The Case for a Password Manager in 2026
Most people understand the security argument for password managers and still don’t use one — because the setup feels harder than the problem it’s solving, until the problem actually hits. A good password manager removes that friction by integrating cleanly with your browser and phone, which is why the right choice isn’t the one with the most features but the one you’ll actually use every day without thinking about it.

The Products Worth Knowing
The three serious contenders are Bitwarden, 1Password, and Dashlane. All use end-to-end encryption with zero-knowledge architecture — the security difference between them is negligible. The real differences are interface and price. Bitwarden is the value case: the free tier is genuinely functional, the paid tier runs about $10 per year, and the open-source codebase has been independently audited. 1Password charges more and earns it with a more polished interface, better travel mode, and strong family-sharing features. Dashlane sits between them on price with good dark web monitoring built in.
Browser-native managers (Apple Keychain, Google Password Manager) work well inside a single ecosystem. The limitation isn’t security — it’s flexibility when you need to share credentials across devices, browsers, or with family members.
Autofill Reliability Is the Differentiator
The day-to-day experience of a password manager comes down to one thing: does autofill work reliably on the sites you actually use? A manager that fills credentials correctly on 95% of sites saves friction every day. One that works on 80% and requires you to copy-paste the rest gets abandoned. Test autofill during the free trial on your specific apps and sites — not the generic demo in marketing materials.
Family Plans Are the Better Math
A family plan covering 5 users runs $35-40 per year — better math than individual plans for most households. Setup takes an afternoon. The ongoing benefit of a shared vault for household credentials (streaming logins, utility accounts, shared passwords) and separate private vaults for each person is worth the one-time migration effort.
The Migration You Only Do Once
Switching from browser-saved passwords to a dedicated manager is a one-time project of a few hours. Export your existing passwords from Chrome or Safari as a CSV, import into the new manager, verify the count matches, then delete from the old source. Every major password manager supports CSV import. Do it once, thoroughly, rather than halfway for months.
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