1Password Gives Claude Session-Scoped Logins Without Model Access
SiliconANGLE wrote that 1Password launched a Claude browser integration that lets Anthropic’s agent use approved logins without exposing passwords or one-time codes to the model. The release starts on Mac and leaves payment-card support, personal-detail autofill and independent security validation outside the launch record.

1Password has launched a Claude browser integration that lets Anthropic's AI agent use approved logins without seeing the underlying passwords or one-time codes.
SiliconANGLE wrote that 1Password for Claude starts with Mac users and targets agentic browsing sessions where users want Claude to sign in to services without placing raw passwords or multifactor codes inside model memory or a vendor system.
A broader agent roadmap remains pending.
1Password For Claude Keeps Credentials Outside The Model
The browser integration injects credentials into the target website through a channel controlled by 1Password.
Passwords and multifactor one-time codes stay outside Claude, the model's memory and Anthropic's systems.
Access is granted for each session and scoped to approved vault items.
Claude requests the credential needed for a task, and the user approves or denies the request through a biometric prompt.
The permission does not carry into another session or create standing access after the task ends.
Nancy Wang, chief technology officer at 1Password, said the security model for agents should let users permit credential use without handing secrets to the agent.
The launch uses what 1Password calls a zero-exposure security framework.
Agentic Mode Locks The Vault During Browser Control
Agentic Mode is being added for all users alongside the Claude integration.
When a compatible agent takes over the browser, the 1Password vault locks down and only the credentials approved for the active task remain reachable.
Agentic Mode appears inside the 1Password browser extension while a compatible agent works in the browser.
Users retain a switch-off control, and the same release allows credential brokering across several sites during one task.
After autofill, another guard scans the page and removes filled values if a form submission fails.
The credential-brokering feature covers workflows that move across multiple websites.
Only approved items remain available while the agent works.
The broader vault returns to normal user control outside that session.
Mac Release Starts With Login Credentials
1Password for Claude is available to 1Password users on Mac across business, family and individual plans.
Users need the desktop and browser-extension versions of both 1Password and Claude for the initial setup.
The company plans to add support after launch for payment cards and personal details such as names and addresses.
Those items are separate from the initial login-focused Claude integration.
SiliconANGLE also listed 1Password enterprise scale figures: more than 1.5 billion credentials and secrets in its vault, more than 1 million developers and 180,000 businesses using the service, including Figma, GitHub, MongoDB, Notion, Perplexity AI, Salesforce and Stripe.
Those scale figures do not prove adoption of the Claude integration itself.
The launch record does not include Claude user counts, pricing changes, third-party security audit results, or a date for payment-card and personal-detail support.


















