Keeper vs Dashlane: Which should you choose?
See how Keeper® and Dashlane compare across security architecture, compliance, privileged access management and enterprise capabilities.
See how Keeper® and Dashlane compare across security architecture, compliance, privileged access management and enterprise capabilities.
KeeperPAM® brings together enterprise password management, privileged session management, secrets management and endpoint privilege management into a single cloud-native solution.
Whether you're securing an end user's password, a privileged admin account or a CI/CD pipeline, Keeper gives security teams a single place to enforce policy, audit activity and respond to threats.
Dashlane is a credential security platform centered on password management and phishing protection. Its Omnix™ platform delivers credential risk detection, AI-powered phishing alerts and visibility into non-vault users.
Based on publicly available documentation, Dashlane does not offer privileged access management, privileged session recording, automated credential rotation, remote browser isolation or endpoint privilege controls.
Keeper is FedRAMP High Certified and GovRAMP High Authorized, the highest levels of federal and state government authorization, hosted on AWS GovCloud with U.S.-only data storage and a sequestered U.S. Persons-only support team.
Keeper's cryptographic module is FIPS 140-3 validated by the NIST Cryptographic Module Validation Program, a mandatory requirement for U.S. federal agencies and defense contractors. Keeper is also SOC 2 Type II, SOC 3, ISO 27001, 27017 and 27018 certified, and supports ITAR compliance.
Keeper has the longest-standing SOC 2 and ISO 27001 certifications in the industry.
Based on publicly available information, Dashlane holds SOC 2 Type II certification, ISO 27001 and has obtained TRUSTe privacy certification. Dashlane's Confidential SSO, built on AWS Nitro Enclaves, reflects a genuine commitment to privacy-preserving architecture.
Dashlane has not obtained ISO 27017 or ISO 27018 certifications, is not FedRAMP Certified or GovRAMP Authorized at any level and is not FIPS 140-3 validated.
Keeper implements zero-knowledge encryption at the record level, meaning every item in your Keeper Vault is protected by its own unique AES-256 key generated locally on your device.
Keeper has no ability to access your data, your secrets or your infrastructure at any level. Keeper's cryptographic module is FIPS 140-3 validated, and this architecture is the reason Keeper has maintained a clean security record across its entire history without any breaches, settlements or regulatory penalties.
Dashlane also uses a zero-knowledge model and has made meaningful architectural investments, including Confidential SSO via AWS Nitro Enclaves and confidential computing for passkey protection within Dashlane Secure Cloud.
Both Keeper and Dashlane share the commitment that only users can decrypt their own data.
Keeper delivers a complete privileged access management solution. KeeperPAM provides agentless remote access to servers, databases and internal applications over SSH, RDP and browser sessions — all fully recorded, encrypted and stored in the vault.
Keeper Endpoint Privilege Manager enforces Just-In-Time (JIT) elevation on Linux, Windows and macOS, eliminating standing local admin rights.
Automated credential rotation eliminates standing credentials across AWS, Azure and Google Cloud.
Remote Browser Isolation (RBI) provides users with secure, VPN-free access to internal web applications without exposing credentials to local devices. The Advanced Reporting & Alerts Module (ARAM) tracks over 300 auditable events with real-time SIEM integration into CrowdStrike, Microsoft Sentinel, Google Security Operations and Splunk.
Based on publicly available documentation, Dashlane does not offer privileged access management. There is no privileged session recording, no remote access brokering, no credential rotation, no remote browser isolation and no endpoint privilege controls.
Dashlane's reporting tracks activity logs and credential risk data via the Omnix platform, but it does not provide the privileged access audit trail that regulated enterprise environments require. Organizations managing access to critical infrastructure alongside Dashlane will need separate PAM tooling.
KeeperAI is an agentic AI engine embedded within KeeperPAM that delivers real-time threat detection and automated response for privileged sessions. It continuously monitors keystroke logs and command execution, classifies behavior by risk level and can automatically terminate a session the moment a threat is detected. Admins can also receive encrypted activity summaries of every privileged session, eliminating manual reviews.
