Using one of the best password managers will make your life both easier and more secure. You won't need to remember a unique, long, complex password for every one of your online accounts.

Every password manager remembers your passwords for you, cutting down your risk when there's a massive data breach, and quickly generates new, strong passwords so you'll never have to reuse another one. The only password you'll need to remember is the single "master" password to the password manager itself.

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All these password managers secure your data, on your machine and in the cloud, with the toughest form of encryption in wide usage today. All have software for Windows, macOS, Android and iOS.

All can be installed on an unlimited number of devices for a single (usually paid) account and store an unlimited, or nearly unlimited, number of passwords.

Most offer a two-factor authentication option for master passwords. But none can recover your master password for you if you forget it, although some let you reset that password to something else.

What are the best password managers?

We extensively tested several services, focusing on user experience, platform support, security and overall performance. We think the best password manager is LastPass for its ease of use, convenience, security and price.

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LastPass has the best free tier of any password manager. It includes unlimited syncing across all your devices, autofilling and basic two-factor authentication (2FA). This is all most users need, and they won't have to pay a dime.

LastPass's paid tier adds encrypted online storage, advanced 2FA, dark-web monitoring of your accounts and emergency access for your friends and loved ones. At $36 per year, it's not expensive, and the family plan covers up to six people for $48 per year.

Keeper is a close runner-up for best password manager. Its free tier won't let you sync your devices, but its inexpensive ($35/year) premium tier is a close match for LastPass. Keeper also has a tight focus on user privacy and security.

Our previous top pick, Dashlane, has a great desktop application and can change hundreds of your passwords at once. But Dashlane's free tier is very limited and its paid plan is pricey at $60/year.

1Password ($36/year), a longtime favorite of Mac users, has no free tier, but it's a strong contender if you live an Apple lifestyle. Windows and Android users who travel a lot should consider 1Password for its unique Travel Mode, which can temporarily delete stored passwords to protect them from snoopy border guards.

The best password managers you can buy today

(Image credit: LastPass)

1. LastPass The best password manager overall Platforms: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, Chrome OS | Free-version limitations: Limited password sharing, few 2FA options | Two-factor authentication: Yes | Browser plugins: Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari, Edge, Opera | Form filling: Yes | Mobile app PIN unlock: Yes | Biometric login: Face ID, Touch ID on iOS & macOS, most Android & Windows fingerprint readers LastPass Premium $3 /mth LastPass Families $4 /mth Visit Site at LastPass Feature-rich free version Extensive two-factor-authentication options Good, consistent design throughout Excellent family-plan pricing Bare-bones stand-alone desktop apps

LastPass is our choice for best password manager because of its ease of use, its support for all major platforms, its wide range of features and its excellent free tier.

The free version of LastPass syncs across an unlimited number of devices and has nearly as many features as the paid version, such as a password generator, unlimited passwords and secure storage. It may be all the password manager you need.

The paid version adds support for physical two-factor-authentication keys, provides 1GB of online file storage and dark-web monitoring of your accounts and gives you access to premium tech support. The paid version's yearly price has gone from $12 to $36 in the past few years, but it's still fairly inexpensive.

You don't need to install an application on your computer to use LastPass. Instead, the software can live entirely in browser extensions and in the full-featured web interface.

There are desktop applications for Windows and Mac, with some limits. Meanwhile, the local-network-only LastPass Pocket option for Windows and Linux has been discontinued, as has password filling for Windows applications.

Read our full LastPass review.

(Image credit: Keeper)

Keeper ($27.99 per year for Tom's Guide readers) is fast and full-featured, has a robust web interface, stores files and documents of any kind, offers perhaps the best security of any password manager and has a premium service cheaper than both Dashlane and LastPass. Its free tier gives you everything except syncing among devices.

The trade-off for that enhanced security is a bit of inconvenience. Keeper chooses not to have a bulk password changer and it won't let you create a PIN to quickly access the mobile app. If you have an older phone that can't read your fingerprint or your face, you'll have to enter the full master password every time.

For an extra $30 per year, Keeper monitors the internet for unauthorized use of your personal data. It also offers a secure messaging service; you can get both plus the premium password manager and 10GB of secure cloud storage for $85 per year.

