2026 comparison · updated for teams

    Dashlane vs NordPass

    A team-focused comparison for 2026 — pricing, collaboration, security and the trade-offs that actually matter.

    Dashlane logo

    Dashlane

    Bundled security platform

    Starts at
    $8/user/mo Business · Enterprise custom
    Best for
    Non-technical teams who want VPN + dark-web monitoring bundled
    Bottom line
    Pricier per seat, but bundles can offset if you'd buy them anyway.
    NordPass logo

    NordPass

    Modern crypto, Nord ecosystem

    Starts at
    Teams $1.99/user/mo (10-seat pack) · Business $3.99/user/mo
    Best for
    Cost-sensitive teams who want modern ciphers and an audit trail
    Bottom line
    Aggressive pricing and a modern XChaCha20 + Argon2id stack. SSO/SCIM gated to Enterprise.

    Dashlane and NordPass both show up on every "best password manager for teams" list, and they sit in genuinely different parts of the market. Dashlane is a polished consumer-grown app now positioned as a bundled credential security platform with built-in VPN and dark-web monitoring. NordPass, by contrast, is nord Security's password manager — modern crypto, aggressive pricing, and clean audit history, with full enterprise identity features gated to Enterprise.

    This comparison is written for the people actually making the call: founders, IT leads and ops folk at startups, agencies and small teams. No affiliate rankings, no "best of" filler — just the trade-offs that matter once more than one person touches the vault.

    Quick verdict

    Pick Dashlane if non-technical teams who want vpn + dark-web monitoring bundled. Pricier per seat, but bundles can offset if you'd buy them anyway.

    Pick NordPass if cost-sensitive teams who want modern ciphers and an audit trail. Aggressive pricing and a modern XChaCha20 + Argon2id stack. SSO/SCIM gated to Enterprise.

    Both are zero-knowledge and both have a defensible recent security story. The choice is almost never about cryptography — it's about collaboration model, governance, and how much per seat per month you want to spend.

    Team pricing at a glance

    FeatureDashlaneNordPass
    Smallest team planAll prices USD, billed annually unless noted. Verify on vendor sites before buying.Business: $8/user/moTeams: $1.99/user/mo (annual, 10-seat pack)
    Next tier for growing teamsEnterprise: customBusiness: $3.99/user/mo · Enterprise: $5.99/user/mo
    Free tier availableYes (1 device)Yes (personal, 1 user)
    SSO (SAML / OIDC)Business and aboveGoogle SSO on Teams; full SAML/OIDC on Enterprise
    SCIM provisioningBusiness and aboveEnterprise only

    Collaboration model

    FeatureDashlaneNordPass
    Shared vaults / collectionsYes — Spaces + CollectionsYes — Shared Folders (Business+)
    Per-item permissions
    External / one-time secure shareLimitedTime-Limited Sharing (recipient needs NordPass account)
    Group-based sharing
    Business and above
    Activity / audit log

    Security & transparency

    FeatureDashlaneNordPass
    Zero-knowledge end-to-end encryption
    CipherAES-256-GCMXChaCha20-Poly1305
    Key derivationArgon2dArgon2id
    Open-source clients
    Self-hosting option
    Published independent audit
    Cure53 (2020, 2021), SOC 2 Type 2, ISO 27001:2022
    Publicly disclosed vault breachNo customer vault breachNo vault breach (Jan 2025 in-memory card-data CVE disclosed)

    Pricing for teams: where the real difference is

    Dashlane Business starts at $8/user/month, with VPN and dark-web monitoring bundled. Enterprise is custom-priced. Per seat it's one of the pricier mainstream options, but the bundle can offset if you'd buy a VPN anyway.

    NordPass Teams is sold as a 10-seat pack starting at $1.99/user/month on annual billing; Business is $3.99/user and Enterprise $5.99/user. Genuinely cheap, but the 10-seat lock can leave smaller or odd-sized teams paying for unused seats.

    For a fast-growing team, the slope matters as much as the starting price. Model it at the size you actually expect to be in 12 months — not the size you are today.

    How teams actually share credentials

    Dashlane. Spaces, Collections and group sharing with per-item permissions, plus the Omnix browser security layer aimed at phishing and risky-paste detection. External one-time sharing is weaker than peers.

    NordPass. Shared Folders and group sharing arrive on the Business tier; Time-Limited Sharing (added Dec 2024) covers contractor access with auto-expiry, but the recipient still needs a NordPass account.

    The everyday question is: when a contractor joins on Monday and leaves on Friday, how much work is it to give them access to exactly the credentials they need, watch what they touched, and revoke cleanly? That's where the daylight between these two shows up.

    Security architecture

    Dashlane. Dashlane uses AES-256-GCM with Argon2d (memory-hard, GPU-resistant) for key derivation. Closed source, but the security paper is detailed and the architecture is conservative.

