Passkeys are transforming how we secure digital identities, moving authentication away from fragile, easily stolen passwords toward device-bound cryptographic security.
Passwords have long been the weakest link in digital security, vulnerable to breaches, phishing, and credential stuffing. Passkeys, built on FIDO2 and WebAuthn standards and recommended by NIST, replace shared secrets with asymmetrical cryptography tied to a user’s device.
Google recently surpassed 1 billion passkey authentications across 400 million accounts, reporting that passkeys are 50% faster and 30% more successful than traditional passwords. Retail giant Amazon has seen similar momentum, with 175 million customers adopting the technology to sign in six times faster than before.
Microsoft’s passkey sign-ins show a 98% success rate (vs. 32% for passwords) and are up to eight times faster than password and MFA flows. Nearly 1 million passkeys are registered daily.
As 87% of businesses now prioritize passkey deployment, the era of the “forgotten password” is being replaced by a hardware-backed trust model that makes digital life both easier to access and harder to hack. By reducing reliance on passwords, passkeys not only improve security but also enhance usability, marking a standards-driven evolution in how trust is established across the internet.








