

LastPass Family subscribers get six LastPass Premium licenses, unlimited shared folders, and access to the LastPass family dashboard. The top tier for non-corporate accounts is LastPass Family, which costs $48 per year.
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In addition to all the free version’s features, you gain one-to-many password sharing, advanced multi-factor options (such as YubiKey support), Emergency Access features (password inheritance), dark web monitoring, priority tech support, the LastPass for Applications app, and 1GB encrypted file storage. Bitwarden’s free version does not impose limitations related to cross-device syncing or total passwords. Then there's Dashlane and Keeper, which are free if you use them on a single device. Other free password managers, such as Enpass, limit the number of passwords free users can save. LastPass' free tier limits credential sharing to one-on-one, restricts vault syncing to a single device, and does not offer advanced multi-factor authentication options. The Free edition includes standard password manager capabilities such as auto-filling, a password generator, secure notes, a password strength report, and support for multi-factor authentication. LastPass offers three different plans for consumers: Free, Premium, and Family. This review, however, outlines the pricing, features, and notes from our hands-on tests with LastPass. The breach and security incident also revealed that LastPass stores unencrypted URLs in user vaults, a practice that can potentially expose users' credentials.Īs of now, we no longer recommend LastPass because we cannot trust the company to alert users promptly about future security incidents. In 2022, LastPass failed to immediately inform users after a malicious third party stole data related to their encrypted vaults.

At PCMag, we expect password management companies to secure users' credentials and inform customers when their vaults may be at risk.

Using a password manager is difficult without trusting the company behind the product. Keeping track of dozens or hundreds of strong and unique passwords isn't possible without a password manager. At this time, we recommend open-source Editors' Choice winner Bitwarden for anyone looking to switch to a new password manager.
