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Passkey Migration

How to Eliminate Password Risk

Passwords remain a leading cause of data breaches, yet most teams still rely on them daily. Passkey migration replaces traditional passwords over time with device-bound, cryptographic credentials that cannot be phished, reused, or stolen from a server. This shift slashes credential risk and helpdesk friction—and most businesses already have the core infrastructure needed to start.

Why passwords are still the biggest risk

Passwords have had decades to prove themselves, and the data tells a consistent story. Year after year, the Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report reveals that more than 80% of data breaches involve compromised credentials.

While multi-factor authentication (MFA) reduced this risk, standard SMS-based codes are highly vulnerable to modern real-time phishing kits. Passkeys close this gap by design. Because a passkey is cryptographically bound to a specific domain, it is technically impossible for a fraudulent login page to trick your device into authenticating.

What a passkey actually is

A passkey is a cryptographic credential based on open FIDO2 and WebAuthn standards. Instead of a shared password stored on a vulnerable server, your device creates a matched pair of digital keys when you register:

  • The Private Key: Stays securely on your local device and never leaves it.
  • The Public Key: Is sent to the service provider.

To log in, you simply use biometrics (Face ID, Touch ID, or Windows Hello) or a device PIN to sign a challenge from the server. No password is ever transmitted, meaning there is nothing for criminals to phish or expose in a server-side data breach.

What passkey migration means in practice

Migration is not a sudden, high-risk cutover. It is a gradual transition where passwords and passkeys run in parallel until the new standard is established across your critical platforms. If your team uses Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace, you do not need new infrastructure. Google has supported passkeys since 2023, and Microsoft enabled them by default for new Entra ID accounts in May 2025. You can begin right away.

How to approach rollout without disruption

  1. Start with Admins and Power Users: Target high-risk accounts first. They reset passwords most often and will provide valuable feedback on any initial friction.
  2. Run Dual Authentication Methods: Allow users to log in with passkeys on enrolled devices while falling back to a password on un-enrolled kit. This prevents anyone from being locked out mid-project.
  3. Bridge the Gaps with a Password Manager: For legacy platforms that do not yet support passkeys, use a password manager to generate unique credentials. When those services finally upgrade, migrating becomes a simple enrollment step.

Shift the burden from people to process

Ready to start your passwordless journey? Contact us to map out your environment, identify passkey-ready platforms, and build a smooth migration plan for your team.

Watch Guard network security partner
Datto ticketing and management system
Huntress security partner
Dell Technologies and services
Hyper-V routing technologies
BitDefender defending your hardware
Microsoft 365 professional services
3CX VoIP phone systems
Veeam partner
Signable partner
Cyber Essentials Certification
Power Automate automation workflows
GTIA
Watch Guard network security partner
Datto ticketing and management system
Huntress security partner
Dell Technologies and services
Hyper-V routing technologies
BitDefender defending your hardware
Microsoft 365 professional services
3CX VoIP phone systems
Veeam partner
Signable partner
Cyber Essentials Certification
Power Automate automation workflows
GTIA
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