Passkeys are now supported in Uniqkey. You can register passkeys for supported services, use them alongside existing passwords, and add more than one passkey per login. This is the first step toward simpler, stronger sign in across your organisation.
What you can do today
- Enable passkeys for logins that support them
- Register a passkey for each supported service in Uniqkey
- Keep the password as a fallback during rollout
- Add multiple passkeys per login for continuity
Why this matters
Passkeys use public key cryptography so users authenticate without sharing a reusable secret. This reduces exposure to phishing, credential reuse and brute force attacks, and lowers time spent on password resets, delivering stronger security with less friction.
Foundation for passwordless security
This release introduces phishing resistant authentication and moves sign in away from reusable secrets while preserving flexibility. Future updates will expand coverage and connect passkeys to Security Score to track adoption and posture.
Important to know
- If a password still works, that account can still be compromised through the password
- Where passwords remain, strong hygiene still applies
- Security Score behaviour is unchanged in this release
Built the Uniqkey way
- Simple for teams to adopt stronger authentication
- Centrally managed for visibility and control across all credentials
- Operated within European infrastructure with European ownership
What is a passkey
A passkey replaces a password with a cryptographic key pair. During sign in, you prove you hold the key rather than sending a password, which makes phishing and credential stuffing far less effective.