730

I've created a web application which uses a tagbox drop down. This works great in all browsers except Chrome browser (Version 21.0.1180.89).

Despite both the input fields AND the form field having the autocomplete="off" attribute, Chrome insists on showing a drop down history of previous entries for the field, which is obliterating the tagbox list.

10
  • 17
    Technically this question was asked about 5 months before the one referenced as "This question already has an answer here". That one is the duplicate as it came after this one. Feb 25, 2019 at 18:19
  • Honestly, what if this is the reasoning for disabling autocomplete=off. What if, the plan is to make sure the web is detailed and described so that the browser you are using right now may autocomplete whatever field their latest version might want to. If that was the case, we need to describe all fields - and the browser will gracefully disable autocomplete for all fields that are outside the scope of the autocomplete script / app... Im betting on this being the case, Jul 21, 2020 at 20:56
  • 87
    7 years and still we can't disable autocomplete properly... such a shame..
    – BruneX
    Jul 21, 2020 at 23:23
  • 3
    i got explanation here developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Security/… Feb 25, 2021 at 7:40
  • 2
    see bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=370363#c7 link that recommend use autocomplete="new-password" Oct 16, 2021 at 15:29

70 Answers 70

5

I managed to disable autocomple exploiting this rule:

Fields that are not passwords, but should be obscured, such as credit card numbers, may also have a type="password" attribute, but should contain the relevant autocomplete attribute, such as "cc-number" or "cc-csc". https://www.chromium.org/developers/design-documents/create-amazing-password-forms

<input id="haxed" type="password" autocomplete="cc-number">

However it comes with the great responsibility :)

Don’t try to fool the browser Password managers (either built into the browser, or external) are designed to ease the user experience. Inserting fake fields, using incorrect autocomplete attributes or taking advantage of the weaknesses of the existing password managers simply leads to frustrated users.

1
  • now it shows CC suggestions instead of other form suggestions...
    – Guillaume
    Nov 29, 2020 at 20:44
4

Whilst I agree autocomplete should be a user choice, there are times when Chrome is over-zealous with it (other browsers may be too). For instance, a password field with a different name is still auto-filled with a saved password and the previous field populated with the username. This particularly sucks when the form is a user management form for a web app and you don't want autofill to populate it with your own credentials.

Chrome completely ignores autocomplete="off" now. Whilst the JS hacks may well work, I found a simple way which works at the time of writing:

Set the value of the password field to the control character 8 ("\x08" in PHP or &#8; in HTML). This stops Chrome auto-filling the field because it has a value, but no actual value is entered because this is the backspace character.

Yes this is still a hack, but it works for me. YMMV.

3
  • I think they've picked up this hack and ignored control characters in the value, so it now evaluates to empty. See the answer by @ice-cream stackoverflow.com/a/16130452/752696 for the correct, up-to-date solution.
    – spikyjt
    Mar 5, 2015 at 11:44
  • Same use case here: Working with user management and having own credentials autofilled. However since it's my own code and I reuse the form for creating new and editing existing users simply overriding input values via JS removed the auto-complete.
    – nuala
    Apr 5, 2015 at 12:21
  • There are situations where it cannot be a user choice, for example in case of password verfication. In these cases there seems to be no way to do that. The browser now always suggests to use a saved password (even with new-password) which defeats the purpose.
    – Cesar
    Jan 12, 2022 at 10:26
4

As of Chrome 42, none of the solutions/hacks in this thread (as of 2015-05-21T12:50:23+00:00) work for disabling autocomplete for an individual field or the entire form.

EDIT: I've found that you actually only need to insert one dummy email field into your form (you can hide it with display: none) before the other fields to prevent autocompleting. I presume that chrome stores some sort of form signature with each autocompleted field and including another email field corrupts this signature and prevents autocompleting.

<form action="/login" method="post">
    <input type="email" name="fake_email" style="display:none" aria-hidden="true">
    <input type="email" name="email">
    <input type="password" name="password">
    <input type="submit">
</form>

The good news is that since the "form signature" is corrupted by this, none of the fields are autocompleted, so no JS is needed to clear the fake fields before submission.

