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I am crafting an application and cannot decide whether to use the terms Login/out or Logon/off. Is there a more correct option between these two? Should I use something else entirely (like "Sign on/off").

In terms of usability, as long as I am consistent it probably doesn't matter which terms I choose, but I did wonder about the origins of the terms - and whether one or another makes more grammatical sense. I also care deeply about the application I am creating, and want to take the time to investigate all aspects of its user experience.

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  • 43
    +1, not only for your concern about usability, but also for starting a fascinating conversation. Thank you!
    – Adam Liss
    Jan 2, 2009 at 4:55
  • 15
    There exists a fourth alternative as "Sign in/Out" as well ;)
    – M.N
    Jan 2, 2009 at 11:26
  • 6
    Interesting side note, although it doesn't answer your question. The Latin word "in" (from which we get the English word "in") means both "in" and "on". Aug 26, 2010 at 18:26
  • 15
    Another interesting discussion on SO makes the front page of Hacker News (news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4249097). It can only be a matter of minutes before it's shut down by the mods. Jul 16, 2012 at 8:40
  • 4
    @JeremyBanks: Create a user-experience tag, don't clone the site. Asking a tech question shouldn't require 15 mins searching for the correct SE site on which to ask it. Especially when several such sites apply. Jul 16, 2012 at 15:11

12 Answers 12

292

Since you're looking for correctness,

login, logout, logon, and logoff are all nouns:

"Please enter your login credentials."
"I see three logons but only two logoffs from this user."

The corresponding verbs are each two words:

"Please log in to see your reputation."
"You must log off and talk to a human."

Update: according to dictionary.com, the various definitions of login are all nouns and involve gaining access to a computer or computer service. Interestingly, logon redirects to login as an exact equivalent. Have the definitions evolved?

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  • 2
    This has irked me as well. You can also consider login as an adjective: Please enter your login information below.
    – strager
    Jan 2, 2009 at 4:42
  • 1
    @strager: Yes, thanks for the catch. Don't even get me started on "doing things everyday" ... which is now apparently correct enough to appear on TV, in signage, and everywhere else except in a dictionary.
    – Adam Liss
    Jan 2, 2009 at 4:51
  • Very interesting - it does look like the terms are both converging and evolving.
    – Brad Leach
    Jan 2, 2009 at 4:55
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    @strager Sure, but that's really in the same way that many nouns can be used as adjectives. salad: "I need a new salad bowl" fan: "The fan blades have a lot of dust" payment: "Please enter your payment information" shoe: "Those left shoe marks!" It's safe to simply say that "login" is a noun.
    – smehmood
    Jul 16, 2012 at 4:26
  • 20
    @strager FYI, grammatically speaking, those aren't considered adjectives, but rather noun adjuncts. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noun_adjunct Jul 16, 2012 at 6:00
90

Voice of democracy: term / number of google results:

login    2,020,000,000
sign in    430,000,000
logon       27,700,000
log on      18,200,000
logout      83,500,000
log out     34,500,000
sign out    19,400,000
log off      5,350,000
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  • 79
    I wouldn't count on Google for this kind of thing: I could care less 30,100,000, I couldn't care less 19,700,000 Jul 16, 2012 at 5:45
  • 8
    True that: I couldnt care less 113,000,000
    – robmcm
    Jul 16, 2012 at 7:38
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    @EamonNerbonne That's because you spelled it wrong.
    – gtd
    Jul 16, 2012 at 8:38
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    "log in" is missing from the list
    – gtd
    Jul 16, 2012 at 8:41
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    -1 I don't consider Google's tailored per user search results a "democracy".
    – matm
    Jul 16, 2012 at 10:19
57

Logon is used for a hardware system that starts up when used, like a computer.

Login is used for a software system where I have to enter my username and password.

Signin is used for identification, either physical such as a photo ID, or digital such as OpenID. What differs here from login is that in the case of an ID, I can use the same ID to access multiple sites, buildings, etc.

Edit 1: I should've added a disclaimer that I have no sources and make no guarantee that these are the official usage of the words. The definitions I'm offering about are based on my personal understanding of the usage, and are purely opinion.

8
  • The explanations for login/logon "feel" right, but I'm not sure about signin -- is this convention or "officially correct" usage? What about signon? Thanks for the info!
    – Adam Liss
    Jan 2, 2009 at 4:42
  • 4
    You have a source for this? I've never heard this distinction between logon/login before, and I've worked with hardware and software for a long time. Perhaps this is localle/industry specific?
    – Huntrods
    Jan 2, 2009 at 5:05
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    @Adam: Signing on is a colloquial term for collecting unemployment benefit [or Job Seeker's allowance now] in the UK, so that may not be so good there. Jan 2, 2009 at 5:14
  • Sorry. I just added a disclaimer that I make no guarantees that the above definitions are "officially correct" usage. Jan 2, 2009 at 6:02
  • @balabaster: Funny, in the US, signing on means joining a company, and some offer a sign-on bonus, which is simply extra cash up front for joining.
    – Adam Liss
    Jan 2, 2009 at 6:43
28

with spaces:
http://google.com/trends/explore?q="log in","log on","sign in","sign on"
winner: "sign in"

no spaces:
http://google.com/trends/explore?q=login,logon,signin,signon
winner: login

spaces vs no spaces:
http://google.com/trends/explore?q="sign in",login
winner: login


with spaces:
http://google.com/trends/explore?q="log out","log off","sign out","sign off"
winner: "log off"

