Apple has been improving password management over the last several years to encourage people to use separate, hard-to-guess passwords for each site, and the latest improvement adds password sharing.
In iOS 17, Family Passwords is designed to let you share your passwords and passkeys with friends and family members. Using the Passwords section of the Settings app, you can create a group of people to share passwords with.
Using a setup process, you can select trusted contacts to share information with. Each person who is in the group can select passwords and passkeys to share with others. You can, for example, share passwords to streaming services and online bill paying sites without having to share the password for your bank.
You can select specific passwords to share after the group is created, and then people in the group can upload their own. Each participant can edit and add passwords, with changes synced across the entire group. There are options to create multiple groups, so you can have a group with a spouse and children and then a separate group with just a spouse, or a group of roommates and friends.
The person who created the group can add and delete people at will, and the entire group can be deleted as well. Adding people to a group requires the person to be in your Contact list, and everyone also must be running the iOS 17 update.
Like regular passwords, shared passwords are stored in iCloud Keychain and are end-to-end encrypted. Passkeys, Apple's device-verified alternative to passwords, can also be shared.
The addition of multi-user password sharing brings Apple's free built-in Password functionality closer to third-party apps like 1Password and LastPass, as there was previously no simple, free, and secure way to share passwords between Apple device users.
Top Rated Comments
This sharing requires iOS 17 (and presumably macOS 14). I currently have 1Password running on my Apple devices ranging from iOS 16 and macOS 13 down to iOS 12 and macOS 10.12.
Apparently there is a Windows app (or at least browser extension?) for iCloud Passwords, but on macOS, if you don't use Safari, you're completely out of luck.
And none of this takes into account 1Password's pivot into enterprise. I don't know what kind of inroads they've made there, but this sharing is likely not enterprise-grade (i.e. can it be remotely configured?).
1Password, Enpass, Bitwarden...none of them will be going away as a result of this announcement. The people who use a password manager other than iCloud Passwords right now are likely doing so because of a wealth of other features, not just sharing, none of which this new feature addresses.
Going to use the heck out of this. (and be Electron free)
Edit: Using Shortcuts app, create a new shortcut to Open URL „prefs:root=PASSWORDS“ (without quotation marks) as documented by Viticci ('https://www.macstories.net/ios/a-comprehensive-guide-to-all-120-settings-urls-supported-by-ios-and-ipados-13-1/') and add it to your home screen.