Old Answer:

The only thing I've found to be still viable is to insert two dummy fields of type email and password before the real fields. You can set them to display: none to hide them away (it isn't smart enough to ignore those fields):

<form action="/login" method="post">
    <input type="email" name="fake_email" style="display:none" aria-hidden="true">
    <input type="password" name="fake_password" style="display:none" aria-hidden="true">
    <input type="email" name="email">
    <input type="password" name="password">
    <input type="submit">
</form>

Unfortunately, the fields must be within your form (otherwise both sets of inputs are autofilled). So, for the fake fields to be truly ignored you'll need some JS to run on form submit to clear them:

form.addEventListener('submit', function() {
    form.elements['fake_email'].value = '';
    form.elements['fake_password'].value = '';
});

Notice from above that clearing the value with Javascript works to override the autocomplete. So if loosing the proper behavior with JS disabled is acceptable, you can simplify all of this with a JS autocomplete "polyfill" for Chrome:

(function(document) {

    function polyfillAutocomplete(nodes) {

        for(var i = 0, length = nodes.length; i < length; i++) {

            if(nodes[i].getAttribute('autocomplete') === 'off') {

                nodes[i].value = '';
            }
        }
    }

    setTimeout(function() {

        polyfillAutocomplete(document.getElementsByTagName('input'));
        polyfillAutocomplete(document.getElementsByTagName('textarea'));

    }, 1);

})(window.document);
0
3

I just updated to Chrome 49 and Diogo Cid's solution doesn't work anymore.

I made a different workaround hiding and removing the fields at run-time after the page is loaded.

Chrome now ignores the original workaround applying the credentials to the first displayed type="password" field and its previous type="text" field, so I have hidden both fields using CSS visibility: hidden;

<!-- HTML -->
<form>
    <!-- Fake fields -->
    <input class="chromeHack-autocomplete">
    <input type="password" class="chromeHack-autocomplete">

    <input type="text" placeholder="e-mail" autocomplete="off" />
    <input type="password" placeholder="Password" autocomplete="off" />
</form>

<!-- CSS -->
.chromeHack-autocomplete {
    height: 0px !important;
    width: 0px !important;
    opacity: 0 !important;
    padding: 0 !important; margin: 0 !important;
}

<!--JavaScript (jQuery) -->
jQuery(window).load(function() {
    $(".chromeHack-autocomplete").delay(100).hide(0, function() {
        $(this).remove();
    });
});

I know that it may seem not very elegant but it works.

3

Chrome keeps changing the way it handles autocomplete on each version, the way I came up was, to make the fields readonly and onclick/focus make it Not readonly. try this jQuery snippet.

jQuery(document).ready(function($){
//======fix for autocomplete
$('input, :input').attr('readonly',true);//readonly all inputs on page load, prevent autofilling on pageload

 $('input, :input').on( 'click focus', function(){ //on input click
 $('input, :input').attr('readonly',true);//make other fields readonly
 $( this ).attr('readonly',false);//but make this field Not readonly
 });
//======./fix for autocomplete
});
2
  • Thanks, only solution that worked. jQuery().ready(function($){ // avoid autofill with Chrome 84 $('input').attr('readonly', true); $('input').val(''); $('input').on( 'click focus', function(){ $(this).attr('readonly', false); }); });
    – Corentin
    Aug 3, 2020 at 12:31
  • Thanks a lot. This solution worked for me with filters input (p:datatable) of primefaces. Mar 16, 2021 at 19:26
3

2021 answer: Sadly, the only things that work are disgustingly hacky. My solution is to add a dynamically generated random number to the end of the name attribute (E.g. <input name="postcode-22643"...) when generating your front-end markup. This tricks the browser suitably for now.

You'll then need to add something server-side to cleanse the incoming post request. For example, within NodeJS / Express, I've put a middleware in, with a bit of regex to remove the number segment from the received post request. Mine looks like this, but I imagine something pretty similar would be available in other languages:

const cleanseAutosuggest = function (req, res, next) {
   for (const key in req.body) {
      if (key.match(/-\d+/)) {
         req.body[key.replace(/-\d+/, "")] = req.body[key];
         delete req.body[key];
      }
   }
   next();
};

app.post("/submit", cleanseAutosuggest, function (req, res, next) {
...
})
3

I have a VERY simple solution to this problem no code required and an acceptable solution. Chrome often reads the label of the input and does AutoComplete. You can simply insert an "empty" character into the label.

E.g. <label>Surname</labe>

Becomes: <label>Sur&#8205;name</label>

‍ is the HTML escape character for "Empty string".

This will still show "Surname" but the Autocomplete wont detect the field and try autocompleting it.

