Skip the awkward hand-wave at the barista
WifiPass shows you the password for the place you walked into 30 seconds ago — without standing in line, without squinting at a chalkboard, without restarting your phone. 50 million working credentials across 180+ countries means the answer is usually already there.
Where the passwords come from
Every hotspot is pinned by a traveler who just used it. The community votes on what still works — stale entries fade out naturally, so the first password the app shows you is the one that connected most recently.
You can contribute too: tap "Add a hotspot", drop a pin, type the password, save. It takes about 10 seconds and helps the next person find the same network 5 minutes later.
Built for the way you actually order coffee
- Tap to copy: one motion, into your clipboard. Paste in iOS WiFi settings. Done.
- Verified: a green checkmark next to passwords confirmed by recent visitors.
- Offline-aware: if you opened the map while you had signal, the venue stays readable when you walk inside.
- Native iOS: no clunky web view, no nag screens, no battery drain.
Is sharing café WiFi passwords legal?
WifiPass is intended for hotspots that the venue makes publicly available to its guests — cafés, hotels, restaurants, airports. We rely on contributors to share only credentials the venue has authorized for guest use. Adding a private home or office network is against our terms, and we remove submissions that violate them.
What happens after you tap "Get on App Store"
Anonymous sign-in. Tap to allow location (we ask once and never store the coordinates server-side). The map opens centered on you, every nearby café pin is a few hundred meters away. Tap one. Tap copy. You're online.
Want the bigger picture? See the full WifiPass map →