TFT

Free Browser Password Manager

Store and manage all your passwords securely in your browser. This local tool encrypts your data and helps you log in faster.

About Password Manager

Store and manage your passwords locally in your browser. This is a client-side only tool - passwords are not synced or backed up. For production use, consider a dedicated password manager with encryption, sync, and secure storage. Always use strong, unique passwords for each account.

How It Works

This browser-based password manager securely stores and manages your passwords locally with master password encryption and auto-fill capabilities.

The secure management process:

  1. Master password setup: Create a strong master password that encrypts your entire vault.
  2. Local encryption: All passwords are encrypted with AES-256 before being stored in your browser.
  3. Secure storage: Encrypted data is saved in browser storage, accessible only with your master password.
  4. Auto-fill integration: Unlock your vault to automatically fill login forms on websites.

Since everything happens locally in your browser, your passwords never leave your device or get uploaded to any cloud server.

When You'd Actually Use This

Replacing Password Reuse

Generate and store unique passwords for every account without the burden of remembering them all.

Privacy-Focused Users

Manage passwords without trusting cloud services or third-party servers with your credentials.

Offline Access Needs

Access your passwords even without internet connectivity, since everything is stored locally.

Security-Conscious Individuals

Maintain full control over your encrypted password data with no external dependencies.

Temporary Password Management

Use while evaluating password managers or as a secondary vault for specific purposes.

Learning Password Security

Understand how password managers work before committing to a long-term solution.

What to Know Before Using

Browser storage has risks

Local storage can be cleared accidentally. Export backups regularly and store them securely.

Master password is critical

If you forget your master password, there's no recovery. Your passwords are permanently inaccessible.

No cloud sync means no cross-device access

Passwords are stored on one device. For multiple devices, consider a cloud-synced password manager.

Browser extensions offer better integration

Dedicated password managers have browser extensions that auto-fill more reliably than manual copy-paste.

Device loss means password loss

Without cloud backup, losing your device means losing access. Maintain encrypted backups.

Common Questions

Is a browser-based password manager safe?

Yes, with proper encryption. This tool uses AES-256 encryption locally. However, dedicated managers offer more features and backup options.

What makes a good master password?

A passphrase of 4+ random words (16+ characters) that you can remember but others can't guess. Never reuse it elsewhere.

How do I backup my passwords?

Use the export feature to create an encrypted backup file. Store it on a USB drive or secure cloud storage.

Can I use this on multiple devices?

Not directly - data is stored locally. You'd need to export/import between devices, which is cumbersome.

What's the advantage over cloud password managers?

Complete privacy - your passwords never leave your device. The trade-off is no automatic sync or cross-device access.

Should I switch from my current password manager?

Established managers (Bitwarden, 1Password) offer better features. This is good for learning or specific privacy needs.

How often should I backup?

After adding important passwords and monthly thereafter. Set a calendar reminder for regular backups.