2
  • 1
    MARCH 2022 - For me this is the only solution that works now. I have a "country" dropdown which I don't want to autocomplete. I use React Semantic, and has to insert the escape code into my label, and also, wrap it in a <span> like... label={{children: <span>Cou&#8205;ntry</span>}} Mar 28, 2022 at 11:27
  • This is the only solution I could get to work. NOTE that the label (surname in this case) does NOT have to be associated with the input control by 'for' and an id. Chrome is smart enough to figure out this by placement on the form just above the input. I wonder how long it will take them to figure this one out and break it again. But do your fellow developers a favor and put a commented version of the text nearby, so that they can search for the string in the html and not headscratch for 10 minutes looking for it.
    – Dean
    Apr 19, 2022 at 14:20
2

i found this solution to be the most appropriate:

function clearChromeAutocomplete()
{
// not possible, let's try: 
if (navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase().indexOf('chrome') >= 0) 
{
document.getElementById('adminForm').setAttribute('autocomplete', 'off'); 
setTimeout(function () {
        document.getElementById('adminForm').setAttribute('autocomplete', 'on'); 
}, 1500);
}
}

It must be loaded after dom ready, or after the form renders.

2

I solved in another way. You can try this.

<input id="passfld" type="text" autocomplete="off" />
<script type="text/javascript">
// Using jQuery
$(function(){                                               
    setTimeout(function(){
        $("input#passfld").attr("type","password");
    },10);
});


// or in pure javascript
 window.onload=function(){                                              
    setTimeout(function(){  
        document.getElementById('passfld').type = 'password';
    },10);
  }   
</script>
2

After having tried all solutions, Here is what seems to be working for chrome version:45, with form having password field :

 jQuery('document').ready(function(){
        //For disabling Chrome Autocomplete
        jQuery( ":text" ).attr('autocomplete','pre'+Math.random(0,100000000));
 });
0
2

autocomplete="off" works now, so you can just do the following:

<input id="firstName2" name="firstName2" autocomplete="off">

Tested in the current Chrome 70 as well as in all versions starting from Chrome 62.

Demo:

  • the top input has the auto complete working
  • the bottom input has the auto complete disabled by adding autocomplete="off"
2
  • 2
    @AntonKuznetsov Please take a closer look at the JSFiddle's HTML: the bottom input has autocomplete="off", whereas the upper one doesn't. So, the auto completer is meant to be disabled for the bottom input only, but on your screen shot you're testing auto complete on the upper one. Thus, this still is the proper way of disabling the auto complete for Chrome 70. I'd appreciate if you check it out more thoroughly and upvote this one instead of downvoting. Nov 15, 2018 at 15:53
  • 1
    This is the correct answer for Chrome 81 (81.0.4044.138)
    – Pitchmatt
    May 14, 2020 at 10:53
2

For me setting autocomplete="off" in form and inputs worked. But can be flake. Some times it will suggest password or some saved login+password option. But don't come pre-filled.

Chrome Version: 81.0.4044.138

CodePen

<form role="form" method="post" action="#" autocomplete="off">
  <label for="login">Login</label><br/>
  <input type="text" name="login" id="login" autocomplete="off" />
  <br/><br/>
  <label for="password">Password</label><br/>
  <input type="password" name="password" autocomplete="off" />
  <br/><br/>
  <input type="submit" name="submit" value="Submit" />
</form>

Others Options:

  1. Remove 'form' tag... or changing it from 'div' to 'form' before submitting.
  2. With javascript and some contentEditable="true" fields could make your way...

Usually I have to find another work around every few months...

2

After lot of digging I found that autocomplete dropdown on Chrome(Version 83.0.4103.116) doesn't shows up when we remove name and id attribute on input tag eg. code as below

<div>
<span>
  Auto complete off works if name and id attribute is not set on input tag 
  <input type="text"/>
</span>
<span>
  Auto complete will work here since id attribute is set
  <input id="name" type="text"/>
</span>
</div>

2

The only solution that worked and tested successfully on Chrome and Firefox is to wrap the input with a form that has autocomplete="off" as per below:

<form autocomplete="off">
   <input id="xyz" />
</form>
1

The hidden input element trick still appears to work (Chrome 43) to prevent autofill, but one thing to keep in mind is that Chrome will attempt to autofill based on the placeholder tag. You need to match the hidden input element's placeholder to that of the input you're trying to disable.

