With so many password management services out there, it can be tempting to make one of them your default autofill provider on your Android device. Unfortunately, our experience has resulted in bug after bug when using third-party password services. This guide will help you change your Pixel or Samsung device password autofill settings and adjust them to your liking.
Google has its own password manager, as you may be familiar with in Google Chrome. The passwords saved in Google Password Manager are stored in the cloud, meaning they can be accessed across multiple devices, including your Android phone. On Android, that same password manager is powered by Google Play services and has a unique UI, although the backend is the same.
If password autofill is enabled in your settings, you can easily access your passwords across tons of different apps and websites on your Android device. Simply by heading into an app and beginning the login process, Android’s autofill feature will let you choose your credentials and fill in your information for you so you don’t have to manually type out your passwords. This comes in handy if you use strong passwords with random letters, symbols, and numbers.
Google’s password autofill feature is not limited to the company’s own password manager. Rather, autofill can pull from a multitude of apps, including popular ones like LastPass and 1Password. As long as you log into those apps and have them filled with a few to hundreds of passwords, you can select them in Android’s autofill settings. This makes it easy to access your passwords no matter which app you use to store them.
Unfortunately, sometimes using a third-party app can cause issues. For instance, LastPass has been a go-to of mine for years. Recently, the app has been refusing to play nice with Android’s autofill process. What has started happening is that opening apps and logging in will immediately pull up the LastPass app, pulling you out of the app you were in.
Normally, this would be fine if I were trying to log in with saved credentials. Unfortunately, the communication between LastPass and Android’s autofill feature has not been working well, and even signing up for an account in-app causes LastPass to pull you away and force you to authenticate.
This may not be a common problem, but it’s one that can cause someone to switch from some third-party services and use Google’s native password manager.
No matter which password-saving application you want to use – whether it be third-party or Google’s – you can easily switch out the preferred password autofill app in your Android device’s settings. Here’s how to change your password autofill settings on your Pixel or Samsung Galaxy device.
That’s it! Once you choose a new service, you’ll be prompted by that app to choose whether or not you want to autofill passwords when logging in to an app. As mentioned, using a third-party app doesn’t work perfectly, and there may be bugs. If you prefer the easiest route, we suggest using Google’s password-saving feature.
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