Which Websites Support Passkeys in 2026?

Regularly updated directory of major websites and services supporting passkey authentication in 2026, organized by category with setup instructions.

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One of the most practical questions about passkeys is where you can actually use them. While the technology is mature and supported by every major platform, individual website and service adoption varies significantly. This regularly updated directory, part of our passkeys and passwordless authentication resource, tracks which services support passkey login in 2026 and provides guidance on setting them up.

The Current State of Passkey Support

Passkey adoption has reached a tipping point. The largest consumer platforms – Google, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon – all support passkeys. Major financial services, social media platforms, and e-commerce sites have followed. However, the long tail of smaller websites, enterprise applications, and regional services is still catching up.

As of early 2026, an estimated 20-25 percent of the top 1,000 websites support passkey authentication. That number is growing rapidly, driven by consumer demand, regulatory pressure, and the clear security benefits that passkeys provide. For the latest numbers, see our passkey adoption statistics.

Major Services with Passkey Support

Technology and Cloud Platforms

ServicePasskey SinceNotes
Google (all services)2023Full passkey support for login. Works across Gmail, Drive, YouTube, Cloud.
Apple ID2022Integrated into iCloud Keychain. Used for App Store, iCloud, and all Apple services.
Microsoft (personal accounts)2023Windows Hello integration. Works with Outlook, OneDrive, Xbox.
GitHub2023Strong recommendation for developers. Supports device-bound and synced passkeys.
1Password2023Uses passkeys for vault unlock in addition to storing them.
Bitwarden2024Supports passkey login and passkey storage.
Cloudflare2023Dashboard login with passkey support.
Nvidia2024Account login for GeForce Experience, cloud gaming.

E-Commerce and Retail

ServicePasskey SinceNotes
Amazon2023Available in account security settings. Works for Amazon.com and regional variants.
eBay2023Early adopter. Passkeys available in account settings.
Best Buy2024Online account authentication.
Shopify (merchant accounts)2024Admin login for store owners. Customer-facing support varies by store.
Target2024Account login for Target.com and the Target app.
Walmart2025Added in mid-2025 for online accounts.

Financial Services

ServicePasskey SinceNotes
PayPal2023One of the earliest adopters. Full passkey login support.
Coinbase2024Cryptocurrency exchange with strong passkey integration.
Robinhood2024Mobile and web passkey support.
Stripe (dashboard)2024For merchant and developer accounts.

Financial services adoption has been measured because of regulatory requirements around strong customer authentication. Many banks are piloting passkey support internally before rolling out to customers. If your bank does not support passkeys yet, continuing to use a strong password with two-factor authentication remains the best practice.

Social Media and Communication

ServicePasskey SinceNotes
WhatsApp2024Passkey for app login.
LinkedIn2024Professional network passkey login.
X (Twitter)2024Account login with passkey.
TikTok2024Mobile-first passkey support.
Discord2024Desktop and mobile passkey support.
Uber2024Account authentication.

Travel and Hospitality

ServicePasskey SinceNotes
Kayak2023Early passkey adopter.
Booking.com2025Account login.
Air France/KLM2025Loyalty account login.
Hilton2025Hilton Honors account authentication.

Productivity and Business

ServicePasskey SinceNotes
Adobe2024Creative Cloud and Document Cloud accounts.
Canva2025Design platform login.
Notion2025Workspace login.
Vercel2024Developer platform.
Figma2025Design tool authentication.

Gaming

ServicePasskey SinceNotes
PlayStation Network2025PSN account login.
Nintendo2024Nintendo Account login.
Roblox2024Account authentication.

How to Check If a Site Supports Passkeys

Not every service prominently advertises passkey support. Here are ways to find out:

  1. Check account security settings. Sign into the service and navigate to Settings > Security or Account > Authentication. Look for terms like “Passkey,” “Security key,” “Passwordless,” or “Sign in with biometrics.”