In my case, I had a field with a placeholder text of 'City or Zip' which I was using with Google Place Autocomplete. It appeared that it was attempting to autofill as if it were part of an address form. The trick didn't work until I put the same placeholder on the hidden element as on the real input:

<input style="display:none;" type="text" placeholder="City or Zip" />
<input autocomplete="off" type="text" placeholder="City or Zip" />
1

Looks like this is fixed! See https://codereview.chromium.org/1473733008

0
1

When using a widget like jQuery UI's Autocomplete make sure to check that it is not adding/changing to autocomplete attribute to off. I found this to be true when using it and will break any work you may have done to override any browser field caching. Make certain that you have a unique name attribute and force a unique autocomplete attribute after the widget initializes. See below for some hints on how that might work for your situation.

<?php $autocomplete = 'off_'.time(); ?>
<script>
   $('#email').autocomplete({
      create: function( event, ui ) {
         $(this).attr('autocomplete','<? echo $autocomplete; ?>');
      },
      source: function (request, response) { //your code here },
      focus: function( event, ui ) { //your code here },
      select: function( event, ui ) { //your code here },
   });
</script>
<input type="email" id="email" name="email_<? echo $autocomplete; ?>" autocomplete="<? echo $autocomplete; ?>" />
1

MAR 2020

I'm facing this issue and unfortunately non of the solutions worked for me. So I applied the little hack which is working fine.

<input autocomplete="off" type="password" name="password" id="password" readonly="readonly">

$('#password').on('click', function (event) {
  $('#password').removeAttr('readonly');
  $('#password').focus();
});

$('#password').on('blur', function (event) {
  $('#password').attr('readonly', 'readonly');
});

when you click on password input field it start to show suggestion but when trigger focus on input field than it does not show suggestions so that's how I solved my issue.

I hope it will help someone.

1
  • 1
    I found that in 11/21, just adding $(document).ready(function(){ $('#password').prop('readonly', false); }); Worked fine Nov 22, 2021 at 23:32
1

None of these methods work anymore, chrome ignores all of these attributes, the only solution is to use jquery

use this on input

<input onclick="$(this).removeAttr('readonly');" onblur="$(this).attr('readonly', true);" readonly />

1
  • Yep - Chrome disabled support for the autocomplete attribute in 96 (testing on Version 96.0.4664.55). Hopefully this is a mistake...
    – jdimmerman
    Nov 29, 2021 at 12:44
1

It seems that the Chrome autocomplete event is triggered on DOMContentLoaded, and in the lastest version of Chrome (110.0.5481.178) now ignores autocomplete="nope" and autocomplete="new-password" or random attribute, so if you don't want to use the readonly trick or other JQuery and Js randomness things you can just set the inputs (email, password and tel mainly) to text and in the load event just re-set to the correct type, this should be at least 1ms after the load event because if it's done immediately it will be autocompleted by the browser, so just do this trick:

Set the input to type to "text" and store the real type on some attribute or class like whis:

<input type="text" id="infoEmail" placeholder="[email protected]" data-on-load-type="email">

Then, in the window load event use the setTimeout function and it's done, the input will have the right type and won't be autocomplete

window.addEventListener('load', ()=>{
    document.querySelectorAll('input[data-on-load-type]').forEach(trickedInput=>{
        trickedInput.setAttribute('type', trickedInput.getAttribute('data-on-load-type'))
    });
});

Edit: just want to add more info about how the autocomplete seems to work.

The autocomplete happens most of the time when are a password and at least other input element in the DOM, the browser will treat everything posssible as a autocompletable, even if theese aren't in a <form> tag or has the autocomplete atribute to nope or new-password, so if a password input is found and any other autocompletable input such as email, tel or adress thoose will be autocomplete, but not if they have a display: none; so the browser will try to fill anyways any other input element visible, even if is not related to a contact or login form, like a input search on a search bar, and if you have a script to display the inputs sometimes they will be autocompleted if an input password is on the DOM, so this is a big problem and browsers should respect when something shouldn't be autocomplete. So, once the browser knows that there's a input password on the DOM it seems to attach a listenner to autocomplete inputs when they change their display, so i found this solution by setting the type to text, and then changing it to the correct type with a little delay after the load event, it seems to work pretty well, for now.

