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1-Year 1Password Manager Subscription: Families Plan $30, Personal Plan

$18
$35.88
+114 Deal Score
181,403 Views
1Password offers 50% Off 1-Year 1Password Manager Subscriptions.

Thanks Staff Member DLS4U for sharing this deal

Note: Discounted total should show on final checkout page. Plans are in USD per user per month but billed annually.

Available Plans (prices after discount):
  • 1Password Personal $17.94/first year
    • Apps for Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, Android, and Web
    • (Chrome, Safari, Edge, Firefox, Brave)
    • Create, autosave, and autofill passwords and sensitive information
    • Unlimited passwords, items, and 1 GB document storage
    • Share passwords, credit cards, secure notes, and more
    • Two-factor authentication for an extra layer of account protection
    • Restore recently deleted or previous versions of passwords and items
    • 24/7 Email support
  • 1Password Families $29.94/first year
    • All the 1Password features above plus
    • Share with 5 family members from any household. Invite more for $1 each
    • Manage what family members can see and do
    • Recover accounts for locked out family members
    • Invite up to 5 guests for limited sharing

Editor's Notes & Price Research

Written by
  • Refer to forum thread for discussion from the community regarding this offer and service. -slickdewmaster
Good Deal?

Original Post

Written by
Edited June 19, 2023 at 01:46 PM by
1Password [1password.com] offers new users 1-Year 1Password Individual Plan or Families Plan (5 Users) for 50% off.

Available (prices after discount):
1Password Personal [1password.com] $17.94/first year
  • Apps for Mac, iOS, Windows, Android, Linux, and Chrome OS
  • Unlimited passwords, items, and 1 GB document storage
  • Friendly 24/7 email support
  • 365-day item history to restore deleted passwords
  • Travel Mode to safely cross borders
  • Two-factor authentication for an extra layer of protection
  • Share your sensitive information securely, with anyone
1Password Families [1password.com] $29.94/first year
  • All the 1Password features, plus…
  • Share with 5 family members
  • Invite up to 5 guests for limited sharing
  • Share passwords, credit cards, secure notes, and more
  • Manage what family members can see and do
  • Recover accounts for locked out family members
Add Comment
Created 01-19-2023 at 11:57 AM by DLS4U | Staff
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Deal
Score
+114
181,403 Views

Community Wiki

Last Edited by user10101 February 3, 2023 at 12:08 PM
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REMINDER

For those that want to own their own data, 1Password is getting ride of their WLAN sync so you will need to store your passwords on their servers...


https://1password.community/discu...password-7

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Featured Comments

Ugh, new accounts only.
Just use bitwarden. It's free and open source. It works on all platforms.
I'm not an IT security expert.

I've used Google's password services in the past and I think that they're decent from a user experience.
I started using 1Password a couple years ago and I much prefer 1Password to Google because it is available on multiple platforms, more functionality and based on what I've observed with using 1Password, better security surrounding protection of my information and data.

1Password user experience features that I've liked (It is possible that Google is able to do some or all of these things, but I did not use them when I was using Google's password service):
-Password sharing
-Shared vaults
-Multiple vaults
-Ability to save more than just passwords
-Works across platforms: This was one of the major points that drove my decision. I needed a solution that was relatively brainless and secure across platforms for the people in my family. 1Password offered this with ease while other password managers could possibly meet this but with maintenance.

Security features that I like:
-Watchtower
-In order to access your vault on a new device, you must use a device that is already logged in or you must log in with your account, including your password and your secret key

I a lot of people have issues with password managers because they want the most secure password manager that is free and convenient. Unfortunately, I think that is an impossible request because I think that most features that increase convenience results in increasing vulnerability.

If I only had to manage passwords for myself, something like Google, Bitwarden or Keepass would most likely be sufficient, but with more people and multiple platforms to consider, a paid service like 1Password meets my needs.

The issue with Google is that it is tied to your Google account. Having 2FA/MFA turned on for your Google account is a must.

The other problem I have (this is more of a gut feeling with nothing to substantiate it other than a feeling of unease) is that, I use Google services for a lot of things. This isn't so much an issue with Google's password manager, but an issue with Google and where my Google account stands with my information.

I don't know if I want to put all or the majority of my information into Google. I know it's really convenient to do so by using so many of Google's services (password manager, log-ins, etc) but I wonder if I'm setting myself up for a catastrophe down the line at some point? Keeping some things separate will help to mitigate that.

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Joined Sep 2016
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> bubble2 36 Posts
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iteachemscience
01-21-2023 at 08:51 AM.
01-21-2023 at 08:51 AM.
Quote from mountainwizard1 :
Why pay for password protection when Google and Norton both offer it for free.
I have had Last Pass and a few other password services, yet they all got hacked.
Even Norton recently got hacked.

Google has yet to be hacked. So I am sticking with them and it is free and always on whether it be my computer or phone.
I use multiple email accounts work, family etc and syncing up all of my passwords doesn't really work well with google (can be done). with that in mind the free version of bitwarden is pretty good. And as far as the hacks well as long as you have a pretty strong master password those hacks won't really hurt you all that much... for those with simple passwords well not so good
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Joined Dec 2018
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> bubble2 321 Posts
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PurpleNest2305
01-23-2023 at 10:31 AM.
01-23-2023 at 10:31 AM.
Quote from jincopunk :
Google password manager seems good enough if you are all Android.
If you are an iPhone user, yet another Apple Tax
Or if you are all Apple devices use iCloud Keychain. Look at that, a tax-free solution
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Joined Nov 2005
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charger
01-23-2023 at 10:40 AM.

