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Midjourney Account Binding and Switching Tutorial: Synchronized Login on Web and Discord

2/14/2026
ChatGPT

This tutorial only covers Midjourney account operations: how to log in on the web, link Discord, and quickly switch between multiple accounts. The steps aren’t complicated, but it’s easy to get stuck on details like authorization, cache, and the “looks like I’m logged in but I still can’t get in” situation. Follow the steps below and you can usually get it done in one go.

Logging in to Midjourney on the web: first figure out which entry point you’re using

After opening the Midjourney official site, the most common login method is authorizing via a Discord account; some users will also see a Google login entry. Whichever method you use to log in the first time, try to keep using the same one afterward, otherwise it’s very easy to get the illusion of “login successful but the resources aren’t in the same account.”

After logging in, it’s recommended that you immediately go to your Midjourney profile page to check whether you can see your gallery, generation history, and subscription status. If the page is blank or the data looks wrong, first consider whether you logged into a different Discord account or a different browser profile.

Linking Discord to Midjourney: authorization essentials and common pitfalls

The core of the Midjourney–Discord connection is “authorizing the app,” not simply adding a server. Go to the account settings/connections section in the Midjourney web app, follow the prompts to complete Discord authorization, and make sure the Discord username shown in the authorization pop-up is the one you actually want to link.

A common pitfall is this: Discord is open on your computer under Account A, but the browser authorization pop-up actually uses the already-logged-in state of Account B. In that case, log out of Discord on the web first, then restart Midjourney’s linking/authorization flow—this is usually cleaner.

Switching Midjourney accounts: what to do on the web and on Discord

To switch Midjourney accounts on the web, the most reliable method is to log out of Midjourney on its website first, then log out of Discord-related login states in the browser as well, and then re-authorize and log into Midjourney with the target Discord account. If you manage multiple Midjourney accounts, it’s recommended to isolate logins using different browser profiles or incognito windows to reduce account mix-ups.

Switching on Discord is similar: log out of the current Discord account, log into another account, then go back to the Midjourney-related channel or DM window and send commands. Midjourney identifies you by your current Discord identity; if you switch to the wrong account, your generation permissions, queue, and history will all follow that identity.

After switching, you can’t see your work / permissions look abnormal: three quick checks are enough

Step 1: confirm the account info shown on the Midjourney web app, especially whether the Discord username is correct. Step 2: check whether the browser has extensions blocking authorization (ad blockers and privacy extensions can affect Midjourney redirects). Step 3: clear the site cache, or switch to a different browser profile and log in again.

If you can log into the Midjourney web app but Discord commands say you lack permission, it’s usually because the account doesn’t match or the authorization hasn’t fully synced. Re-doing Midjourney’s Discord authorization linking often has a higher success rate than repeatedly refreshing.

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