If 1Password Android Autofill Not Working is driving you nuts, a few Android settings and one in-app toggle usually bring filling back.
Autofill on Android can be touchy. A browser update lands, your typing app changes, battery rules kick in, and the suggestion chip disappears. Most of the time it’s not a broken vault or a bad login. It’s a setting mismatch that stops Android from handing the field to 1Password.
This guide is built like a checklist you can run in under ten minutes. Start with the system autofill provider, then tune prompt placement, then fix browser hand-offs. Each step is safe, reversible, and focused on getting filling suggestions back where you expect them.
What Autofill Needs To Work On Android
On modern Android, 1Password relies on the system autofill service plus the way suggestions are shown on your device. If either piece is off, filling won’t show up even if your vault is fine. 1Password’s Android autofill help page walks through the setup inside the app and the provider choice in Android Settings.
- Authenticated app — Autofill only fills after you open 1Password and authenticate with biometrics or your account password.
- System provider selected — Android must be set to use 1Password as the autofill service.
- Suggestion display fits your screen — Prompt placement can hide behind your typing panel or float far from the field.
- Browser hand-off allowed — Some browsers need a third-party autofill mode and a matching toggle in 1Password.
When one of these slips, you’ll usually see one of three patterns: no suggestions at all, suggestions that appear but don’t fill, or suggestions that work in apps but fail in a browser.
1Password Android Autofill Not Working
If you searched the exact phrase 1password android autofill not working, use this quick triage. It’ll point you to the smallest fix that matches what you’re seeing.
| What You See | Likely Cause | Fast Fix |
|---|---|---|
| No suggestion chip anywhere | Provider not set, or prompts hidden | Set 1Password as the autofill service, then change prompt placement |
| Chip shows, tap does nothing | Stuck autofill session | Force stop the app or browser you’re filling into, then retry |
| Apps work, Chrome fails | Chrome autofill mode mismatch | Enable third-party autofill in Chrome, then toggle Chrome filling in 1Password |
| Works, then vanishes later | Battery limits or background kills | Set battery to unrestricted for 1Password and remove sleep rules |
Run the next sections in order. Don’t skip ahead unless the table points you there.
Set The Right Autofill Provider And 1Password Options
Start inside 1Password. On current versions, Autofill settings sit under your account icon, then Settings, then Autofill. From there you can turn on filling suggestions and choose which account or collection suggestions come from. If you use multiple vaults, a wrong selection can make it feel like autofill “stopped”, when it’s just looking in the wrong place.
- Open 1Password — Authenticate so the vault is ready to fill.
- Open Autofill — Tap your account icon, then Settings, then Autofill.
- Enable filling suggestions — Turn on the switch for filling suggestions.
- Pick the source — Set “Show filling suggestions from” to the account or collection you expect.
Now set Android’s autofill provider. Phone menus vary, so the fastest way is often the Settings search bar. Search “Autofill”, then open the autofill service menu and select 1Password. On some devices the same setting lives under Passwords, passkeys, and accounts, where you can choose your preferred service.
- Open Android Settings — Use Settings on your device.
- Search Autofill — Tap the search box and type Autofill.
- Select 1Password — Choose 1Password as the autofill service.
If Android shows 1Password as selected but 1Password still claims autofill is off, do a short reset cycle. Switch the provider to a different service, back out, then switch it back to 1Password. After that, force stop 1Password and reopen it. A phone restart can also clear a stuck provider state when toggles refuse to “take”.
Fix Prompt Placement When Suggestions Don’t Show
Sometimes autofill is on, yet the prompt is hidden by your typing panel or placed where you never notice it. 1Password lets you change where prompts appear. Switching this setting is often enough when suggestions vanish after a Gboard update or after you swap typing apps.
- Open prompt display — In 1Password Settings > Autofill, find “Display autofill prompts”.
- Switch the placement — Try “Below the fields they relate to” first.
- Test a login field — Tap into the username field and pause for a second.
If “Below the fields” still doesn’t show, switch to “Above compatible typing apps”, then test again. After you change the placement, force stop the app you’re filling into, then retry, since some apps hold on to the prior autofill session.
1Password Autofill Not Working On Android In Chrome
Browsers update constantly, and their autofill hand-offs change over time. In 2025, coverage noted that Chrome’s shift toward a newer native autofill path created gaps that left some users without working filling until app versions caught up.
Start with a clean browser reset. If you’re in the middle of a login screen, back out first, then do this.
- Force stop the browser — Settings > Apps > Chrome (or your browser) > Force stop.
