What I like most about HeyLogin is that it actually delivers on the “no password, just log in” promise in day-to-day use. On my Mac, using my phone as the secure key to approve logins feels both natural and fast, and I don’t have to think about master passwords, browser profiles, or which vault I’m in. On iOS, AutoFill behaves the way I want a password tool to behave: I tap, Face ID confirms, and I’m in. I also appreciate that the whole system leans on hardware-backed security and avoids the traditional “one giant master password” approach, which gives me a bit more confidence when I’m logging into school systems, SaaS dashboards, and financial tools from multiple devices. From a workflow perspective, HeyLogin fits nicely into a busy, multi-account environment. I often switch between personal, teaching, and admin logins, and the login mask and quick approvals reduce the friction I usually feel when juggling several password managers or browser profiles. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.
The main friction points I run into are around edge cases and occasional reliability. Every once in a while, the phone approval flow feels a bit slower than I expect, especially when I’m moving quickly between tabs or waking my Mac from sleep and want an immediate login. I’ve also hit some occasional quirks on iOS where AutoFill doesn’t immediately suggest the right entry, which forces me to search manually when I’m in the middle of something else. For someone who lives in productivity apps all day, those small speed bumps add up. I’d also love to see even deeper macOS-level integration and some power-user controls for organizing and tagging logins at scale. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.