Read our full Keeper review.

(Image credit: Dashlane)

3. Dashlane The best password-manager desktop-app interface Platforms: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, Chrome OS | Free-version limitations: Single device; 50 passwords max | Two-factor authentication: Yes | Browser plugins: Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari, Edge | Form filling: Yes | Mobile app PIN unlock: Yes | Biometric login: Face ID, Pixel Face Unlock, Touch ID on iOS & macOS, some Android & Windows fingerprint readers Visit Site Intuitive interface across all platforms Built-in, unlimited VPN service Optional identity protection Quite expensive Web interface is limited

Dashlane matches LastPass in platform support and has better desktop software. Its killer feature remains the bulk password changer that can reset hundreds of passwords at once, although the sites that support it aren't the best-known.

The password manager is well designed, easy to use and excellent at filling out your personal information in online forms. A scanner goes through your email inbox to find online accounts you may have forgotten about.

Dashlane's drawback is its high price. Its Premium plan is $60 per year, while Dashlane's free plan is limited to 50 sets of credentials and won't let you sync among devices.

On the upside, the Premium plan has dark-web monitoring and unlimited VPN service. The Premium Plus plan ($120 per year) adds credit monitoring, identity-restoration assistance and identity-theft insurance at bargain rates. All together, these non-password-management features may justify the high prices.

Read our full Dashlane review.

(Image credit: 1Password)

4. 1Password Best for Mac and iOS users Platforms: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android. Linux, Chrome OS, Darwin, FreeBSD, OpenBSD | Free-version limitations: No more free version | Two-factor authentication: Yes | Browser plugins: Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, Brave | Form filling: Yes | Mobile app PIN unlock: Yes | Biometric login: Face ID, Pixel Face Unlock, Touch ID on iOS & macOS, Windows Hello, most Android fingerprint readers Visit Site Travel Mode keeps out prying eyes Strong organizational tools Secret Key encryption Weak mobile experience Outdated design on desktop

1Password provides a better experience on Mac and iOS users than on Android or Windows users, but the design and user interface seem outdated on all the desktop and mobile apps.

However, 1Password's browser extensions for Brave, Chrome and Firefox, dubbed 1Password X, are great. They improve upon the desktop experience and work directly with web browsers instead of operating systems. They also extend 1Password to Chromebook and Linux users, although a beta version of a 1Password Linux application recently became available.

1Password's killer feature is a Travel Mode that deletes sensitive data from your devices (you'll get it back later) so that snooping border-control agents can't find it. 1Password also has great form-filling abilities and true two-factor authentication.

1Password asks new users to sign up for a $36 yearly cloud subscription, although for $65, Mac users can buy the older stand-alone application that lets them sync devices locally. Alas, the limited free version of 1Password has been discontinued.

Read our full 1Password review.

(Image credit: RoboForm)

5. RoboForm Basic, but reliable and inexpensive Platforms: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, Chrome OS | Free-version limitations: Single device; no 2FA | Two-factor authentication: Yes | Browser plugins: Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari, Edge, Opera | Form filling: Yes | Mobile app PIN unlock: Yes | Biometric login: Face ID, Touch ID on iOS & macOS, Windows Hello, Pixel Face Unlock,most Android fingerprint readers RoboForm Everywhere $16.68 /year RoboForm Everywhere Family $33.40 /year Visit Site at Roboform Robust form filling Relatively inexpensive Attractive mobile apps, web interface Unintuitive desktop apps Features don't match top rivals

RoboForm has been around since 1999, but its recently overhauled web interface and mobile apps are modern and responsive. The desktop app still feels a bit clunky, yet retains RoboForm's famously excellent form-filling.

RoboForm offers quite a few features, such as password sharing, two-factor authentication and a password generator. Their functionality is a bit limited compared to some other password managers, but they'll do the job.

The free tier works well and includes most RoboForm features. However, it won't sync across multiple devices. At a list price of $24 per year (plus a 30% discount for Tom's Guide readers), RoboForm's premium version is cheaper than almost every other password manager, and may be just the thing for someone seeking the basics at a budget price.

Read our full RoboForm review.

