Anyone setting up a new Microsoft account will soon find they’re encouraged to use a passkey during the sign-up process.

Microsoft introduced passkey support across most of its consumer apps last year, allowing users to sign into their accounts without the need for 2FA methods or remembering long passwords. A year later, it’s removing passwords as the default and encouraging all new signups to use passkeys.

PCMag attempted to sign up for a new Microsoft account on May 2, but it still asked for a password at the time of publication. Microsoft hasn’t shared an exact timeframe for when the change will take place, but you should expect it to happen in the coming days.

This is the first time a new account can be entirely passwordless. Previously, it had to have one alongside your passkey.

In a blog post, Microsoft says 98% of passkey attempts to log in are successful, while passwords are only at 32%. Microsoft is also introducing what it calls a “streamlined” sign-in experience for all accounts that “prioritizes passwordless methods for sign-in and sign-up.” It means some UX design changes to highlight passkey functionality.


More

The Hacker News: Microsoft Removes Password Management from Authenticator App Starting August 2025

Microsoft has said that it’s ending support for passwords in its Authenticator app starting August…

Read More →

PCmag: This Password Manager Now Lets You Create an Account Without a Password

Dashlane lets you open an account with a FIDO2-spec USB security key as your authentication.…

Read More →

ZDNET: Facebook’s new passkey support could soon let you ditch your password forever

For all of us who hate passwords, passkeys represent a simpler and safer way of authenticating online…

Read More →