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank charger

01-23-2023 at 10:40 AM.
Ugh, new accounts only.
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Joined Apr 2015
New User
> bubble2 10 Posts
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indiraider
01-23-2023 at 10:47 AM.

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank indiraider

01-23-2023 at 10:47 AM.
Just use bitwarden. It's free and open source. It works on all platforms.
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Joined Sep 2014
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Yazen
01-23-2023 at 11:04 AM.
01-23-2023 at 11:04 AM.
Quote from mountainwizard1 :
Why pay for password protection when Google and Norton both offer it for free.
I have had Last Pass and a few other password services, yet they all got hacked.
Even Norton recently got hacked.

Google has yet to be hacked. So I am sticking with them and it is free and always on whether it be my computer or phone.
  1. You are not paying for password protection with a 1Password subscription
  2. Because 1Password has a clearly superior architecture to LastPass?
  3. Google's Password Manager offering is incredibly limited. Additionally, you are tying your secrets to a public email id. Hopefully you have MFA enabled...
  4. 1Password has not been compromised either
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Joined Jun 2022
New User
> bubble2 7 Posts
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RelaxedTree5461
01-23-2023 at 11:33 AM.
01-23-2023 at 11:33 AM.
1password is the best. Its much more than google password manager, has templates, you can save 2fa, ssh keys. etc. Im a web developer and it is part of my workflow,
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Joined Jun 2014
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punglenjeh
01-23-2023 at 11:58 AM.

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank punglenjeh

01-23-2023 at 11:58 AM.
Quote from mountainwizard1 :
Why pay for password protection when Google and Norton both offer it for free.
I have had Last Pass and a few other password services, yet they all got hacked.
Even Norton recently got hacked.

Google has yet to be hacked. So I am sticking with them and it is free and always on whether it be my computer or phone.
I'm not an IT security expert.

I've used Google's password services in the past and I think that they're decent from a user experience.
I started using 1Password a couple years ago and I much prefer 1Password to Google because it is available on multiple platforms, more functionality and based on what I've observed with using 1Password, better security surrounding protection of my information and data.

1Password user experience features that I've liked (It is possible that Google is able to do some or all of these things, but I did not use them when I was using Google's password service):
-Password sharing
-Shared vaults
-Multiple vaults
-Ability to save more than just passwords
-Works across platforms: This was one of the major points that drove my decision. I needed a solution that was relatively brainless and secure across platforms for the people in my family. 1Password offered this with ease while other password managers could possibly meet this but with maintenance.

Security features that I like:
-Watchtower
-In order to access your vault on a new device, you must use a device that is already logged in or you must log in with your account, including your password and your secret key

I a lot of people have issues with password managers because they want the most secure password manager that is free and convenient. Unfortunately, I think that is an impossible request because I think that most features that increase convenience results in increasing vulnerability.

If I only had to manage passwords for myself, something like Google, Bitwarden or Keepass would most likely be sufficient, but with more people and multiple platforms to consider, a paid service like 1Password meets my needs.

The issue with Google is that it is tied to your Google account. Having 2FA/MFA turned on for your Google account is a must.

The other problem I have (this is more of a gut feeling with nothing to substantiate it other than a feeling of unease) is that, I use Google services for a lot of things. This isn't so much an issue with Google's password manager, but an issue with Google and where my Google account stands with my information.

I don't know if I want to put all or the majority of my information into Google. I know it's really convenient to do so by using so many of Google's services (password manager, log-ins, etc) but I wonder if I'm setting myself up for a catastrophe down the line at some point? Keeping some things separate will help to mitigate that.
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Joined Nov 2010
L6: Expert
> bubble2 2,042 Posts
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Pro
flashfir
01-23-2023 at 03:03 PM.
01-23-2023 at 03:03 PM.
I used lastpass for years, switched to bitwarden for last 2 years+ or so, no functionality loss, in fact it's an upgrade considering the limitations lastpass has started to put on me device limit wise.
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Joined Nov 2007
Chronic deal hunter
> bubble2 867 Posts
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Jimmeh
01-23-2023 at 08:45 PM.
01-23-2023 at 08:45 PM.
I just wanted to throw it out there that Google Passwords can be used on iPads (and presumably iPhones) as well, the OS lets you choose your password manager. I don't remember now if it works for app logins as well or just browsing, just putting it out there that it's an option.

That said, I use a combination of Google Passwords & Bitwarden now. Used to use Lastpass but we all know how that turned out. Not to say the same couldn't happen for Bitwarden and/or Google but at least they don't make a habit out of it!

Not crapping on 1Password either, they come highly recommended by many, just turns out Bitwarden has been good enough for my purposes.
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Joined Jun 2004
GEEKS ARE COOL!
> bubble2 16,868 Posts
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Geekesmind
01-24-2023 at 04:22 AM.
01-24-2023 at 04:22 AM.
just get bit warden its free or you can get the premium version for 10 dollars a year
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