(Image credit: Blur)

6. Blur OK at managing passwords, great at protecting privacy Platforms: Windows, Mac, Linux (via browsers); Android, iOS | Free-version limitations: Single device; fewer privacy features | Two-factor authentication: Yes | Browser plugins: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, Opera, Safari | Form filling: Yes | Mobile app PIN unlock: No | Biometric login: Face ID, Touch ID on iOS, most Android fingerprint readers Visit Site Unique privacy-protecting features Strong autofill support Unreliable password import Poor mobile app experience Expensive for a password manager

Blur is a privacy-protection service with a password manager tacked on. It's fine as a browser-based desktop password manager, but it's a bit expensive compared to LastPass, Keeper or 1Password. And its mobile apps are out-of-date and hard to use.

What Blur excels at is keeping your data private. It offers one-time-use credit-card numbers for online purchases, different email addresses for every online service you sign up for, and even a second phone number for when you don't want to reveal your real one.

You get all that for $39 per year with Blur's basic premium plan, although you have to pay a small fee for every one-time-use credit number. Those fees disappear with the $99 unlimited premium plan. (Each paid plan can be tried free for 30 days.) The free tier is pretty bare-bones, with few privacy features and no syncing across devices.

If you just want a good password manager, there are better and cheaper options. But if online privacy is your chief concern, then Blur is definitely worth considering.

Read our full Blur review.

(Image credit: KeePass)

7. KeePass Great -- if you're highly technical Platforms: Windows, Mac, Linux; unofficial Android, iOS, Chrome OS ports | Free-version limitations: None; it's all free | Two-factor authentication: Via plugins | Browser plugins: 3rd-party extensions for Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, Opera, Safari | Form filling: Yes | Mobile app PIN unlock: Depends on 3rd-party app | Biometric login: Via plug-ins Visit Site Completely free & open-source Gives you total control of data Runs on almost anything Very unintuitive Third-party Android, iOS apps

KeePass may be the most powerful and customizable password manager around, and it's entirely free. But you'll have to put a lot of the pieces together yourself.

The core KeePass desktop application is written for Windows and runs on Mac or Linux with a bit of tweaking. Syncing among devices is up to you: You can use Dropbox, OneDrive or similar online accounts, or you can share files on your local home network.

Likewise, you can choose among several third-party apps for Android, iOS, Chrome OS or other platforms, as well as third-party browser extensions. These daunting tasks are made easier by more than 100 plug-ins and extensions that bolt onto KeePass.

There is definitely a bit of a learning curve to KeePass, and the average user may want to stick to one of the easier-to-use password managers. It's best for those who are technically minded and enjoy a bit of a challenge.

Read our full KeePass review.

Other password managers

We aren't able to every worthwhile password manager every year. Following are a couple that are well worth considering even if we reviewed them some time ago, plus one that we've reviewed again recently and found that we can't quite recommend.

(Image credit: Enpass)

Enpass Not bad for $12 a year Platforms: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, Chrome OS | Free-version limitations: 25 items on mobile; no biometric login on desktop | Two-factor authentication: No | Browser plugins: Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, Opera, Vivaldi | Form filling: Yes | Mobile app PIN unlock: Yes | Biometric login: Touch ID on iOS & macOS, Windows Hello, most Android fingerprint readers Enpass Password Manager Visit Site at Enpass Strong free desktop version Easy to keep your data offline Limited features and syncing options No two-factor authentication

Enpass has strong, unlimited free desktop applications for Windows, Mac and Linux, but its free mobile apps for Android and iOS are limited to 25 passwords.

Unlimited coverage on all devices costs $7.99 for 6 months, $11.99 for a year or $57.99 for a one-time lifetime purchase.

Enpass handles the basics well, but you'll have to sync your own devices via Dropbox, OneDrive or a similar service, as Enpass doesn't offer any cloud-syncing of its own. (Some users might see that as a security advantage.)

The Enpass desktop interface is a bit spare, but functional; the mobile apps are sleek. All handle biometric logins to some extent.

Enpass doesn't advertise a local-sync feature, but you could create one with USB drives or a bit of network sharing. That might make the service ideal for users who are wary of putting their data online. Overall, Enpass belongs on our best password managers list, but it's not our top pick.

