HotKey OTP lives in your menu bar and types your two-factor codes wherever your cursor is. Every secret stays encrypted in the macOS Keychain — and syncs across your Macs with iCloud.
14 days free · then $4.99/month · macOS 13 Ventura or later
Stop reaching for your phone every time a site asks for a code.
Assign a key combo to each account. Press it in any app — the current code is copied, with a tiny “Code copied” confirmation.
Turn on auto-paste and the code is typed straight into the field your cursor is in. No ⌘V, no switching windows.
Scan a QR right off your screen, import an image file, paste an otpauth:// link, or type a key by hand. Google Authenticator export links work too.
Secrets are stored in the macOS Keychain, protected by your account password and Touch ID. They never live in plain text.
Add an account on one Mac, it appears on the others — carried end-to-end encrypted by iCloud Keychain. Nothing passes through our servers.
TOTP and HOTP, SHA-1/256/512, 6–8 digits, custom periods. If an app supports authenticator codes, HotKey OTP speaks its format.
Try everything for 14 days. No card required to start.
Cancel anytime · Secure checkout by Polar
In the macOS Keychain on your own device, encrypted by the system. With iCloud Keychain turned on, they sync end-to-end encrypted between your Apple devices. We never see or store your 2FA secrets — the only thing the app sends over the network is your license key, to confirm your subscription is active.
On your phone, open Google Authenticator → Transfer accounts → Export, and show the QR on screen. In HotKey OTP, choose Add → Scan screen (or photograph the QR and use Add → Image file). A single export QR can carry several accounts at once.
Yes — macOS asks for Accessibility permission the first time you enable auto-paste, the same as 1Password or Raycast. If you skip it, hotkeys still copy the code to your clipboard.
Your subscription covers up to 3 devices. You can release a device from the app at any time to free up a slot.
macOS 13 Ventura or later. The app is notarized by Apple, so it opens with no security warnings.