  2. Look for the FIDO/passkey icon. Some login pages display a passkey icon (a key symbol) alongside the password field.

  3. Use the FIDO Alliance’s passkey directory. The FIDO Alliance maintains a directory of passkey-enabled services at passkeys.directory, which is updated by the community.

  4. Try creating one. On sites where you suspect support, look in the security settings for an “Add passkey” or “Set up passkey” option.

Setting Up Passkeys: General Process

While the exact steps differ by service, the general flow is consistent:

  1. Sign in to the service using your existing password.
  2. Navigate to security settings (usually under Account > Security or similar).
  3. Find the passkey option and click “Add passkey” or “Create passkey.”
  4. Authenticate with your device biometrics (Face ID, Touch ID, fingerprint, or device PIN).
  5. Confirm the passkey creation.

On Apple devices, the passkey is automatically stored in iCloud Keychain and synced to all your devices. For step-by-step instructions specific to iPhone, iPad, and Mac, see our detailed guide to setting up passkeys on Apple devices.

Which Accounts to Prioritize

You do not need to set up passkeys for everything at once. Prioritize based on risk:

High priority – set up passkeys immediately:

  • Email (Google, Apple ID, Microsoft) – your email is the recovery mechanism for almost every other account
  • Banking and financial services
  • Cloud storage (iCloud, Google Drive, Dropbox)
  • Password manager account

Medium priority – set up when convenient:

  • Social media accounts
  • Shopping sites where you have stored payment information
  • Work and productivity tools

Lower priority – set up as part of regular maintenance:

  • Entertainment and streaming services
  • Forum and community accounts
  • Gaming platforms

The principle is simple: the accounts where a breach would cause the most damage should get passkeys first. For a structured approach to organizing your credentials during this transition, see our guide to managing passwords and passkeys together.

Notable Services That Do Not Support Passkeys Yet

As of early 2026, several major services still lack passkey support:

  • Most traditional banks (though many are piloting)
  • Netflix (passwordless via email link only)
  • Spotify (no passkey support yet)
  • Many government services (adoption varies by country)
  • Most healthcare portals
  • Many small and medium business tools

The absence of passkey support on these services does not mean you cannot protect them. Strong, unique passwords stored in a password manager combined with two-factor authentication where available provides solid protection. If you use a KeePass-compatible tool like PanicVault, your passwords are stored in an encrypted, portable KDBX database that remains under your control regardless of which authentication method the service supports.

The Platform Implementation Factor

Where your passkey is stored matters. When you create a passkey on an Apple device, the default storage is iCloud Keychain. On Android, it is Google Password Manager. On Windows, it is Windows Hello.

If you use devices across these platforms, you have several options:

  1. Platform-native storage. Let each platform store passkeys in its own credential manager. Simple but creates silos.
  2. Third-party password manager. Use a password manager like 1Password, Bitwarden, or Dashlane that stores passkeys across platforms. More flexible but adds a dependency.
  3. Platform-native with cross-device authentication. Store passkeys in iCloud Keychain but use cross-device QR code authentication when needed on non-Apple devices.

For a detailed comparison of how each platform handles passkeys, see Google, Apple, Microsoft passkey implementations compared. For practical cross-platform strategies, see how to sync passkeys across devices.

What to Expect Going Forward

Passkey adoption follows a predictable pattern. The largest, most technically sophisticated services adopt first. Then mid-size services follow as libraries and frameworks make implementation easier. Finally, small businesses adopt as passkey support becomes standard in off-the-shelf web frameworks and CMS platforms.

Industry analysts project that by the end of 2027, a majority of the top 10,000 websites will support passkeys. For consumers, the practical implication is clear: start using passkeys where you can, keep your password manager for everything else, and check back regularly as support expands.

The password manager industry is adapting to this reality by adding passkey management alongside traditional password storage. Whether you use iCloud Keychain, a third-party manager, or a KeePass-compatible tool, the goal is the same: a unified view of all your credentials, both passwords and passkeys, managed securely from a single interface.

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