ASP.NET Core ships with support for authenticator applications for individual authentication. Two factor authentication (2FA) authenticator apps, using a Time-based One-time Password Algorithm (TOTP), are the industry recommended approach for 2FA. 2FA using TOTP is preferred to SMS 2FA. An authenticator app provides a 6 to 8 digit code which users must enter after confirming their username and password. Typically an authenticator app is installed on a smartphone.
The ASP.NET Core web app templates support authenticators but don't provide support for QR code generation. QR code generators ease the setup of 2FA. This document provides guidance for Razor Pages and MVC apps on how to add [QR code](https://wikipedia.org/wiki/QR_code) generation to the 2FA configuration page. For guidance that applies to Blazor Web Apps, see <xref:blazor/security/qrcodes-for-authenticator-apps>.
The ASP.NET Core web app templates support authenticators but don't provide support for QR code generation. QR code generators ease the setup of 2FA. This document guides you through adding [QR code](https://wikipedia.org/wiki/QR_code) generation to the 2FA configuration page.
Two-factor authentication does not happen using an external authentication provider, such as [Google](xref:security/authentication/google-logins) or [Facebook](xref:security/authentication/facebook-logins). External logins are protected by whatever mechanism the external login provider provides. Consider, for example, the [Microsoft](xref:security/authentication/microsoft-logins) authentication provider requires a hardware key or another 2FA approach. If the default templates required 2FA for both the web app and the external authentication provider, then users would be required to satisfy two 2FA approaches. Requiring two 2FA approaches deviates from established security practices, which typically rely on a single, strong 2FA method for authentication.
* Follow the instructions in [Scaffold Identity](xref:security/authentication/scaffold-identity) to generate `/Areas/Identity/Pages/Account/Manage/EnableAuthenticator.cshtml`.
* In `/Areas/Identity/Pages/Account/Manage/EnableAuthenticator.cshtml`, locate the `Scripts` section at the end of the file:
The site name in the QR code is taken from the project name you choose when initially creating your project. You can change it by looking for the `GenerateQrCodeUri(string email, string unformattedKey)` method in the `/Areas/Identity/Pages/Account/Manage/EnableAuthenticator.cshtml.cs`.
The second parameter in the call to `string.Format` is your site name, taken from your solution name. It can be changed to any value, but it must always be URL encoded.
## Using a different QR Code library
You can replace the QR Code library with your preferred library. The HTML contains a `qrCode` element into which you can place a QR Code by whatever mechanism your library provides.
TOTP (Time-based One-Time Password) authentication depends on both the server and authenticator device having an accurate time. Tokens only last for 30 seconds. If TOTP 2FA logins are failing, check that the server time is accurate, and preferably synchronized to an accurate NTP service.