
We looked carefully at what each password manager provides for password storage and other key resources at paid tiers of service, whether they provide a functional free version (and if so, how functional that free version is) and overall value-for-money.īitwarden is one of the most highly secure password managers on the market and has been through third-party security audits by the Cure53 firm. We looked at the tools each application provides for doing this as securely as possible, the features they provide for controlling this kind of access, the tiers of service at which each of them allows sharing with multiple or unlimited users and any particularly useful aspects of each solution’s approach to password sharing. There are times when it’s necessary to share passwords between certain users. An up-to-date password manager should also offer the convenience of biometric logins for your smartphone. The less time you have to spend working out how the software accomplishes certain tasks, the more time you can spend actively securing your passwords, and time is money for businesses and families alike. The best password managers should run as seamlessly as possible on any device, should be able to synchronize data between unlimited numbers of devices and should work with the broadest possible range of mobile, desktop and laptop operating systems as well as the most popular web browsers.Ī high-quality password manager should be painless to set up and intuitive to use.

We looked for whether each app provides broad-based compatibility with multiple devices, browsers, and operating systems.


Modern security practices should also, ideally, include third-party security audits. It’s critical for a password manager to store and transmit information securely, to provide multifactor authentication - or at the very least the option for two-factor authentication - to further impede hacking attempts and to encrypt data in ways that can’t be decrypted even with brute-force cryptanalytic attacks.
