
For more details visit the LastPass blog and learn more about how to share passwords safely. LastPass recommends changing passwords and remaining alert for phishing scams. A class action lawsuit was filed in January of 2023 for “failure to exercise reasonable care in securing and safeguarding highly sensitive consumer data.” This is a red flag worth investigating and possibly taking action. In this article, we’ll take a closer look at the features users care about most-pricing, usability, security, device compatibility and scope of features-and share those situations in which a user may prefer one over the other.Įditor’s note: Since this article was published, Last Pass has confirmed that it had been breached and users’ password vaults were compromised in August of 2022. Don't share it with anyone, and I'd even go so far as to recommend deleting the file after you import and verify that all of your information is accurate in your new password manager account.Both Bitwarden and LastPass offer a solid free version of their password manager software but there are a few differentiators between them. It's important to remember that this file now has all of your account logins in plain text. Save the new CSV file to your desktop, and give it a name like "Lastpass_export.csv" that makes it easy to identify. In Notepad, for example, that means you'll need to go to File > Save As and add ".csv" to the end of the file name. No matter the app you end up using, make sure you save or export the file as a CSV file. If you don't have access to Excel on a PC, you can use the Notepad app.

To do that, you'll need to copy the text that's displayed in the browser, and then paste it into an app like Numbers on a Mac, or Excel on a PC (or Mac).

Depending on which password manager you're moving to, you can either leave that tab open and copy/paste the information into the import tool, or you'll need to create a CSV file of your own. LastPass will generate a CSV list with all of your info and display it in your browser tab.