no spaces:
http://google.com/trends/explore?q=logout,logoff,signout,signoff
winner: logout

spaces vs no spaces:
http://google.com/trends?q="log off",logout
winner: logout

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  • I did a survey off all the top sites in alexa, almost without exception, social networking sites use "Login", all other sites (portals and email etc) use sign in. If AOL says sign in and that's what their users understand, then go with that since I'd say that is the LCD
    – JeremyWeir
    Mar 10, 2009 at 21:40
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    Popularity does not mean authority or correctness...
    – lbolla
    Jul 16, 2012 at 8:02
  • I am most interested in what happened Q4 2011 that saw the strong decrease in the use of 'sign in', whilst there was a slightly slower but just as strong increase in the use of 'log in'. Even more interesting is that the apparent correlation almost disappears when you look at any region in isolation; it seems to be an almost exclusively global trend.
    – Cogito
    Jul 16, 2012 at 8:07
  • People may tend to write more about "the for sale sign in their yard" than about "who left the log in the bowl?" I think adding password brings us closer to the trend OP is interested in. Jan 7, 2014 at 15:29
  • This is dangerously close to a link-only answer. Results from these searches should be summarized or embedded as a screenshot. Search statistics from 2009 are vastly different from the 2017 results those links currently point to.
    – Stevoisiak
    Jun 8, 2017 at 14:44
14

My preferences (less popular, but many cool websites are using this convention):

[Sign In] [Join]

Welcome, UserName! [Sign Out]

I wouldn't use any of the following: Log On, Logon, Log In, Log Out

Another option is (which is by the way more popular):

[Login] [Register]

Welcome, UserName! [Logout]

Google Stats (hits):

[Sign In], [Sign Out] -> 1 210 000 000 + 300 700 000 = 1 510 700 000
[Login], [Logout]     -> 1 940 000 000 + 88 200 000  = 2 028 200 000
[Log In], [Log Out]   -> 873 000 000   + 83 800 000  =   956 800 000

[Sign Up] for registration link is also a good option but it does't look good near [Sign In], you should use it wether with [Login] or seporatly.

[Sign In] [Join] on a page looks more user-friendly (less official) for me than [Login] [Register]

8

Microsoft's framework design guidelines recommmend using "LogOn" rather than "LogIn" but "SignIn" rather than "SignOn" (see rule CA1726 from FxCop's code analysis). Granted this is talking about framework/API naming conventions, but it's worth putting out there for people to consider.

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    I'd summarily discount any term in CamelCase, which reeks of, um, MadeUpness. I'm afraid I'm turning into Andy Rooney.
    – Adam Liss
    Jan 3, 2009 at 0:56
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    Yeah, but the framework design guidelines are about identifiers in code rather than UI. Still, I thought it was worth bringing up purely for the "on" vs "in" debate. Jan 3, 2009 at 5:55
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I've always distinguished the two in this manner:

Logon - you log on to a terminal or other multi-user access DEVICE
Login - you log in to an SOFTWARE application, either for authorization or authentication

although obviously, there is a lot of overlap between the two, especially since terminals aren't so common anymore. But as you say, it probably doesn't matter much.

5

Here is an old thread about this problem: "Logon vs Login" Personally I think that you should use terminology your users are most familiar with. For Windows platform "logon" seems to be a common term.

Interesting fact: Google yields 2.040.000.000 results for "login" and 27.400.000 for "logon".

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  • I guess one can conclude login is preferable on the Web.
    – strager
    Jan 2, 2009 at 4:41
  • yep, seems that login is the most popular term
    – aku
    Jan 2, 2009 at 4:42
  • 1
    Windows is also "starting up" (why not just "starting"?) and requires you to click "Start" to shut down. I agree that "login" seems more popular; "logon" seems somehow dated.
    – Adam Liss
    Jan 2, 2009 at 4:53
  • @AdamLiss without the "up" you can't use Rolling Stones for branding ;-)
    – asjo
    Jul 16, 2012 at 15:42
5

I have to say, that I looked into that Q and usually: Login, Logon, Logoff or Log in, Log on, Log off are used in applied applications.

Such verbs & nouns like Sign in, Join, Sign out, Sign up are more used in web applications, but as it was said earlier it all comes down to personal preference...

4

If only all problems were so easy to solve as trying to decide which grammar is "more correct". I think this is one of those that comes down to personal preference...

I personally prefer Login/Logout, but I know lots of software that uses Logon/Logoff.

4

Several answers compare the popularity based on Google results, where Log in/out is clearly the winner. I don't think this should be used as a guide though.

Both Windows Live ID and Google Accounts (the two most used authentication systems?) use Sign in/out on their user interfaces. Interestingly, both use Login on their URLs (https://login.live.com/login.srf, https://www.google.com/accounts/ServiceLogin).

My conclusion is that Log in/out are more popular amongst developers for historical reasons (they are used in framework APIs, etc.), and for that they continue to use it (e.g. this very site, stackoverflow.com), but end users are probably more familiar with Sign in/out.


Same with Yahoo and AOL, Sign in/out on user interfaces, Login on URLs (https://login.yahoo.com/config/login_verify2, https://my.screenname.aol.com/_cqr/login/login.psp).

0

I think all of these have their origins in handwritten logs of users who are accessing early systems. They are all semantically equivalent and users will likely understand them equally. I think it comes down to preference. Just pick one and use it consistently.

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