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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T08:08:54+00:00 2026-05-24T08:08:54+00:00

I need to connect to a SQL Server 2008 instance in another Windows domain

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I need to connect to a SQL Server 2008 instance in another Windows domain to manage it. We only use Windows Authentication.

In Windows XP, I could use the “Manage Network Passwords” feature to store on my local machine my username and password for the remote machine. Doing so would cause SQL Server Management Studio to use those credentials, instead of my local credentials, when connecting to that server. This worked great, and prevented my having to enter a username or password every time I connected with SSMS.

But, Holy Cow, after upgrading to Windows 7, I can no longer do this. Adding my remote domain credentials in Credential Manager fails to produce the desired behavior. SMSS 2008 R2 ignores the stored credentials, and instead, always sends my local credentials, causing the login to fail every time. There’s not even a way, within SMSS, to enter alternate credentials, so the upshot is that I simply cannot access the remote server!

The login fails with the following message:

Login failed. The login is from an
untrusted domain and cannot be used
with Windows authentication.
(Microsoft SQL Server, Error: 18452)

How can I get SMSS on Windows 7 to work the same way it did on Windows XP?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T08:08:55+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 8:08 am

    It looks like there is a bug in the Windows 7 Credential Manager that causes this behavior. After lots of Internet research, I found some ugly workarounds, but also found a great one:

    In Credential Manager, add an entry for the remote server, but instead of adding just the server name, like database.contoso.com, add the server name with the SQL Server port, like so:

    database.contoso.com:1433

    This results in the desired behavior, with no pain!

    Source: http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/sqlsecurity/thread/c05a90e4-cb16-46f6-9072-37083c65696d/

    Also remember, of course, that you need to prefix the remote username in Credential Manager with the remote domain name, like so:

    database\administrator

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