Saved website logins sit in Google Password Manager, where you can view, copy, check, or delete them after device verification.
Forgetting a password is annoying. Reset links pile up, old email inboxes get dragged back into the mess, and a two-minute login turns into a twenty-minute chore. If you already saved that login in Chrome, you can usually pull it up in a few clicks and get on with your day.
Chrome stores saved passwords inside Google Password Manager. That’s the place to open if you want to see a saved password, copy it, edit it, remove it, or check whether it has shown up in a data breach. The steps shift a bit between desktop and phone, yet the layout stays familiar once you know where to tap or click.
This article walks through the exact path on desktop, Android, and iPhone, then shows what to do if the password you need is missing.
How to Access Passwords on Chrome On Desktop
On a computer, the shortest route starts inside Chrome itself. Open the browser, head to the menu at the top right, then move into Passwords and autofill. From there, open Google Password Manager and pick the site you want.
- Open Chrome.
- Click the three-dot menu at the top right.
- Click Passwords and autofill.
- Open Google Password Manager.
- Choose the saved login under the passwords list.
- Click the eye icon to reveal the password.
Chrome may ask you to verify yourself before it reveals anything. That extra stop is a good thing. On desktop, Chrome can use Windows Hello on a PC or your screen lock on a Mac when filling or revealing saved logins. If you share a computer, that check adds a useful barrier between your accounts and anyone else who opens the browser.
If you’d rather skip the menu hunt next time, type password manager into Chrome settings search. That pulls the same area into view without digging through several panels.
Where Chrome Keeps Saved Passwords
Chrome doesn’t treat every saved login the same way. Where your passwords live depends on how you use Chrome and whether you’re signed in to your Google Account.
- If you’re signed in, saved passwords can live in your Google Account and follow you across devices.
- If you’re not signed in, some saved passwords stay on that one device only.
- On phones, Chrome still points you back to Google Password Manager, even if the route looks a bit different.
That split matters when a password shows up on your laptop but not on your phone. In many cases, it means the login was saved locally on one device or sync was turned off when the password was created.
Google’s Manage passwords in Chrome page matches the desktop path above and also lists options to show, edit, delete, export, and check saved entries.
Accessing Passwords In Chrome On Android And iPhone
Phones put the same tool behind shorter menus, though Android and iPhone don’t use the exact same labels. Once you land inside Password Manager, the rest feels familiar: pick the site, verify yourself, then reveal the saved password.
On Android
Open Chrome, tap the three-dot menu, then go to Settings > Google Password Manager. Pick the account entry you want. Tap the reveal option to show the saved password. Android may ask for your fingerprint or passcode before Chrome shows it on screen.
Android also lets you edit, delete, export, and run a password checkup from the same area. If you use Chrome as your main browser on Android, this is the fastest place to handle old logins without jumping into account recovery pages.
On iPhone And iPad
Open Chrome, tap the three-dot menu, then open Password Manager. Choose the site entry you want, then use Face ID, Touch ID, or your passcode to reveal the saved password. If you’re signed in to Chrome, those saved logins can sync with the same Google Account you use on desktop.
Google’s Google Password Manager help page also notes that saved passwords and passkeys can be stored behind Google’s built-in security with encryption.
| Task | Where To Go | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| Show a saved password | Open the site entry, then tap or click the eye icon | Chrome reveals the password after device verification |
| Copy a password | Open the saved login entry | You can copy the password instead of typing it by hand |
| Edit a password | Open the entry, then choose edit | You can fix an outdated password without waiting for a new save prompt |
| Delete a saved login | Open the entry, then choose delete | The password is removed from Password Manager |
| Export passwords | Password Manager settings | Chrome creates a downloadable file with saved logins |
| Check reused or leaked passwords | Open Checkup inside Password Manager | Chrome flags exposed, weak, or reused logins |
| Add a new password manually | Password Manager, then Add | You can save a login even if Chrome never offered the prompt |
| Add a note to a saved login | Open the entry, then edit | You can attach account details that stay protected with the login |
What You Can Do Once The Password Is Open
Seeing the password is only one part of the job. The same screen gives you a few other useful moves that save time later on.
- Copy it: Handy when a site blocks autofill or you need the login in another app.
- Edit it: Useful after a password change that Chrome didn’t catch.
- Delete it: Good for old accounts, duplicate entries, or logins saved on a shared device.
- Export it: Best reserved for account moves or backup jobs you handle carefully.
Be cautious with exports. A password export file is plain enough that anyone who opens it can read the saved logins inside. If you create one, move fast and delete it once the job is done.
Why Saved Passwords May Not Show Up
If the login you want isn’t there, the browser usually gives you a clue. The password may have been saved on a different device, saved only to local storage, or never saved at all because you dismissed Chrome’s prompt.
Common Reasons Chrome Looks Empty
One issue is sync. If Chrome was not signed in to your Google Account when the password was saved, that login may still be sitting on one device instead of traveling with you. Another issue is the site name. Password Manager stores entries by website, so a login saved under one domain may not show up where you expected.
There’s also the declined list. If you once told Chrome not to save a password for a site, Chrome can keep that choice and stop asking again. On desktop, you can remove declined sites inside Password Manager settings so the save prompt returns the next time you sign in.
If you suspect the login is old, weak, or reused across multiple sites, open Password Checkup. Google flags passwords that were exposed online, reused, or too weak, which helps separate a missing login from a bad one that should be replaced anyway.
| Problem | Likely Cause | Best Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Password missing on phone | It was saved only on desktop | Sign in to the same Google Account and check sync |
| No save prompt appears | The site was declined before | Remove the site from declined entries in settings |
| Wrong password shows up | The site password changed after the save | Edit the saved login entry |
| Chrome won’t reveal the password | Device verification is required | Use your screen lock, fingerprint, or passcode |
| Password works on one device only | It was stored locally | Move it into the signed-in Google Account setup |
Habits That Make Chrome Passwords Easier To Manage
Saved passwords work best when the list stays clean. If it turns into a pile of duplicate logins, outdated entries, and old work accounts, finding the right one gets slower each month.
A few habits help a lot:
- Delete old logins you no longer use.
- Change reused passwords instead of letting them sit.
- Use Chrome’s generated passwords on new accounts.
- Turn on device verification for autofill and reveal actions.
- Run Checkup now and then, not only after a breach story hits the news.
If you use Chrome across a laptop, phone, and tablet, try to stay signed in to the same Google Account on each one. That keeps the password list more consistent and cuts down on “it’s on my other device” moments.
One more thing: if you share a family computer, don’t leave the browser profile open and unlocked. Password Manager does a nice job once verification is turned on, but browser profiles still deserve the same care as a banking app or email account.
Finding The Right Login Without The Reset Loop
Chrome makes password access easy once you know the route: open Passwords and autofill, head into Google Password Manager, choose the site, then verify yourself. On phones, the labels shift a little, yet the flow stays close to the desktop version.
If the entry is there, you can reveal it, copy it, edit it, or delete it in under a minute. If it isn’t there, check sync, declined sites, and Password Checkup before you start another reset. That small routine saves time, trims clutter, and keeps your saved logins in better shape.
References & Sources
- Google Chrome Help.“Manage passwords in Chrome – Computer.”Lists the desktop path for showing, editing, deleting, exporting, and checking saved passwords in Chrome.
- Google Chrome Help.“Get started with Google Password Manager – Computer.”Explains where Google Password Manager stores passwords and passkeys and notes the built-in encryption protections tied to the service.
- Google Account Help.“Change compromised passwords in your Google Account.”Shows how Password Checkup flags exposed, weak, and reused passwords and where to open that tool.
