iPad Tips & Lessons
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Classes on using the iPad5 Lessons
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Videos for iPadOS 26
Videos for iPadOS 2626 Lessons-
Manage iCloud & Devices with your Apple Account
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Personalize your Display Settings
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Add Recovery & Legacy Contacts for your Apple Account
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Customize Home Screens in iPadOS 26
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Can Widgets Make Your iPad Easier to Use? Absolutely!
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Overwhelmed by Apps on iPad? Let the App Library Help!
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Wish Your iPad Felt More Organized? Start with Home Screen Pages!
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Want to Personalize Your iPad? Customize Wallpapers Today!
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Full Screens Apps Mode in iPadOS 26
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Can You Use Apps Like Windows on iPad? Yes with iPadOS 26!
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Multitask with Stage Manager
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Want Faster Access to iPad Settings? Customize the Control Center!
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Want to Keep Certain Apps Private? Easily Lock & Hide Them!
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Can You Really Organize Contacts on iPad? Yes — Here’s How!
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Make Phone Calls on an iPad with the Phone App
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Confused About AirDrop on iPad? Here’s How It Really Works!
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Control What Shows Up in iPad Search
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Tired of Cluttered iPad Screens? Learn how to Organize your Apps!
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Find Lost & Unused Apps on your iPad
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Is Your iPad Dock Set Up Right? Let’s find out!
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How to Switch Apps and Force Quit Apps on iPad
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Can Today View Make Your iPad More Useful? Yes!
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Manage Mail Accounts
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Manage Mailboxes or Folders in Mail
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Optimize your iPad Storage
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Did You Know Your iPad Has a Built-In Password Manager?
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Manage iCloud & Devices with your Apple Account
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Videos for iPadOS 18 and OlderNew in iPadOS 1810 Lessons
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What's New in Maps with iPadOS 18
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New in Calendar and Reminders
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What's New with Control Center in iPadOS 18
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New Home Screen Options with iPadOS 18
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New Password App with iPadOS 18
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Sharing an iPad's Screen
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Exploring the New Photos App on iPadOS 18
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New in Notes with iPadOS 18
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New in Messages on the iPad with iPadOS 18
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New in Safari on the iPad with iPadOS 18
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What's New in Maps with iPadOS 18
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New in iPadOS 172 Lessons
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New in iPadOS 169 Lessons
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All New Weather App on the iPad
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Apple Introduces Smarter Dictation on the iPad with iPadOS 16
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How to Create a Shared Library in Photos on the iPad
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How to use Multi-stop Routing and Scheduled Times in the Maps app on the iPad
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What's new in Contacts with iPadOS 16
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View and Copy Wi-Fi Passwords and Delete Known Networks on your iPad
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My Favorite New Features in Notes with iPadOS 16
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My 4 Favorite New Features in Reminders with iPadOS 16
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Lift the Subject from the Background in a Photo on the iPad
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All New Weather App on the iPad
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Getting Started with the iPad18 Lessons
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Sleep/Wake/On/Off, Volume, and Side Switch on the iPad
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Arranging and Organizing Apps on the iPad
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Home Button Features on the iPad
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Access All Your Apps from the iPad's App Library
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Searching your iPad
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4 Ways to Find and Delete an App on the iPad and iPhone
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Add Folders to your Home Screen on the iPad
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Use large Icons on the iPad's Home Screen
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Using Siri on the iPad
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Subscriptions and Purchase Location in the App Store
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Take and Mark Up Screenshots on the iPad
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Working with the iPad's Dock
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Notifications and the Notification Center on the iPad
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Switching between Open Apps
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How to Rename your iPad
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View iPad Storage
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Make the iPad easier to Read
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Background Sounds on the iPad with iPadOS 17 or older
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Sleep/Wake/On/Off, Volume, and Side Switch on the iPad
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iPad Basics28 Lessons
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Cut, Copy, Paste, Undo, and Redo with iPadOS
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Delete and Offload Apps on the iPad
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Sharing from within Apps on the iPad
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Hide thumbnails when reading a PDF on an iPad
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Magnify the iPad screen with Display Zoom
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Select which App to open a Document With on the iPad
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Prevent In-App Ratings & Review Popups on the iPad
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Quickly Scroll to the Top of an App on the iPad
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Moving the Cursor with iPadOS
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New Compact Siri on the iPad
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New Pulldown Menu Enhancement on the iPad
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New Sidebar Enhancement on the iPad
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Using your Mac as a Second Display with Sidecar
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A Look at the Find My App on the iPad
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Using the iPad's Scrollbar
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Controlling the Cursor on the iPad
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Access the Today View on the iPad
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Exporting Documents as PDF on iPad: A Step-by-Step Guide
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Compress Images in Seconds on the iPad!