    NordPass. NordPass is one of the few mainstream managers using XChaCha20-Poly1305 with Argon2id by default, backed by two Cure53 audits, SOC 2 Type 2 and ISO 27001:2022. Clients remain closed source.

    If you're forced to choose on cryptography alone, modern AEAD ciphers (AES-GCM, XChaCha20-Poly1305) paired with a memory-hard KDF (Argon2id) are the bar. Both vendors are inside that range; the harder differences are open-source posture, audit history, and whether you can self-host.

    Admin & governance for teams

    Both products support some flavour of role-based access, forgotten-password recovery, and audit logging on the right tier. Where they diverge is on the boring-but-critical stuff: SSO, SCIM provisioning, and whether group policies can keep up with how your team actually grows.

    SSO tier: Dashlane — Business and above; NordPass — Google SSO on Teams; full SAML/OIDC on Enterprise. SCIM tier: Dashlane — Business and above; NordPass — Enterprise only.

    If Okta, Entra ID or Google Workspace SSO is non-negotiable from day one, factor the tier price into the per-seat number — it's often the thing that flips the cheaper-on-paper option into the more expensive real-world bill.

    Dashlane

    Pros

    • Bundled VPN and dark-web monitoring on Business plan
    • Argon2d KDF + modern crypto stack
    • Polished UX and aggressive passkey rollout
    • Free tier for individuals (1 device)

    Cons

    • $8/user/mo is steep for small teams
    • Closed source; no self-hosting
    • External one-time sharing is weaker than 1Password's Psst!
    • Plan structure has churned recently — what's bundled can change

    NordPass

    Pros

    • XChaCha20-Poly1305 + Argon2id — among the most modern defaults in the category
    • Teams 10-seat pack is one of the cheapest per-user prices on the market
    • Activity log on every paid plan
    • Cure53-audited, SOC 2 Type 2, ISO 27001 certified

    Cons

    • Teams plan is a fixed 10-seat pack — no per-seat flexibility
    • Full SSO (Entra/Okta/ADFS) and SCIM gated to Enterprise
    • Closed source — trust depends on Cure53 reports
    • No self-hosting; external sharing requires recipient NordPass account

    A third option worth considering

    The Dashlane vs NordPass pitch usually hinges on a bundle — VPN, dark-web feed, a productivity suite — that quietly justifies the per-seat price. Pwdly doesn't bundle anything. It's a password manager built for teams, billed at $2/user/month, and that's the whole story.

    • Per-project vaults. Most teams don't share "everything with everyone" — they share by client, repo or product. Pwdly makes that the primary unit, not an afterthought folder.
    • $2/user/month, flat. No seat-count cliff, no SSO upsell on the cheapest paid plan. See the full pricing.
    • XChaCha20-Poly1305 + Argon2id under the hood. The cipher explainer walks through why those defaults matter.
    • Trade-offs we own. No breach monitoring (we literally can't read your data), no self-hosting yet, no browser extension on day one. The security page has the honest list.

    If the bundle is the reason you're considering either, stick with them. If you just need credentials shared cleanly across a team, Pwdly is the leaner option.

    Frequently asked questions

    Is Dashlane or NordPass better for a small team?

    Dashlane fits best when non-technical teams who want vpn + dark-web monitoring bundled, while NordPass is the stronger choice when cost-sensitive teams who want modern ciphers and an audit trail. Model both at the seat count you expect in 12 months — the cheaper option at 5 seats isn't always the cheaper option at 25.

    Which has stronger encryption — Dashlane or NordPass?

    Dashlane uses AES-256-GCM with Argon2d. NordPass uses XChaCha20-Poly1305 with Argon2id. Both are zero-knowledge. In practice the cipher choice is rarely the differentiator — KDF (Argon2id vs PBKDF2), open-source clients, and audit history matter more.

    Does either support SSO and SCIM on the cheapest team plan?

    Dashlane: SSO Business and above, SCIM Business and above. NordPass: SSO Google SSO on Teams; full SAML/OIDC on Enterprise, SCIM Enterprise only. If SSO is non-negotiable, price it on the tier that includes it, not the entry tier.

    Has either vendor had a vault breach?

    Dashlane: No customer vault breach. NordPass: No vault breach (Jan 2025 in-memory card-data CVE disclosed). A clean record isn't a guarantee, but a known prior incident materially raises the cost of trust.

    Keep comparing

    Also worth a read: The XChaCha20-Poly1305 explainer, our security model, and the free password generator.

    Sources & further reading

    Worth fact-checking

    • Vendor pricing for both Dashlane and NordPass has changed more than once in the past 24 months — verify on the official site before purchasing.
    • SSO / SCIM tier inclusion can change between plans; confirm with vendor sales for your exact seat count.

    Last updated May 2026. Vendor pricing and features change frequently — always confirm on the official site before purchasing. Pwdly is not affiliated with 1Password, Bitwarden, LastPass, or Dashlane.

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