1Password now lets Claude log in to sites without seeing your passwords — use these 7 prompts to test this new feature

There is such a thing as giving up too much of your personal information to a chatbot.
Letting a chatbot know all about your bank account, giving it the names of your closest friends & family members and exposing it to your current address just isn’t the way to go. But there is a long list of AI password managers that store, protect, and automatically change your passwords to keep you safe from any sort of hacks & scams.
While 1Password may not be powered by AI, it handles the same tasks as those aforementioned password managers while also auto-filling login credentials across all your devices and generating strong, unique passwords for the sites you regularly visit. Speaking of AI, 1Password and Claude have now joined forces to not only ensure your online safety stays intact, but also to handle everyday tasks for you that require your login credentials.
And best of all, Claude won’t ever actually see your passwords whenever it’s logging into your sites to handle whatever job you’ve just given it.
Say hello to 1Password for Claude
Now that 1Password is capable of working in conjunction with Claude, here’s how it works: whenever Claude is given a task that requires it to sign in, 1Password notifies its users about which credential is being requested by the chatbot and why.
After a user approves Claude’s login attempt, 1Password enters the password and makes sure to never expose it to Claude. Claude is only concerned with completing the job you’ve given it, while 1Password works simultaneously to check that your credentials have not been compromised.
To take advantage of this new feature, you must own a Mac device and have access to 1Password’s business, family, or individual subscription plan. Enabling it means your device has to have the 1Password desktop app, the 1Password browser extension, the Claude desktop app and the Claude in Chrome browser extension. You can take a look at these detailed directions on how to make good use of this new feature.
1Password is obviously aware of its users’ fears concerning browser-based AI agents taking over and possibly seeing the login details stored in their 1Password account. In an official blog post posted by the company, it made mention of a new “Agentic Mode” that’s meant to keep you safe should this ever happen.
“When a compatible AI agent takes over, the 1Password extension automatically locks down,” the blog explained. “The interface is hidden, and the agent can only use the logins and one-time codes explicitly approved for the current task. The rest of the vault stays out of reach.”
Some of the examples 1Password provides for their new Claude integration include the chatbot logging in to handle your booking travel duties, presenting you with a Stripe revenue summary and redeeming your credits on Audible. I hopped into Claude and asked it to come up with the sort of prompts that act as tasks for the chatbot that require it to act on a site it needs to log into on your behalf:
- Check my Audible wishlist and redeem this month's credit on whichever title has the best reviews.
- Log into my [name of airline] account and check if my seat can be upgraded with my frequent flyer miles.
- Go to [name of electric company's site] and see if my bill went up this month.
- Compare prices for [name of item] across the sites I have accounts on, then order from whichever is cheapest.
- Update my shipping address on my [name of online retailer] account.
- Pull a revenue summary from my Stripe dashboard and flag anything unusual.
- Check my business bank account for any suspicious transactions this week.
Bottom line
1Password for Claude sounds and looks like a trustworthy proposition since it goes out of its way to complete any sort of tasks that require a sign-in and make sure your passwords are never exposed to AI. The password manager company will release details about payment cards and identity details sometime after launch.
More from Tom’s Guide
This is a preview from the original publisher. Continue reading at the source:
Read Full Article on tomsguide.com →
