FactorCat vs Ente Auth

Ente Auth is a solid open-source authenticator. FactorCat adds browser auto-fill, push-to-approve, and vault flexibility.

Ente Auth: the open-source contender

Ente Auth emerged as a popular alternative when Authy discontinued its desktop app. It's fully open-source, supports end-to-end encrypted cloud backups, and has a clean interface. If you want a traditional authenticator app with strong privacy credentials, Ente Auth is a legitimate choice.

Side-by-side comparison

FactorCat Ente Auth
Browser auto-fillYes — push approve + auto-fillNo
Push notificationsYes — tap to approveNo
Browser extensionYes (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge)No (desktop app available)
Desktop accessBrowser extension + web dashboardDesktop app (Electron)
E2E encrypted backupLocked Vault (zero-trust, free)Yes (all tokens, free)
Cloud-managed optionCloud Vault (convenience, free)No — E2E only
Open sourceExtension (planned)Fully open source (client + server)
Token sharingYes — share-to-invite + anonymous linksNo
Self-hostingNoYes
PriceFree (50 factors) / Pro $24/yrFree

Where Ente Auth is better

Where FactorCat is better

The honest take

Ente Auth is a great authenticator, especially for the privacy-conscious community that values full open-source and self-hosting. If browser auto-fill and push-to-approve aren't important to you, Ente Auth is a solid choice.

FactorCat is for people who want MFA to be invisible — where the browser and phone work together so you never have to manually copy a code again. Different priorities, both valid.

Ready to switch?

Get FactorCat free — available on iOS, Android, Chrome, and the web.

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