. Come Aug. 1, you'll no longer be able to access your stored passwords at all. Instead, you'll need to set up a passkey.
So...what is a passkey? It's effectively a safer, more secure way of logging in that effectively rolls a password and two-factor authentication into one step. You effectively create a credential that is not stored on a server — this could include biometric data like facial recognition/thumbprint or a PIN — unlike a password. Microsoft believes passkeys will be much more difficult for hackers to access and more resistant to phishing.
"It's the difference between using a codeword to open a door and using a physical key that only you have," Mashable Tech Editor Timothy Werth explained. "Passkeys are only stored on your devices, not a Microsoft server, and they also eliminate the kind of user errors that result in weak passwords. Plus, password managers are becoming a really popular target for hackers, so Microsoft is definitely onto something."
As we noted in our guide to the top cybersecurity breaches of 2025, popular password managers are increasingly under threat.
SEE ALSO: A review of 19 billion passwords reveals people are still bad at themIf you want to keep using passwords stored with Microsoft, you'll have to use Microsoft Edge and enable password autofill or export your passwords. However, Microsoft wants to get rid of passwords for all its various users and products, including Copilot and Xbox. As part of this, new Microsoft accounts are password-less by default.
Microsoft has said it will automatically prompt users to set up a passkey in Authenticator. So, if you use Microsoft Authenticator to store passwords, you should have been — or will soon be — urged to set up a Microsoft passkey. Microsoft will also automatically detect the best method for your passkey.
You can also add new passkeys in the Authenticator app by clicking "set up a passkey." After that, you simply log in and then set up the passkey.
And if you want to set up a passkey for your Microsoft account, sign in and look for the "Advanced Security Options" tab. From there, you'll be able to select between "Face, Fingerprint, PIN, or Security Key." From there, simply follow the simple instructions.
Topics Cybersecurity Microsoft
Vision Pro apps are now visible on Apple's App Store websiteThe Paris Review Wins 2023 Whiting Literary Magazine Prize by The Paris ReviewApartment Four by Jacqueline FeldmanA Fall Dispatch from the Review’s Poetry Editor by Srikanth ReddyWind power is now the top clean energy source in the U.S.Lost and Found by Sophie HaigneyThe Language of Lava Lamps by Nora Claire MillerXbox, Spotify leaders blast Apple for App Store changes. Here’s why.The most exciting (and underwhelming) reveals from the PlayStation State of Play streamThe Language of Lava Lamps by Nora Claire MillerSally Jackson is the notThe Language of Lava Lamps by Nora Claire MillerKurt Vonnegut’s House Is Not Haunted by Sophie KempMadeleines by Laurie StoneOn Peter Pan by Laurie StoneSpaceX sticks daytime rocket landing back on Earth after launch to spaceThe Sofa by Cynthia ZarinSally Jackson is the notThe Paris Review Wins 2023 Whiting Literary Magazine Prize by The Paris ReviewTim Cook says big Apple AI announcement is coming later this year When will this terrible wildfire season in California end? Check out Netflix's delightful and surprising 2018 holiday lineup Emily Blunt on what it's really like to play Mary Poppins Eagles fans brought an actual coffin to their game against the Cowboys Video of bears feasting on apples is weirdly soothing VR training for car assembly workers might work, but it's like a game Trump might still be able to play Rihanna's music at rallies Harambe memes chase Cincinnati Zoo off Twitter, Facebook 'PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds' is finally coming to PS4 in December California erupted in flames overnight. Here's why. Leftovers season is here, so it's time to upgrade your food container situation Facebook went down for large swath of East Coast Your thoughts as you watch your Instagram likes roll in 'Regular guy' Mike Pence has a very awkward encounter at a barbershop Foldable phones will be a short LinkedIn adds events to make it easier to network IRL Woman's death This visual history of video game hardware quite literally pulls your favorite consoles apart Samsung will debut new foldable phones once per year, says Amazon selects New York and Northern Virginia for its 'second headquarters'