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Remove Downloads or Delete Files? How to Manage Your iPad Storage
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Managing subscriptions on iPad
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How to Zip and Unzip Files on the iPad
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Find out what's changed in your Favorite iPad Apps!
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Combine and Compress files on the iPad
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Finding text on web pages made easy in Safari on the iPad!
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App Privacy Report: Manage your Privacy on the iPad
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Discover How to Optimize Your iPad's Storage
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Screenshot and Screen Recordings on the iPhone
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Cut, Copy, Paste, Undo, and Redo with iPadOS
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Home Screen Basics19 Lessons
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Accessing the New Today View on the iPad
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Edit the Today View on the iPad
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Edit Widgets in the Today View on the iPad
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Creating Widget Stacks on the iPad
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Smart Rotate and Smart Stacks for Widgets on the iPad
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Select and Move Multiple Apps on the iPad
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View All your iPad Apps in the App Library
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Rearrange and Hide Home Screens on the iPad
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Add Widgets to the iPad's Home Screens
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Remove Apps from the iPad's Home Screen
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Shortcuts for Editing your Home Screen on the iPad
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Set Where New Apps are Download to on the iPad
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Delete Apps from your iPad through the App Store
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Save a Website to your iPad's Home Screen
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Access Your Favorite Websites with Just a Tap on Your iPad
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Find your Lost Apps on the iPad
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Apple Passwords App for the iPad? A Step-by-Step Guide
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9 Tips for Working with Apps on the iPad
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Taking Screenshots and Screen Recordings on the iPad
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Accessing the New Today View on the iPad
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Keyboard and Dock Lessons for the iPad9 Lessons
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Keyboard Options for the iPad
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Hide Recent Apps in the Dock on the iPad
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Typing with QuickPath using the iPad's Floating Keyboard
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Enable Caps Lock and lock the Shift Key on the iPad
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Undock the Keyboard
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Float the iPad's Keyboard
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Splitting the iPad's Keyboard
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Add an Escape Key to the iPad's Smart Keyboard
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Discover the Power of Text Replacement on iPad
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Keyboard Options for the iPad
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Notifications and Control Center Lessons for the iPad7 Lessons
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Multitasking on the iPad5 Lessons
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iPad Settings10 Lessons
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Dynamically Position the iPad’s Volume Buttons
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Privacy Options with iPadOS
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Set Dark Appearance on the iPad
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Privacy Settings on the iPad
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Passcode Options on the iPad
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Do Not Disturb Options and Settings on the iPad
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iCloud Settings on the iPad
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iPad Settings and Searching the Settings App
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Search the Settings App on the iPad
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How to Extend Your Mac Display to Your iPad
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Dynamically Position the iPad’s Volume Buttons
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Accessibility Options for the iPad6 Lessons
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Require Attention for Face ID on the iPad
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Use VoiceOver to Speak Items on the iPad
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Set Display & Text Size for All Apps on the iPad
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Change Settings for Specific App with Per-App Settings on the iPad
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Set the Text Size for Individual Apps on the iPad
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Use your iPhone to control your iPad effortlessly from anywhere in the Room
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Require Attention for Face ID on the iPad
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Lessons for Older Versions of iPadOS4 Lessons
Did You Know Your iPad Has a Built-In Password Manager?
Introduction
If you haven’t really dug into the Passwords app on your iPad yet… you’re missing out. This little app does a lot more than just store usernames and passwords. Let’s take a look at what it can do.
What Is the Passwords App?
The Passwords app is a built-in Apple app that comes on your iPad. It’s been around for a couple of years now, and with iPadOS 26 it’s looking pretty solid.
Here’s the thing — it’s not just a place to store passwords. You can also use it kind of like Google Authenticator, manage your passkeys, view your Wi-Fi passwords, and even share passwords with other people. Pretty handy.
