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I remember seeing a way to have an <input type="password" /> such that the browser will not prompt the user to save the password. But I'm drawing a blank. Is there an HTML attribute or some JavaScript trick that will do this?

1

15 Answers 15

125

Try using autocomplete="off". Not sure if every browser supports it, though. MSDN docs here.

EDIT: Note: most browsers have dropped support for this attribute. See Is autocomplete="off" compatible with all modern browsers?

This is arguably something that should be left up to the user rather than the web site designer.

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  • 2
    You can also deliver the page with HTTPS and via HTTP header or META tag prevent caching. That way, the password also won't be stored (at least in Internet Explorer).
    – doekman
    Apr 9, 2010 at 8:55
  • As regards validation, HTML5 adds the autocomplete attribute to the spec so it is fine now Feb 28, 2014 at 17:18
  • 9
    Note for future readers: All major browsers are moving towards ignoring the attribute. (see stackoverflow.com/a/21348793/37706)
    – rdans
    Jun 6, 2014 at 11:23
  • @RyanDansie thanks for the pointing that out. I've updated the answer. Old answer is ...old.
    – tvanfosson
    Jun 6, 2014 at 13:20
  • 11
    "This is arguably something that should be left up to the user rather than the web site designer." there are both technical and non technical reasons for having this. One-time passwords shouldn't be remembered, for example. Bank sites with "enter first digit of your PIN" is another. Don't forget that a business analyst might decide he wants a password field and remove the choice from the developer.
    – Sprague
    Nov 16, 2015 at 12:32
63

<input type="password" autocomplete="off" />

I'd just like to add that as a user I think this is very annoying and a hassle to overcome. I strongly recommend against using this as it will more than likely aggravate your users.

Passwords are already not stored in the MRU, and correctly configured public machines will not even save the username.

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  • 24
    +1 for "don't annoy your users". That's exactly what this kind of feature does. Just like sites that force off caching so the back button clears the form. EXTREMELY irritating.
    – cletus
    Jan 22, 2009 at 7:29
  • 6
    +1 I completely agree. Its for an administrator edit customer profile page where you only enter a password if you intend to change it. That way the administrators don't change the password every time they go to edit the customer's information.
    – DavGarcia
    Jan 22, 2009 at 16:12
  • 14
    It is very useful for credit card number fields. PayPal's form is stored in every browser, and anyone using your computer can re-input all the data, so you have to manually go and delete all remembered fields. Nov 16, 2009 at 11:48
  • 35
    On a form where the user can set a password that has nothing to do with their login, enabling autocomplete is actually the more annoying option - the browser may offer to save a password that it can't actually do anything with. Also, if security is a sensitive issue, I wouldn't assume that all public machines are correctly configured.
    – jrb
    Oct 25, 2010 at 10:33
  • 3
    I'm using this for a one time use password. As jrb said, it would be very annoying if the browser stored it.
    – Danation
    Dec 18, 2013 at 21:39
13

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>

#another way

 <script type="text/javascript">    
 function setAutoCompleteOFF(tm){
    if(typeof tm =="undefined"){tm=10;}
    try{
    var inputs=$(".auto-complete-off,input[autocomplete=off]"); 
    setTimeout(function(){
        inputs.each(function(){     
            var old_value=$(this).attr("value");            
            var thisobj=$(this);            
            setTimeout(function(){  
                thisobj.removeClass("auto-complete-off").addClass("auto-complete-off-processed");
                thisobj.val(old_value);
            },tm);
         });
     },tm); 
    }catch(e){}
  }
 $(function(){                                              
        setAutoCompleteOFF();
    });
</script>

// you need to add attribute autocomplete="off" or you can add class .auto-complete-off into the input box and enjoy

Example:

  <input id="passfld" type="password" autocomplete="off" />
    OR
  <input id="passfld" class="auto-complete-off" type="password"  />
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    This prevents the browser for storing the password instead of preventing autocompletion which is a better solution in my scenario. Jan 14, 2015 at 15:36
  • Thanks,worked for me on latest chrome Please Note: Used on an internal system where only Chrome is allowed, do more testing if using in production site.
    – Izion
    May 12, 2016 at 14:59
  • @AntoVinish, I hope my last solution work in firefox 40. Nov 1, 2016 at 7:44
7

I tried the following and it seems that works to any browser:

<input id="passfld" type="text" autocomplete="off" />

<script type="text/javascript">
    $(function(){  
        var passElem = $("input#passfld");
        passElem.focus(function() { 
            passElem.prop("type", "password");                                             
        });
    });
</script>

This way is much more safer than using timeout techniques, because it guaranties that the input field will yield to password when the user focuses it.

0
6
<input type="password" placeholder="Enter New Password" autocomplete="new-password">

Here you go.

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    This IS the way, there are a lot of workarounds out there, and it's as simple as this, tested with latest version of Firefox (v67) and Chrome (75). Jul 6, 2019 at 18:16
  • Chrome 80 will still offer to remember the password after submitting the form.
    – Bouke
    Feb 19, 2020 at 17:59
5

As for security issues, here is what a security consultant will tell you on the whole field issue (this is from an actual independent security audit):

HTML Autocomplete Enabled – Password fields in HTML forms have autocomplete enabled. Most browsers have a facility to remember user credentials entered into HTML forms.

Relative Risk: Low

Affected Systems/Devices: o https://*******/

I also agree this should cover any field that contains truly private data. I feel that it is alright to force a person to always type their credit card information, CVC code, passwords, usernames, etc whenever that site is going to access anything that should be kept secure [universally or by legal compliance requirements]. For example: purchase forms, bank/credit sites, tax sites, medical data, federal, nuclear, etc - not Sites like Stack Overflow or Facebook.

Other types of sites - e.g. TimeStar Online for clocking in and out of work - it's stupid, since I always use the same PC/account at work, that I can't save the credentials on that site - strangely enough I can on my Android but not on an iPad. Even shared PCs this wouldn't be too bad since clocking in/out for someone else really doesn't do anything but annoy your supervisor. (They have to go in and delete the erroneous punches - just choose not to save on public PCs).

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    Just adding a comment here for a reason you would not want to save a password. I maintain a website with user accounts where admins can change a user's password. The client is currently infuriated that Chrome offers to save the password entered on the "change password" form every single time for every user, because it misidentifies the edit user form as a login form. Giving simple instructions like "just click Never Remember Password" are beyond them, apparently. Dec 29, 2014 at 23:57
  • @charredUtensil Doesn't "Never Remember Password" usually mean "never remember password for this site"? Feb 11, 2021 at 18:47
  • I honestly have no idea whether it did back in 2014 when I wrote this comment. Feb 12, 2021 at 19:08
5

Here's the best answer, and the easiest! Put an extra password field in front of your input field and set the display:none , so that when the browser fills it in, it does it in an input that you don't care about.

Change this:

<input type="password" name="password" size="25" class="input" id="password" value="">

to this:

<input type="password" style="display:none;">
<input type="password" name="password" size="25" class="input" id="password" value="">
2
  • Actually, it works if 2 password fields are in the form, but new browser ignore 2nd password if not visible and enabled ;( Sep 13, 2016 at 14:03
  • 1
    Using display:none does not work for me (Chrome 61 OSX), but this does: <input type="password" style="position: absolute; top: -1000px;"> Dec 13, 2017 at 7:47
3

seeing as autocomplete=off is deprecated, I suggest a more recent solution.

Set your password field to a normal text field, and mask your input with "discs" using CSS. the code should look like this:

<input type="text" class="myPassword" /> 

input .myPassword{
    text-security:disc;
    -webkit-text-security:disc;
    -mox-text-security:disc;
}

Please note that this may not work propely on firefox browsers, and an additional walkaround is needed. Read more about it here :https://stackoverflow.com/a/49304708/5477548.

