At a glance

Bitwarden Enpass
Best for Privacy-conscious users who want free or self-hosted password management Users wanting offline-first password management
Starting price Free $23.99/yr
Free tier
Open source
Free tier available
Open source
Audit
Biometrics
Local Storage
Open Source
Passkeys
Password Generator
Self-Hosted
Vault Sharing
Your Cloud Sync

Bitwarden

Strengths

  • Open source and audited
  • Generous free tier
  • Self-hostable for full control
  • Premium is just $10/year

Weaknesses

  • UI is less polished than 1Password
  • Autofill can be finicky in some browsers
  • Self-hosting requires technical setup
  • Fewer convenience features than 1Password

Enpass

Strengths

  • Includes Local Storage as a core feature, purpose-built for password manager workflows
  • Includes Your Cloud Sync as a core feature, purpose-built for password manager workflows
  • Free for 25 items — generous enough for most small teams to get real work done
  • Established product with 12+ years on the market and a mature ecosystem

Weaknesses

  • Free plan exists but key features are locked behind the paid upgrade
  • Fewer built-in features means you may need additional tools to cover gaps
  • If you forget your master password, recovery options are limited by design
  • Limited team/admin features if your organization eventually scales up

The bottom line

Pricing: Bitwarden is completely free, which makes it the obvious pick if budget is the top concern. Enpass starts at $23.99/yr, but Free for 25 items. That cost buys you a more polished or feature-rich experience, so it comes down to whether the extras justify the spend.

Feature gaps: Bitwarden offers Open Source, Passkeys and Password Generator that Enpass lacks. Enpass brings Audit, Biometrics and Local Storage that Bitwarden does not have.

Team fit: Bitwarden is geared toward any size teams, while Enpass is aimed at individual users and small setups. Pick the one that matches where your team is today and where it is headed — migrating tools later is always painful.

Open source: Bitwarden is open source, meaning you can self-host, audit the code, and avoid vendor lock-in. Enpass is proprietary — you are trusting the vendor with your data and uptime.

Where each tool shines: Bitwarden's biggest strengths are: open source and audited. generous free tier. Enpass's biggest strengths are: includes local storage as a core feature, purpose-built for password manager workflows. includes your cloud sync as a core feature, purpose-built for password manager workflows.

Watch out for: With Bitwarden, users commonly note that ui is less polished than 1password. With Enpass, the main complaint is that free plan exists but key features are locked behind the paid upgrade.

Choose Bitwarden if...

  • You need a tool built for privacy-conscious users who want free or self-hosted password management
  • Budget is a hard constraint — Bitwarden is free, Enpass is not
  • You need self-hosting, data sovereignty, or the ability to audit source code
  • You specifically need Open Source and Passkeys
  • You care about generous free tier

Choose Enpass if...

  • You need a tool built for users wanting offline-first password management
  • You specifically need Audit and Biometrics
  • You care about includes your cloud sync as a core feature, purpose-built for password manager workflows
  • Your team size fits the individuals profile Enpass is designed for
  • The free tier works for you: free for 25 items

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