Built on a Sovereign AI framework, each organization retains full data ownership and can deploy KeeperAI on-premises or via cloud LLMs, including OpenAI, Azure OpenAI, Google Vertex AI and Anthropic.
Dashlane Omnix™ is a credential security platform that delivers AI-powered capabilities. These include real-time phishing detection that analyzes 79 webpage attributes on-device, credential risk detection for vault and non-vault users, nudges that drive employee remediation and the Omnix AI Advisor for natural-language threat intelligence queries.
Omnix operates at the credential and browser layer; it does not extend to monitoring or responding to threats within privileged infrastructure sessions.
Keeper Secrets Manager (KSM) is a fully cloud-based, zero-knowledge secrets management solution requiring no on-premises components. KSM secures API keys, SSH keys, certificates, database passwords and CI/CD pipeline credentials, all under a zero-knowledge architecture.
KSM integrates natively with Terraform, Kubernetes, GitHub Actions, Jenkins and other DevOps toolchains. Keeper supports the Model Context Protocol (MCP) within KSM, so AI tools and agents can securely retrieve secrets.
Keeper also provides SDKs for multiple languages, a full REST API, a powerful CLI and deep integrations with SIEM, SOAR, IGA and SSO platforms.
Dashlane introduced secrets management as part of its Business plan (available through the vault and CLI), allowing teams to store and access infrastructure secrets.
Dashlane has also launched an MCP server in beta, enabling AI agents to view audit logs in a read-only, controlled way.
Dashlane's developer ecosystem, SDK coverage and integration depth with enterprise DevOps toolchains are more limited than Keeper's.
Keeper gives organizations full control over where their data is hosted. Keeper operates data centers across the United States, U.S. Government Cloud (AWS GovCloud), Europe, Australia, Canada and Japan, allowing customers to choose the region that meets their data sovereignty and regulatory requirements.
For government and regulated environments, all data stays within the selected region, with no cross-border transfers.
Based on publicly available documentation, Dashlane hosts all customer data, including data for U.S.-based customers, in Dublin, Ireland. Customers cannot select their preferred data hosting region.
For organizations with strict data residency requirements, particularly in the U.S. public sector or industries subject to data localization regulations, this is a meaningful constraint that Dashlane's solutions currently do not address.
Keeper gives administrators granular control through a node-based organizational structure that groups users, roles, teams and admins by department, location or business unit, each with fully independent policy sets.
Security teams can define exactly who accesses what, from which devices and under what conditions. Delegated administration allows different admins to manage their own segments of the organization without visibility into others.
Time-limited access, self-destructing records, nested shared folders and over 100 configurable enforcement policies give enterprises the precision they need across complex org structures without requiring customization or professional services.
Based on publicly available documentation, Dashlane offers SCIM provisioning, SAML 2.0 SSO, Confidential SSO via AWS Nitro Enclaves and Role-Based Access Controls (RBAC). A recently introduced Scoped Group Manager role allows admins to delegate oversight of specific teams or projects.
Dashlane does not support customizable role-based enforcement policies to the depth Keeper offers, does not support nested subfolder sharing and its delegated administration model is more limited. For enterprises with complex org structures, multiple business units or strict per-team policy requirements, Dashlane's governance model shows its limits.
Keeper introduced KeeperDB to bring database access under the same zero-trust controls as the rest of the platform. KeeperDB is a database management interface built inside the Keeper Vault, allowing privileged users to securely query and manage MySQL, PostgreSQL and Microsoft SQL Server databases without credentials ever touching a local device.
Every session is fully recorded, policy-governed and runs inside Keeper. Administrators can enforce read-only sessions, grant time-limited access and control data exports, all with a complete audit trail from the same console that manages the rest of the platform.
Based on publicly available documentation, Dashlane does not offer native database access management. Database credentials can be stored in the Dashlane vault, but there is no built-in interface for querying or managing databases, no session recording for database activity and no policy enforcement on what users do once they retrieve a database credential.
Keeper's BreachWatch® continuously monitors the dark web for credentials exposed from your organization's vaults. Your credentials are never transmitted to or compared directly against any third-party service. All matching happens inside Keeper's encrypted environment, delivering real-time breach detection with no additional exposure risk.
