Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
69,444
40,547


1Password has introduced a new deal this week, offering 50 percent off the first year of both its individual and family plans. Like previous offers, this sale is available for new 1Password subscribers only, and it does not require a coupon code.

1password-deal-blue.jpg
Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with 1Password. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.

To get the deal, head to 1Password's website and click "Try FREE for 14 days" on either the individual or family plan to create an account. The 50 percent savings on your first year will be applied automatically.



This deal brings the price of 1Password Individual down to $18.00/year or $1.50/month, from $35.88/year or $2.99/month, and it's billed annually. The price of the 1Password Family plan will be priced at $30.00/year or $2.50/month, down from $59.88/year or $4.99/month, also billed annually.

Once your first year ends, the pricing on the plan will return to $2.99/month, billed annually. 1Password is a password management app that is compatible across Apple devices, including iPhone and Mac. It allows you to create and store strong passwords across all of your most important online accounts, and alert you when your passwords are compromised.

The 1Password app informs you when sites that you're storing information for support two-factor authentication, helping you improve and strengthen your login information. If you're on a Touch ID or Face ID-supported Apple device, you can also open the 1Password app even quicker with Apple's biometric authentication systems.

Be sure to visit our full Deals Roundup to shop for even more Apple-related products and accessories.

Article Link: Deals: 1Password Offering 50% Off First Year of Individual and Family Plans
 
I am using a password manager that comes without any subscriptions (Safe +). Works very well and syncs between iOS devices and Macs without putting my data into a cloud!
 
If you can follow basic instructions, you can use Bitwarden for free. There's tons of tutorials and step-by-step guides to run it on a Mac. The data is encrypted locally, and if you use lets encrypt, it's transmitted over SSL. I use docker to host Bitwarden and Nginx/lets encrypt to run SSL over port 80 for a secure solution.
 
As a long time user of 1password standalone I decided to subscribe to 1password last year. I have no regrets and the features it offers is worth it in my opinion. I use it also on windows PCs and a recent update added support for windows hello which makes it a lot easier when accessing password all day.
 
I hate having yet another subscription, but 1Password has CHANGED MY LIFE. I am not kidding. I can keep all my family's credentials in sync and it is well worth the money. Yes you can set up Bitwarden with some IT knowledge, and yes there are other tools out there that may have less features. Coming from iCloud Keychain, 1Password blows it out of the water (especially when you use a PC). I have done a deep dive into their encryption and it is top-notch. It is well worth the money.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I use docker to host Bitwarden and Nginx/lets encrypt to run SSL over port 80 for a secure solution.
Do you use the official Bitwarden stack, or bitwarden_rs / Vaultwarden?

I have Vaultwarden but for many people I think not self-hosting is much more popular.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Sikh
1Password works very well if you need it. I grew tired of paying yet another subscription and found that Keychain has been incrementally improved over the years and would serve my limited use case.
Keychain is really good now. Nothing really beats the ease of Keychain’s 2FA input, just one tap. I use BitWarden as well to have a backup and cross platform.
 
Last edited:
I'm curious how many things are people 'subscribed' to, monthly or yearly. The subscription fatigue feels never ending with every other app lately.
 
Last edited:
Do people really have THAT many passwords? :rolleyes:
I have over 100 logins alone for me. Then you add work, another 30. I also have it set up so I can share with my wife hand kids on certain logins. Even if you have 20-30, no way to remember all of those password (if you use a different one for each site, like you should).

Heck, even my 70+ year old mom has about 50 different logins.
 
Last edited:
Well, this is what I expected with my luck or lack thereof. ? I was on the original standalone plan for YEARS, and decided to sign up for an individual subscription last week to get some of the added features. I have 350 items in 1Password. (passwords, credit cards, bank accounts, software license keys, secure notes, etc)



0
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.