0

To prevent autocomplete, just set an empty space as the input value:

<input type="text" name="name" value="  ">
3
  • 1
    This makes no sense... Most of the times you want to use the value attribute and it will only not show autocomplets because nothing starts with a space.
    – Roel
    Dec 31, 2015 at 13:38
  • Can you clarify? Autocomplete is only triggered on empty inputs, what I say is that to prevent it you can render white spaces instead of empty string.
    – JVitela
    Jan 27, 2016 at 16:56
  • no, autocomplete triggering on inputs that has a similar starting characters Feb 7, 2019 at 3:28
0

Here is what worked for me on Chrome Version 51.0.2704.106.<input id="user_name" type="text" name="user_name" autocomplete="off" required /> and in combination with <input id="user_password" type="password" name="user_password" autocomplete="new-password" required />. My problem was that after implementing new-password it would still show a drop-down of usernames on the user_name field.

0

I've just tried the following, and it appears to do the trick on Chrome 53 - it also disables the "Use password for:" drop down when entering the password field.

Simply set your password input type to text, and then add the onfocus handler (inline or via jQuery/vanilla JS) to set the type to password:

onfocus="this.setAttribute('type','password')"

Or even better:

onfocus="if(this.getAttribute('type')==='text') this.setAttribute('type','password')"
0
0

Add this right after form tag:

<form>
<div class="div-form">
<input type="text">
<input type="password" >
</div>

Add this to your css file:

.div-form{
opacity: 0;
}
0

I'am using Chrome - Version 64.0.3282.140 (Official Build) (64-bit) and used following code along with form name and it works for me.

<form name="formNameHere">....</form>
<script type="text/javascript">
    setTimeout(function(){
        document.formNameHere.reset();
    },500);
</script>
1
  • The problem is that the user can still choose to use the saved passwords after the initial clean by just focusing either user/password fields. At least in Chrome, it prompts to use saved credentials. This basically breaks any other attempt to clean / reset fields.
    – DiegoDD
    Jul 24, 2018 at 17:15
0

None of the solutions worked except for giving it a fake field to autocomplete. I made a React component to address this issue.

import React from 'react'

// Google Chrome stubbornly refuses to respect the autocomplete="off" HTML attribute so
// we have to give it a "fake" field for it to autocomplete that never gets "used".

const DontBeEvil = () => (
  <div style={{ display: 'none' }}>
    <input type="text" name="username" />
    <input type="password" name="password" />
  </div>
)

export default DontBeEvil
0

I call this the sledgehammer approach, but it seems to work for me where all other approaches I tried have failed:

<input autocomplete="off" data-autocomplete-ninja="true" name="fa" id="fa" />

Note: the input name and id attributes should not contain anything that would give the browser a hint as to what the data is, or this solution will not work. For instance, I'm using "fa" instead of "FullAddress".

And the following script on page load (this script uses JQuery):

$("[data-autocomplete-ninja]").each(function () {
    $(this).focus(function () {
        $(this).data("ninja-name", $(this).attr("name")).attr("name", "");
    }).blur(function () {
        $(this).attr("name", $(this).data("ninja-name"));
    });
});

The above solution should prevent the browser from autofilling data gathered from other forms, or from previous submits on the same form.

Basically, I'm removing the name attribute while the input is in focus. As long as you're not doing anything requiring the name attribute while the element is in focus, such as using selectors by element name, this solution should be innocuous.

0

For this problem I have used this css solution. It is working for me.

input{
  text-security:disc !important;
  -webkit-text-security:disc !important;
  -moz-text-security:disc !important;
}
1
  • it doesn't help also text-security use case is totally different and un-related to autocomplete
    – Danish
    Jun 16, 2021 at 13:47
0

I had the similar issue with one of the search field in my form. neither autocomplete= "false" nor autocomplete= "off" worked for me. turns out when you have aria-label attribute in the input element is set to something like city or address or something similar , chrome overrides all your settings and display the autocomplete anyway

So fix i have done is to remove the city part from the aria-label and come up with a different value. and finally autocomplete stopped showing

chrome overrides autocomplete settings

0

I have a nearly perfect solution for this issue: Remove "type=password" from all password input elements,after all of them were loaded into DOM,give a timeout to set the "type=password" back.Chrome will ignore the changed type for auto filling.Example:

setTimeout(()=>{ele.type="password"},3000)

Or change the type by event:

ele.oninput=function(){ele.type="password"}

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