On iPhone or iPad: Tap Settings > [your name] > iCloud > Passwords and Keychain. On Mac: Choose the Apple menu > System Settings (or System Preferences), click your name (or Apple ID), then click iCloud. Make sure Password and Keychain (or Keychain) is turned on.
Open the iCloud Passwords app and sign in. Click the account you want to view. You can copy the user name, password, website, verification code, or note.
You can find your saved passwords in Google Chrome's Password Manager. Navigate to "Settings", then "Autofill". Select "Passwords" to view all saved passwords.
Tip: You can also view your passwords in System Settings and Safari settings. Choose Apple menu > System Settings, then click Passwords in the sidebar (you may need to scroll down); or open Safari, choose Safari > Settings, then click Passwords.
Go to Settings > Passwords, then tap an account.
This typically only happens when you make changes to your system user name/password credentials. Typically, only a user with the same logon credential as the user who encrypted the data can decrypt the data. If that information is gone, then the “key” to the encryption is gone.
Apple has a dedicated password management system known as iCloud Keychain. This system not only allows you to safely store the passwords, account details, and credit card numbers, but you can sync them on all other iOS devices. Do passwords transfer to the new iPhone 14 via iCloud Keychain? Yes, it does!
Open Settings. Tap Passwords & Accounts (iOS 13). For iOS 14 or later, it's named Passwords. Tap Website & App Passwords.
Open the Settings app and tap your Apple ID banner at the top of the Settings menu. Tap iCloud. Scroll down the list and select Keychain.
Apple stores these passwords alongside secure notes, certificates, and keys locally in Keychain Access, but if you enable iCloud Keychain – a neat feature of iOS and macOS – you'll have access to all of the stored information since it is synced automatically across all trusted devices.
iCloud Keychain escrows users' keychain data with Apple without allowing Apple to read the passwords and other data it contains. Even if the user has only a single device, keychain recovery provides a safety net against data loss.
Check the macOS keychain
Click "Passwords" in the left-hand category sidebar. Type "backup" into the search box in the top-right of the window. View the saved password entries by double-clicking on results named iOS Backup or iPhone Backup . Check the "Show password" box and the password will be displayed.
Everything stored in iCloud Keychain is secure—it's protected by industry-standard encryption. Your iCloud Keychain can't be set up on another Mac or iOS or iPadOS device unless you approve it.
To see if iCloud Keychain is turned on: On iPhone or iPad: Tap Settings > [your name] > iCloud > Passwords and Keychain. On Mac: Choose the Apple menu > System Settings (or System Preferences), click your name (or Apple ID), then click iCloud. Make sure Password and Keychain (or Keychain) is turned on.
When you reset all settings of your iPhone or iPad, all settings including the following will be deleted or reset to their defaults: Network settings, including: Previously saved Wi-Fi networks and passwords will be deleted.
You can sign in to apps and sites on different devices using passwords saved to your Google Account when you either: Turn on sync in Chrome on Android.