Home Technology How to Manage Saved Passwords in Chrome

How to Manage Saved Passwords in Chrome

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Laptop on a table with Chrome logo on screen.
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Google Chrome comes with a handy password manager already built in. You can have your browser save and fill out passwords for different sites when you’re asked to sign in. Here’s how to manage all your saved passwords in Chrome.

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How to Save a Password to Chrome

The first step of managing your saved passwords is ensuring that password saving is enabled. That is done through the passwords menu.

To access it, click on your profile picture in the top right corner and then click on the small icon that looks like a key. You can also type chrome://settings/passwords into the Omnibox (the address bar) and hit Enter.

Toggle the switch labeled “Offer to Save Passwords” to the on position (it should be on by default).

Enable Offer to Save Passwords option in Settings

Now, head to a website where you need to log in, fill in your credentials, and sign in. After the form submits, Chrome asks if you want to save your password. Click “Save.” If you click “Never,” the site gets added to a “Never Saved” passwords list. We’ll show you how to remove a site from the “Never Saved” list down below.

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Click Save to save your password to Chrome

Assuming you saved the password, the next time you go to that site’s sign in page, Chrome fills in the sign-in form automatically. If you have more than one username and password saved for any single site, click the field and choose which sign-in info you want to use.

Select a username and password combo from the list provided

How to Remove a Site From the “Never Saved” List

If you accidentally clicked “Never” when Chrome asks if you want to save your password to a site, here’s how you can remove that site from the exceptions list. When you remove a site, the next time you sign in, you’re given the option to save your password.

Open up the passwords menu by clicking your profile picture in the top right corner, and click the small key, You can also type chrome://settings/passwords into the Omnibox and hit Enter.

Scroll down to the bottom until you see the heading “Never Saved.” This is a complete record of all the sites you’ve blacklisted from Chrome’s saved passwords list.

Never saved password examples.

Scroll through the sites until you find the entry you accidentally sent to this list in the first place, then click the X to the right of the URL.

Click the "X" next to the password you don't want saved.

The entry disappears and is saved from its life of purgatory. Now, whenever you sign in to that site again, Chrome asks you if you want to save your password again.

Save password prompt.

How to View Saved Passwords

To see a list of all the usernames and passwords saved to Chrome, open up the passwords menu by clicking your profile picture in the top right corner, then click again on the small key. You can also type chrome://settings/passwords into the Omnibox and hit Enter.

In the new tab, scroll down to the “Saved Passwords” heading, and you’ll find a list of all the usernames and passwords saved to Chrome.

The whole list of all the passwords saved to Chrome

To view the password in plain text, click the eye icon.

If you lock your computer with a password, you need to provide the password before you can view this password. If you’ve set it up with a PIN, you’ll need to provide that.

Enter your PIN or password.

After you successfully enter your computer’s credentials, the saved password reveals itself in plain text.

Voila! The password is revealed

How to Export Saved Passwords

If for whatever reason you need to export the whole list of usernames and passwords, Chrome lets you do that as well.

We don’t recommend the exporting of your passwords unless you know what you’re doing or if you really have to, because everything exported is stored in a CSV file, which isn’t encrypted and when opened, can be read as plain text.

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From the Passwords menu of Chrome, next to “Saved Passwords,” click the settings menu, then click “Export Passwords.”

Click the three dots menu, then click export passwords

You’re prompted to confirm the export of your passwords, as this is a huge security risk due to the file being completely human-readable.

Click the export passwords button

Again, when accessing sensitive information, you’re prompted to enter your computer’s PIN or password to confirm this action.

Enter your PIN or password.

Choose a safe place to store your file and click “Save.”

Save your exported passwords in a safe place

How to Remove Saved Passwords

If you accidentally clicked save to a password, but you no longer have that account or just don’t want your password saved anymore, you can remove them from Chrome just as quickly as you save them.

From the Passwords settings menu, click the settings icon (three dots) next to the password you want to remove, then click “Remove.”

The selected password deletes immediately. A popup will notify you of the change, and if you accidentally removed it, you can click undo to restore your password.

Your password has been deleted. Click Undo if you didn't mean to delete it

To delete every entry from your passwords list, you’ll first need to jump into Chrome’s Settings menu. Click the three dots in the upper right, then choose “Settings.” You can also type chrome://settings/ into the Omnibox and hit Enter.

Click on the three dots, then click "Settings."

Once in the Settings menu, click “Security and Privacy” on the right-hand side.

Click "Security and Privacy."

Scroll down a little bit more until you see “Clear Browsing Data” and click on it.

Click "Clear Browsing Data."

In the popup, click the “Advanced” tab, choose “All time” from the Time Range menu, tick “Passwords,” then finally, click “Clear Data.” There is no going back from this, so make sure you want to delete all of them before clicking any further.

Click the advanced tab, choose all time from the menu, tick passwords as an option, then click on Clear data

Follow the prompts, and all the passwords you’ve ever saved in Google Chrome are wiped clean from your browser. The next time you go to a site, you better hope you remember your password or have a password manager, or else you’ll find yourself clicking that “Forgot Your Password?” link when you go to sign in.



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