Sometimes when the keychain is out of sync, Safari is unable to retrieve the stored passwords from iCloud. And sometimes, the iCloud keychain credentials can get out of order for apparently no reason. Your iPhone or iPad cannot access any of the passwords saved on your Mac for specific Safari sites.
If you go to Applications/Utilities/Keychain Access and open it, does it ask you for a password? If it does, try going to System Preferences/Users & Groups and reset your user password. That will reset the keychain password to your user password.
View saved passwords and passkeys in Safari
Open Safari. From the Safari menu, choose Settings (or Preferences), then click Passwords. Sign in with Touch ID, or enter your user account password. Select a website, then click Edit.
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.
You can find your saved passwords in Google Chrome's Password Manager. Navigate to "Settings", then "Autofill". Select "Passwords" to view all saved passwords. You won't be able to recover deleted passwords in Google Chrome.
View saved passwords and passkeys in Settings
Tap Settings, then select Passwords. In iOS 13 or earlier, select Passwords & Accounts, then tap Website & App Passwords. Use Face ID or Touch ID when prompted, or enter your passcode. To see a password or passkey, select a website or app.
On your iPhone or iPad
For account names and passwords: Go to Settings > Passwords > Password Options. Then check that AutoFill Passwords is turned on.
Open a Finder window to your home folder, then select the Library folder. Inside that is a Keychains folder. Select that, then +Enter Time Machine,+ navigate to whatever backup you want, and restore that folder. It should contain one or more keychains with your passwords.
Your passwords are saved in your Google Account. To view a list of accounts with saved passwords, go to passwords.google.com in any browser or view your passwords in Chrome. To view passwords, you need to sign in again. To view a password: Select an account and then preview your password.
Resetting Safari removes all cookies, saved passwords, and saved AutoFill information, not just the ones saved during the current browsing session. Cookies saved by other applications may also be removed.
Go to your user Library>Keychains folder and click restore. You might also look for the preference files in you're User Library>Preferences folder> any com. apple. keychain .
Yes, clearing your Safari browser cache will clear out all of your saved passwords. This means you will need to re-enter them once when you visit any site you have passwords saved for.
Yes, it is possible to recover the deleted passwords from your iOS device using iCloud, iTunes, and recovery software solutions.
To encrypt the Time Machine backup, you must provide a backup password. No one but you should have access to your password. Choose a hint that helps you remember your password. To restore files from encrypted Time Machine backups, you must provide your backup password.
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.
Ensure That iCloud Keychain is Enabled
Open the Settings app on your iPhone or iPad> your profile and choose iCloud. 2. Now, tap on Keychain and then turn on iCloud Keychain. Now, try to auto-fill passwords in any app or website to see if the issue has been fixed.
iCloud Keychain remembers things, so that you don't have to. It autofills your information—like your Safari and app usernames and passwords, passkeys, credit card information and security codes, and Wi-Fi passwords on any device that you approve.
Safari on your iPhone or iPad will automatically save your passwords if you allow it to. This makes it easier to manage your passwords and not have to memorize and type them in every time you go to a new site.
Tip: When you use passwords and credit cards online, you can let Safari store them in your keychain and automatically fill them in for you. If you also use iCloud Keychain on your Mac and iOS and iPadOS devices, Safari can fill in the stored information on any of your 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.