Oh, and one thing you’ll notice right away when you open it up… it uses Face ID. So if someone else grabs your iPad, they’re not getting in. Nice.
The Layout
When you first open the Passwords app, you’re looking at three panes. On the left, you’ve got your categories. In the middle, you’ll see your list of accounts. And when you tap on one of those accounts, all the details pop up on the right.
You can also search for a password right from the top. Quick and easy.
All Passwords
Tap on All and every single username and password you have saved will show up in that middle column. Tap on one and you’ll see the full details.
So what are you actually looking at? Three key pieces of information:
- Username — usually an email address
- Password — hidden by dots by default, but tap on it and you’ll see it
- Website (or app) — this is how the app knows where to autofill your info
That’s really it. Those three things work together so that when you visit a website, the Passwords app knows exactly which username and password to fill in.
A couple of other things you’ll see in there… you can copy your password (super helpful if autofill isn’t doing its thing), you can see the last time it was modified, add notes, and even see if there are any security issues with that account.
Changing a Password
If the app flags a password as compromised, you’ll see a prompt to change it. Here’s how that works — and it might surprise you a little.
You don’t actually change the password inside the Passwords app. Instead, what happens is it takes you out to that website. You change it there. And then it comes back and saves the updated password over in the app automatically. So you’re always changing it at the source.
Adding or Deleting a Password
Want to add one manually? Just tap the + button. You can fill in the label, username, password, assign it to a group, and add any notes. Done.
Deleting is even simpler. Just swipe left on any password and tap delete.
Passkeys
Passkeys are kind of the future of logging in… we’re just not quite there yet. It’s still pretty early days.
The idea is that passkeys replace usernames and passwords entirely. Instead of typing in credentials, it saves a passkey right to your device and uses your Face ID to verify it’s you. Best Buy actually supports passkeys already, so if you have an account there, you can log in that way.
The big advantage? If there’s ever a data breach, there’s nothing to steal. No username, no password. It’s all tied to your device and your biometrics. Really cool concept… just waiting for more websites to catch up.
Codes (Like Google Authenticator)
See that Codes section? That’s your built-in authenticator. You know how some sites ask for a six-digit code when you log in? This handles that.
To set it up, you tap the +, scan a QR code or enter a setup key, and you’re done. Next time that site asks for an authentication code, the Passwords app will pull it in automatically. No need for a separate Google Authenticator app.
Wi-Fi Passwords
Ever needed to share your Wi-Fi password but couldn’t remember it? Tap on Wi-Fi and you’ll see every network you’ve connected to. Tap on a network, tap on the password field, and there it is. You can even copy it and share it with someone else.
Security
This one’s worth checking out. Tap on Security and the app does a full audit of all your saved passwords.
It’ll show you anything that’s been compromised — meaning it’s shown up in a known data breach somewhere. If something pops up here, you want to go change it.
The main things to prioritize? Banking. Work accounts. Anything critical. Give that list a look and make sure nothing important is sitting in there with a compromised password.
Shared Groups
This is a really useful feature if you share accounts with family members or a partner.
You can create a shared group, add people to it, and then assign individual passwords to that group. Anyone in the group will have access to those usernames and passwords.
To share a password with a group, you just tap on the password, tap where it says Not Shared, and then choose your group. That’s it — it moves right over.
A couple of things to know about groups:
- Only the group owner (the person who created it) can add or remove members
- If someone shared a group with you, you can view it and leave it, but you can’t manage it
- You’ll see all your groups in one place — ones you created and ones shared with you
Autofill
Last thing — make sure autofill is turned on. This is what makes the whole thing work seamlessly.
When autofill is enabled, any time you create an account through Safari, it’ll automatically save the username and password to the Passwords app. And the next time you visit that site, it fills it right in. No typing required.
To check that it’s on, go to Settings > General > Autofill & Passwords and make sure the toggle is enabled. And yes — this works for apps too, not just websites.
Wrapping Up
The Passwords app really is one of those things that once you start using it, you wonder how you got along without it. It keeps everything secure, it does the heavy lifting with autofill, it flags security problems, and it even lets you share passwords with the people you trust.
If you haven’t explored it yet, take a few minutes to dig in. It’s worth it.
