Your AWS Credentials

When you create an AWS account, AWS assigns you a pair of related credentials:

These are your AWS access key identifiers.

[Caution]Caution

Your Secret Access Key is a secret and only you and AWS should know it. It is important to keep it confidential to protect your account. Never include it in your requests to AWS, and never e-mail it to anyone. Do not share it outside your organization, even if an inquiry appears to come from AWS or Amazon.com. No one who legitimately represents Amazon will ever ask you for your Secret Access Key.

The Access Key ID is associated with your AWS account. You include it in AWS service requests to identify yourself as the sender of the request.

The Access Key ID is not a secret, and anyone could use your Access Key ID in requests to AWS. To provide proof that you truly are the sender of the request, you must also include a digital signature. For all requests except those using SOAP with WS-Security, you calculate the signature using your Secret Access Key. AWS uses the Access Key ID in the request to look up your Secret Access Key and then calculates a digital signature with the key. If the signature AWS calculates matches the signature you sent, the request is considered authentic. Otherwise, the request fails authentication and is not processed.

Your Access Key ID and Secret Access Key are displayed to you when you create your AWS account. They are not e-mailed to you. If you need to see them again, you can view them at any time from your AWS account.

To view your AWS access identifiers

  1. Go to the Amazon Web Services web site at http://aws.amazon.com.

  2. Point to Your Web Services Account to display a list of options.

  3. Click View Access Key Identifiers and log in to your AWS account.

Your Access Key ID and Secret Access Key are displayed on the resulting AWS Access Identifiers page.

AWS Access Identifiers Page