What this category really covers
Browser automation with login means using a browser agent, Playwright script, hosted browser, or local profile to complete tasks after authentication. For developers, QA teams, growth operators, and support teams automating web workflows that require signed-in accounts, the important question is not whether the category sounds agentic. The important question is whether the tool can move a real workflow from input to action while keeping the user in control of data, credentials, approvals, and outputs. ClawSites treats this category as a practical buying and building map, so the page points readers toward tools that already exist in the directory instead of turning the topic into a loose trend explanation.
The surface includes cookies, storage state, persistent profiles, 2FA prompts, passkeys, CAPTCHA interruptions, SSO redirects, browser fingerprints, downloads, forms, screenshots, traces, and approval prompts. That surface matters because most agent failures happen at the boundary between a model and the outside world: a browser changes, a repo has hidden conventions, a payment action needs authorization, a memory store saves the wrong detail, or an integration exposes more scope than the task needs. A useful comparison should describe the operating surface, the setup burden, the review point, and the evidence a buyer should check before giving an agent more authority.
- Start with the workflow outcome: an authenticated browser workflow that can reuse session state, handle interruption, capture evidence, and pause before risky submissions
- Map tool access before comparing brands or model claims.
- Check whether the tool is a complete product, framework, server, SDK, or hosted runtime.
- Use ClawSites listings to compare screenshots, descriptions, categories, and related tools.