BreachWatch also provides enterprise-level risk visibility with actionable remediation guidance for administrators across the entire organization.
Dashlane offers dark web monitoring as part of its platform, alerting users when credentials appear in known breach databases. Dashlane's Omnix platform extends this with credential risk detection for non-vault users, providing visibility into employees whose credentials may be at risk even if they're not actively using the vault.
While Keeper performs all credential matching within its own zero-knowledge environment, Dashlane compares credentials against external breach datasets.
Keeper provides 24/7 customer support via phone and live chat, with dedicated customer success managers for enterprise accounts.
Keeper's offline vault allows users to create, edit and manage records without an internet connection; changes sync automatically when connectivity is restored.
Keeper is available across every major platform with a consistent, full-featured experience, including a web vault, desktop apps for Windows, Mac and Linux, mobile apps and browser extensions for Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge and Opera.
Customer support is available for business plans, though phone support options are more limited than Keeper's.
Based on publicly available documentation, Dashlane does not offer a dedicated desktop vault application, and offline access is not supported, meaning users cannot view or manage their vault without an active internet connection.
*Data as of April 6, 2026
Your passwords, folders, secure notes and account data transfer directly from Dashlane to Keeper, fully encrypted, with no manual re-entry required.
Yes, Dashlane uses end-to-end AES-256 encryption, a zero-knowledge model and has made genuine architectural investments, including Confidential SSO via AWS Nitro Enclaves. For organizations with standard credential management needs, Dashlane provides solid security.
However, Dashlane has not obtained ISO 27017 or ISO 27018 certifications, is not FedRAMP Certified or GovRAMP Authorized and is not FIPS 140-3 validated. For organizations in regulated industries where these certifications are a hard requirement, including government, defense, healthcare and financial services, Dashlane's security posture does not meet the bar. Keeper holds all of these certifications and has maintained a clean security record with zero breaches.
The clearest difference is platform depth. Keeper delivers full privileged access management, including session recording, agentless remote access, credential rotation, remote browser isolation and endpoint privilege management, none of which Dashlane offers.
Keeper also supports global data residency across six regions, including a dedicated U.S. Government Cloud, while Dashlane hosts all customer data in Dublin, Ireland, with no regional choice. KeeperAI monitors and responds to threats within active privileged sessions, a capability well beyond Dashlane's credential-layer protection.
No other enterprise password management vendor simultaneously holds FedRAMP High, GovRAMP High, FIPS 140-3 validation, SOC 2 Type II, SOC 3, and ISO 27001, 27017 and 27018 certifications. Keeper supports ITAR compliance through a dedicated GovCloud environment. Keeper holds the longest-standing SOC 2 and ISO 27001 certifications in the industry.
Dashlane holds SOC 2 Type II certification and ISO 27001 but has not obtained ISO 27017 or ISO 27018 certifications and is not FedRAMP or FIPS 140-3 certified. For government agencies, defense contractors and other regulated organizations where these authorizations are non-negotiable, Keeper is the clear choice.
Migrating from Dashlane to Keeper is straightforward. Export your vault from Dashlane by navigating to My Account > Export Data and saving the file. Then log in to your Keeper Vault, go to Settings > Import, select Dashlane from the list and drag your exported file in. Keeper maps your passwords, folders, secure notes and account data automatically.
For enterprise migrations involving SSO configuration, SCIM provisioning and policy setup, Keeper's customer success and professional services teams are available to support the transition at any scale.
To delete your Dashlane account, first make sure you have exported your data if you want to keep it. Once the account is deleted, your vault data cannot be recovered.
On web: Log in to your Dashlane account, go to My Account > Settings > Delete Account and follow the on-screen prompts. You will be asked to confirm the deletion and may be required to enter your master password.
On mobile: Open the Dashlane app, tap your profile, go to Settings > Delete Account and confirm. Note that if you subscribed via the App Store or Google Play, you must cancel your subscription separately through Apple or Google to stop future billing. Deleting the account does not automatically cancel the subscription.
Before deleting, we recommend exporting your vault from Dashlane and importing it into Keeper so none of your credentials are lost in the transition.
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