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IE11 dropped support for autocomplete=off for input type=password at both the form and element level.

Has anybody found a working solution to disable autocomplete under IE11?

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    Have you checked this? In short, you're trying to revert what IE team thinks about as a fix. ) Here's one possible approach to circumvent it, I suppose, but that's quite the royal pain in the bottom area. )
    – raina77ow
    Oct 7, 2013 at 16:14
  • Thanks, but unfortunately that solution requires javascript be enabled whilst the autocomplete="off" would be pure HTML(5)
    – Hofi
    Oct 8, 2013 at 8:37
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    just for the record, the linked in solution does not work if listening on form submit event, that time is too late, IE will already confirm the password save, you should do the trick in the (submit typed) button onclick handler!
    – Hofi
    Oct 8, 2013 at 12:02
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    You must mean a tricky workaround, not a solution. Jan 8, 2014 at 13:11
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    Just so I understand you correctly; you want to re-enable autocomplete for passwords? So that if a user types in the first character, the browser spits out the rest of the password?
    – Sampson
    Jan 13, 2014 at 16:06

5 Answers 5

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You're much better off solving the problem of security with two-factor authentication. Hacking around the browser will (a) only work in the short-term (password managers are getting better at handling these kinds of approaches), and (b) often lead to accessibility issues, which can cost you a lot more users than your fear of legitimate password leakage. If you work in a large organization, users of assistive technology who have a tough enough time with your browser hacks can end up filing a lawsuit. (I am not speaking to this hack in particular, but generally speaking working against the browser hurts assistive technologies)

Two-factor authentication, even a sloppy implementation that just asks for something like middle name, then sets a cookie ("this browser is now allowed access without 2FA for a month"), makes it immensely more difficult for a random hacker to gain unauthorized access to an account, and keeps things better off for the users, especially those using screen readers or other assistive technology.

Disabling password managers, on the other hand, tends to lead to easy-to-type passwords rather than strong passwords. Using LastPass or similar, I can have a 24-character password (and LastPass can probably fill in fields you're trying to protect with hacks, fyi) that I would never hope to remember, and a different password for each site. When I have passwords I have to remember, they tend to be two words strung together with a symbol, such as "Dogs+Knife".

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  • That's a nice piece of advice despite not being an ansert to the original question. What if I accept 3 different passwords in the app and it's confusing to the users when the browser auto-completes a totally unrelated password field with their main password?
    – naugtur
    Jul 24, 2014 at 8:06
  • That's a problem that doesn't really have a great solution. USAA banking does something like this. It has a login and a PIN area. LastPass works great for the login, but tries to autofill the same password into the PINfield - even though the field has a totally different name and USAA puts "autocomplete=off". So long story short, you still can't really stop password managers, which in this case is very unfortunate. The pin field is a wonderful case where turning it off makes sense, since it's a very simple 6-digit field. I wish I had a better suggestion for these edge cases :-/
    – Nerdmaster
    Jul 24, 2014 at 16:52
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I'm a bit late to this, but the cleanest approach (at the time of writing) seems to be making users submit their username and password in different pages, i.e. the user enters their username, submit, then enters their password and submit. The Bank Of America and HSBC Bank websites are using this, too.

Because the browser is unable to associate the password with a username, it will not offer to store passwords. This approach works in all major browsers (at the time of writing) and will function properly without the use of Javascript. The downsides are that it would be more troublesome for the user, and would take 2 postbacks for a login action instead of one, so it really depends on how secure your website needs to be.

PS: Firefox will be following IE11's lead and ignore autocomplete="off" for password fields, as per this 'bug report' which is marked VERIFIED FIXED.