The solution was taken from this link, but to comply with SO "no-hotlinks" i summarized it here.

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Read also this answer where he is using this easy solution that works everywhere (see also the fix for Safari mobile):

<input type="password" readonly onfocus="this.removeAttribute('readonly');"/>
1

You can use JQuery, select the item by id:

$("input#Password").attr("autocomplete","off");

Or select the item by type:

$("input[type='password']").attr("autocomplete","off");

Or also:

You can use pure Javascript:

document.getElementById('Password').autocomplete = 'off';
1

you can also use it like following

$('#Password').attr("autocomplete", "off");
setTimeout('$("#Password").val("");', 2000);
1

you can use this: autocomplete="new-password"

Example:

<input type="password" placeholder="Enter New Password" autocomplete="new-password">
1
  • This answer already exists in this question. You should review all answers before you post your own.
    – blazej
    Aug 19, 2021 at 16:13
0

In the case of most major browsers, having an input outside of and not connected to any forms whatsoever tricks the browser into thinking there was no submission. In this case, you would have to use pure JS validation for your login and encryption of your passwords would be necessary as well.

Before:

<form action="..."><input type="password"/></form>

After:

<input type="password"/>
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    By the way, this is a trick you probably should not use. By not using a form tag, your code becomes HTML4 by default and makes it harder to validate your users' accounts.
    – Cannicide
    Jan 2, 2017 at 19:28
0

I've found the following works on Firefox and Chrome.

<form ... > <!-- more stuff -->
<input name="person" type="text" size=30 value="">
<input name="mypswd" type="password" size=6 value="" autocomplete="off">
<input name="userid" type="text" value="security" style="display:none">
<input name="passwd" type="password" value="faker" style="display:none">
<!-- more stuff --> </form>

All of these are within the forms section. "person" and "mypswd" are what you want, but the browser will save "userid" and "passwd" once, and never again since they don't change. You could eliminate the "person" field if you don't really need it. In that case, all you want is the "mypswd" field, which could change in some way known to the user of your web-page.

0

The only way I can get firefox, edge, and Internet explorer to turn off autocomplete is to add autocomplete="false" in my form statement like:

  <form action="postingpage.php" autocomplete="false" method="post">

and I have to add the autocomplete="off" to my form input and change the type to text Like:

     <input type="text" autocomplete="off">

It seems that this html code needs to be standardized with the browsers. the form type = password should be revised so that it overrides browser settings. The only issue I have is that I lost my input masking. But on the bright side the annoying "this site is not secure" is not showing up in firefox.

for me, its not a big deal since the user is already authenticated and its my change user name and password portion of it

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    DO NOT DO THIS. The data will still be sent in plaintext through the network, which is the entire problem with HTTP (not HTTPS) in the first place, hence your "annoying" warning message. It makes no difference that the user is already authenticated because a Man In The Middle can still see the plaintext data and server-side logging may be configured differently (could store the request headers, whereas there are other problems altogether if it would have stored POST data under HTTPS).
    – Jacob
    Jun 15, 2017 at 10:54
  • https encrypts the traffic. If you are using this as part of an Internet application that is public, you do this anyways. Post method prevents bookmarking, and multi Iframes of php code inside an HTML prevents URL injection. Technically, you supposed to put your full path in. If you are deploying then I would recommend loading a $_SESSION variable with the base url that is written in text instead of looking at $_SERVER variables. $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'], and $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] should only be used in non public environments because both have several exploits.
    – drtechno
    Nov 5, 2017 at 18:07
  • Btw, my example is for closed systems that are not connected to the internet in any way
    – drtechno
    Nov 5, 2017 at 18:14
  • no one has touched on using an encyption scheme executed with "java onclick" then submit the form after encryption routine.
    – drtechno
    Nov 5, 2017 at 18:57

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