- Reopen the browser — Launch it again and return to the login page.
- Try the field again — Tap the username field, then wait for the suggestion chip right away.
If Chrome keeps offering Google’s manager, turn off Chrome’s save-password prompts, then reload the login page. You can also clear Chrome’s cache (not stored passwords) to wipe a stuck session. After that, open the page again, tap the field, and watch for the 1Password chip.
If the chip appears but won’t fill, check Chrome’s autofill mode. Many versions include a setting that allows a third-party service. You’ll usually find it under Chrome Settings in Autofill, Password Manager, or a passwords menu. Some builds label it as a choice between Google’s manager and a third-party provider.
- Open Chrome Settings — Tap the three-dot menu, then Settings.
- Find Autofill settings — Open Autofill or Password Manager.
- Allow third-party autofill — Pick the option that lets a third-party service fill.
Then confirm the 1Password side of the browser link. In 1Password Settings > Autofill, look for the browser toggle such as “Autofill in Chrome”. Turn it off, then on, then force stop Chrome again and test. If you use multiple browsers, turn on the toggle for the browser you actually use day to day.
- Toggle Chrome filling — Turn the Chrome option off, then on, then test a fresh login page.
- Switch prompt placement — If you changed typing apps, try the other display option too.
- Update apps — Update both Chrome and 1Password, then restart the phone.
If you use Brave, Edge, Firefox, or Samsung Internet, repeat the same pattern: allow third-party autofill in the browser, then enable the matching browser toggle inside 1Password if it exists. If one browser works and another doesn’t, that usually points to a browser setting, not an Android provider issue.
Prevent Battery And Background Kills That Stop Suggestions
If autofill works right after you open 1Password but disappears later, your phone is probably killing background activity. Android and some device-maker tools can stop background work even when you don’t touch any settings.
Give 1Password room to stay active in the background. The menu names differ by device, so use Settings search if you need it. On many phones, the single best change is setting battery use to Unrestricted for 1Password.
- Open App Battery — Settings > Apps > 1Password > Battery.
- Set Unrestricted — Choose the option that allows background activity.
- Allow background data — If you see a background data toggle, allow it.
Next check device-maker sleep lists. Samsung, Xiaomi, and others often have “sleeping apps” or “deep sleep” lists that quietly block services. If you use a system-wide battery saver mode daily, autofill can drop out more often.
- Remove from sleeping lists — Take 1Password out of any sleep or deep sleep groups.
- Pin in recents — If your device offers a lock or pin icon in the recent apps view, pin 1Password.
- Test with battery saver off — Turn off battery saver, test filling, then decide what trade-off you want.
Do a two-part test to confirm the fix. Fill once right after authenticating in 1Password. Then wait a few minutes, go back to the same login screen, and try again without reopening 1Password.
Fix Stubborn Cases Without Resetting Everything
Some apps use custom login fields that don’t trigger autofill every time. Some devices hold on to a bad autofill session until you reset the target app. Start with the low-friction moves, then use the clean reset steps only if you still can’t fill.
Quick App-Specific Moves
- Tap the username field — Autofill often appears only after the field has focus.
- Try the password field — Some screens trigger suggestions from the password box.
- Force stop the target app — Close it fully, force stop it, then reopen and retry.
- Switch apps for a test — Try a different login screen you can control, like a well-known site in a browser, to confirm your setup works.
If you still can’t get a prompt, you can fill by opening 1Password directly and copying the fields. It’s slower, yet it works even when an app refuses to show suggestions.
- Search the login item — Open 1Password and search for the site or app name.
- Copy username and password — Copy each field and paste into the app.
- Add the right URL — If the login is for a site inside an in-app browser, add that URL to the item for better matching later.
Clean Reset Steps
If you keep seeing 1password android autofill not working after the provider check, prompt placement, browser settings, and battery rules, do this short reset sequence. Keep your account details handy before uninstalling anything.
- Restart the phone — This clears stuck services and resets autofill sessions.
- Update 1Password — Install the latest version from the Play Store.
- Update your browser — Update Chrome or your chosen browser.
- Recheck the provider — Confirm Android still shows 1Password as the autofill service.
- Revisit prompt placement — Toggle the display option once, then test again.
If all of that fails, reinstall 1Password as the final step. After reinstall, set the autofill provider first, then turn on filling suggestions, then pick prompt placement. Test in one app and one browser before you change anything else.
When you reach out to the 1Password team for help, include your phone model, Android version, 1Password version, and browser version. Also note whether autofill fails in apps, in browsers, or both, and whether you authenticated in 1Password before testing.