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    „it really depends on how secure your website needs to be” – and stopping password managers from working will make the site less secure for any user caring enough. Jun 10, 2014 at 18:22
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    @JWLim security critical websites should be encouraging good practices. Consider fixing your security policy, allowing password managers (and thus encouraging more secure passwords) and 2FA while you're at it. Jun 11, 2014 at 6:57
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    It ultimately should be up to the user if he wants to store a password or not. It should NOT be up to the website operator. Firefox asks if to store the password, it doesn't do so automatically. So it's the user's decision for every site if to store the password. I have pwgen 24 passwords for most sites, each differently, and I think that using the password manager increases my overall security instead of using the same password everywhere.
    – Martin C.
    Jun 11, 2014 at 7:39
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    @JWLim If an attacker has full control of the a user's system, it's already too late - weak passwords make that more of a possibility. Jun 11, 2014 at 8:44
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    @DeadlyChambers is correct on this one. The chorus of people sounding off on this don't understand the law and they don't understand federal requirements. I build health care apps used in hospitals, and there are serious patient privacy issues tied up in this, issues which not only can cost facilities hundreds of thousands of dollars for violations, but which can place caregivers and patients at risk. In a healthcare setting, not only are such user conveniences unwise, they verge on being unlawful. Aug 1, 2014 at 20:28
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This is a work-around, not best practice.

IE 11 will autocomplete any input type="password". BUT it will only populate the first one. So what I have done is this

<div style="display:none;">
    <input type="text" id="my_username"/>
    <input type="password" id="my_password"/>
</div>              
<asp:Login ID="Login1" runat="server"
    SkinId="LoginDefault" LabelStyle-Font-Bold="true"
    DisplayRememberMe="False"
    DestinationPageUrl="~/CheckPassword.aspx">

    <LoginButtonStyle CssClass="btnEntry" />
    <LabelStyle Font-Bold="True" />
</asp:Login>  

Now if you notice the first one has a style of display:none. Which allows IE 11 to autocomplete it, but the user doesn't care, because they don't see that. I know this is kind of a hack, but it works.

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    What's the point in doing this? It doesn't improve the security (the password is still stored and just as easy to extract as before) and it's annoying the legitimate user. In a way it's even harmful for security: The user is lead to assume that the password isn't stored but it actually is. They might make bad security decisions based on that. Apr 17, 2014 at 13:01
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    @DeadlyChambers Still a user realm problem. Use private browsing if you are on a public terminal, or better yet, if it's a kiosk you can configure that for them. Or is IE11 also saving passwords when in private mode?
    – gonchuki
    Jun 11, 2014 at 0:38
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    @DeadlyChambers trying to work around a client behavior using server-side techniques does not security constitute. The next version of IE will disable your workaround, or Chrome will also ignore that attribute and you'll have to try and pile another workaround, or Firefox will just plain ignore any hidden fields.Meanwhile, you will feel secure in the knowledge that you've "solved" a problem that is not a problem of your website, but a problem of the client setup. Jun 11, 2014 at 17:07
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    IE did not create a security issue. A simple keylogger installed on that shared computer will expose the same issue. If you want to make your website secure, adopt two-factor authentication. Or force each user to have their own Windows account. In fact, I would argue that since this is a health application, the fact that you are relying on shared Windows account is most likely already in violation of some regulations. Jun 11, 2014 at 17:12
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    People - in an enterprise setting like a hospital, employees are not able to install password managers and the like. Likewise, IT staff can configure the browsers they use to disable autocomplete. That said, the witch hunt and downvoting is really unbecoming. There are many instances in which disabling autocomplete is a very valid requirement. In fact, in a healthcare setting, it may be seen as a direct impact of federal law. Asserting that these are user preferences and should therefore never be abrogated is immature and demonstrates a poor understanding of how regulation impacts design. Aug 1, 2014 at 20:50
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You can insert hidden input after user name input.

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    As with many other responses, this doesn't do anything to prevent external password managers like lastpass. It can memorize just about any field, hidden or otherwise.
    – Nerdmaster
    Jun 13, 2014 at 16:52
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You need to have different pages for username and password. This approach is used by google too.

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