02-27-2025 10:23 AM - edited 03-11-2025 01:39 PM
Exciting news! We're testing passwords in the sidebar in Nightly 138—a new way to access and manage your saved passwords without interrupting your flow. No need to open a new tab or window to look up a password—just open the sidebar, and your logins are right where you need them, when you need them.
1️⃣ Update to the latest Firefox Nightly (138).
2️⃣ Go to Settings > Firefox Labs and follow the instructions to enable Passwords in the Sidebar.
The following video demonstrates how to enable the feature:
We’d love to hear what you think! Your feedback will help shape the future of this feature.
We’re especially interested in hearing about:
1️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, how satisfied are you with having access to your saved passwords in the sidebar? (1 = Very dissatisfied, 5 = Very satisfied, or I don’t use the sidebar to access my passwords)
2️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, to what extent do you agree with this statement: "Managing passwords in the sidebar easier than other ways in Firefox"? (1 = Strongly disagree, 5 = Strongly agree, or I don’t use the sidebar for managing passwords)
3️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, does having passwords in the sidebar make you more or less likely to save passwords in Firefox? (1 = Much less likely, 5 = Much more likely)
(Please note: the feature is currently available in English only in Nightly, with gradual rollout to additional locales planned.)
03-07-2025 10:27 AM - edited 03-07-2025 10:29 AM
Can the performance be improved and / or the view be cached? I have 822 saved passwords. And it takes about three seconds until the entries becomes visible. This is on a MacBook Pro with M1 Pro, that's not the slowest device. It also takes so long every time I switch between the sidebars. I would expect that there is no delay at all after the passwords were loaded once. The about:logins page is much faster.
Also, the font sizes of the labels ("Website", "Username", "Password") are very small on macOS, making it difficult to read.
03-11-2025 01:49 PM - edited 03-11-2025 01:52 PM
Thanks for your feedback! Performance optimizations would definitely be something we’d explore if we move forward with a broader rollout. Appreciate the note on font size as well.
A few follow up questions:
1️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, how satisfied are you with having access to your saved passwords in the sidebar? (1 = Very dissatisfied, 5 = Very satisfied, or I don’t use the sidebar to access my passwords)
2️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, to what extent do you agree with this statement: "Managing passwords in the sidebar easier than other ways in Firefox"? (1 = Strongly disagree, 5 = Strongly agree, or I don’t use the sidebar for managing passwords)
3️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, does having passwords in the sidebar make you more or less likely to save passwords in Firefox? (1 = Much less likely, 5 = Much more likely)
03-15-2025 02:33 AM
It would feel wrong for me to rate how satisfied or dissatisfied I am, as I am generally not a sidebar user and therefore not in the target group for this feature. So I won't use it, but I can imagine that it is a good feature for other users as soon as the performance problems are solved.
03-11-2025 05:11 AM
Things I noticed:
03-11-2025 01:52 PM
Thanks for the detailed feedback @zade! Performance optimizations and UI refinements, are definitely things we’d explore further if we move forward with a broader rollout. This kind of input is super helpful.
A few follow up questions:
1️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, how satisfied are you with having access to your saved passwords in the sidebar? (1 = Very dissatisfied, 5 = Very satisfied, or I don’t use the sidebar to access my passwords)
2️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, to what extent do you agree with this statement: "Managing passwords in the sidebar easier than other ways in Firefox"? (1 = Strongly disagree, 5 = Strongly agree, or I don’t use the sidebar for managing passwords)
3️⃣ On a scale of 1 to 5, does having passwords in the sidebar make you more or less likely to save passwords in Firefox? (1 = Much less likely, 5 = Much more likely)
03-17-2025 12:25 PM - edited 03-17-2025 12:27 PM
I haven't tested it, but judging by the screen recording above... I love it!
It's almost revolutionary compared to the current options to access passwords. Perhaps it might even push me to give the new sidebar a go...
Nevertheless, I think absolute perfection would be reached if the sidebar would automatically scroll the logins to the one(s) matching the URL of the active website! It would be a joy, especially if you have a lot of entries, to have an almost-one-click solution! Besides, you don't really need (most of the times) ALL logins, just the corresponding ones. If it can't find a match, then it would start at the top of the list.
Also I'm not sure if it's already the case, since again I haven't tested, but it could be a good thing to require a verification, if configured, such as the master password or biometric login, before showing the logins...
As for the numbers in question, I'd say respectively I don't use the sidebar to access my passwords (yet), 6 (or 5 if you prefer 🙂) and 3 (it would stay the same).
03-19-2025 08:56 AM
This is not a feature I would've asked for but I'm rather enjoying it. Gives me another reason to use the sidebar.
03-19-2025 01:08 PM
I like it and am using it. I would give it a 5/5 but passwords are painfully slow and that is a huge frustration for me. I also feel like a need the ability to add notes to passwords, everything is a big clutter right now, hard to distinguish different logins, what they are for etc.
E.g., if I'm looking for a particular Gmail login, I don't know what to search for. "Google" gives way too many results; "gmail" not enough. I need to know to search for "accounts.google.com" or something. A searchable note, "my developer gmail" would solve this.