Read our full Enpass review.

(Image credit: Zoho)

Zoho Vault is part of a larger suite of paid enterprise tools, but the company makes its password manager free for individual personal use. Group plans that can be used by families start at $12 per user, per year.

You won't get consumer-friendly features such as personal-data form-filling or a bulk password changer with Zoho Vault, but all of the essentials are in place and work smoothly.

Zoho Vault does the password syncing for you using its own servers, and there's no fee to sync all your desktop, laptop and mobile devices.

The only drawbacks are that Zoho Vault sometimes tripped over Google's two-page logins in our testing (Zoho representatives tell us that's been fixed) and that the free version of LastPass does even more.

Read our full Zoho Vault review.

(Image credit: McAfee)

True Key Once promising, but now a has-been Platforms: Windows, Mac (both through browser extensions), Android, iOS | Free-version limitations: Single device; 15 passwords max | Two-factor authentication: Yes | Browser plugins: Chrome, Edge, Firefox | Form filling: None | Mobile app PIN unlock: No | Biometric login: Face ID, Touch ID on iOS, Windows Hello, most Android fingerprint readers Visit Site Inexpensive Extensive multi-factor authentication Hasn't been updated in years Limited features Useless free version

True Key was one of the most impressive and futuristic password managers of 2015, with an appealing, user-friendly interface, strong support for biometric logins and multi-factor authentication.

The problem is that True Key has barely been updated since then, and other password managers have passed it by. Even its $20 yearly subscription price hasn't changed.

The features True Key does have, including note-taking and ID record-keeping, work well, although its Mac and Windows desktop apps have been replaced with browser interfaces. The mobile apps do a good job.

Unfortunately, the free tier is next to useless, as it permits only 15 password entries, and True Key's developers never seem to have gotten around to adding form-filling.

True Key is often bundled with McAfee antivirus software, and if you get it that way, it's perfectly fine to use. But it's not worth paying for when the free version of LastPass beats it by a mile.

Read our full True Key review.

How to choose the best password manager for you

Most of these password managers have the same essential functions. But things differ when you get to their extra features.

Some of these password managers, such as Dashlane, 1Password and Keeper, alert you to the latest data breaches, sometimes for an extra price. Many offer to save your personal details, credit-card numbers and other frequently used information so that they can quickly fill out online forms for you. (It's safer than letting retail websites save your credit-card information.)

1Password's Mac and iOS apps have generally been kept more up-to-date than in its Android and Windows applications. It may be the best choice if you use exclusively Apple devices, but the other password managers work just fine across all platforms.

The biggest decision to make is whether you want your passwords to be stored locally on your own computers and mobile devices, or in the cloud on someone else's servers. There are pros and cons to each approach.

Cloud vs. local management

1Password gives you an option to store and sync your "vault" of passwords and other sensitive information locally (in other words, only on your own devices) without using the service's cloud servers. (LastPass has ended its Pocket option that did so too.)

For KeePass, local sync is the default solution, but setting up your Dropbox, iCloud or other account to sync online is not hard. The third-party cloud-account option is standard for Enpass, although it plans to add a local-sync feature.

There's a security advantage to syncing your passwords locally because none of the data needs to reach the internet. If you want to maintain total control, this is the way to go.

The downside is that it can be a hassle to synchronize the passwords on all of your devices. Some services let you do so over a local network, such as a Wi-Fi network. You could also put the password vault on a USB stick and walk it from one computer to another.

Far more convenient are cloud-based password managers. These services keep encrypted copies of your vault on their own servers, ensure that all your devices are always synced and encrypt the transmissions between your devices and their servers.

The risk, though small, is that one of the cloud-based services could be breached and your passwords released out into the wild. (LastPass has had a few documented security issues, all of which were quickly fixed, without losing any passwords.)

If a password manager is doing its job right, it's storing all your passwords in encrypted format, and storing your master password only as a "hash" that's the result of an irreversible mathematical process.

Whether it's local or cloud-synced, a password manager puts all your eggs in one basket, so to speak, unless you use more than one password manager. But for most people, the demonstrable security benefits of using a password manager far outweigh the disadvantages.