

There are other features, like TOTP management and leaked password scanning, that are useful as well and warrant the $10/year premium subscription. The main reason I switched to Bitwarden was to also onboard my friends and family into secure password management. I would go for Bitwarden if you have multiple users and need to share passwords or use an array of devices. I would still find a way to sync your database in the rare case you do need access elsewhere, and I would back it up non-locally as well. I really miss how fluid the auto-type feature was in Keepass - it's a lot faster for keyboard users than what Bitwarden offers outside a browser. For Keepass, I would totally forego any browser extension and instead use their Auto-Type feature with a global hotkey. LastPass, Keepass, Bitwarden, 1Password, and other mainstream password. Password sharing between users is also easy. Bitwarden is more convenient and easy to setup. There is a feature request for this feature. Keepassxc is excellent for a single device with a keyboard, and rather good (but not as seamless as Bitwarden) for multiple devices if you reliably sync your database to a cloud service. A password manager can either store passwords locally, on your device, or in the. Also, Bitwarden doesn’t have an autotype feature for filling passwords in desktop/traditional applications.
