Self-Hosted & Secure
PasswordLab is designed to run where your business lives — inside your own infrastructure. No cloud dependency, no third-party servers, and no shared environments. Just a clean, secure setup that puts your IT team back in control.
In a world where most password managers are cloud-first (and often cloud-only), PasswordLab takes a different path — one that prioritizes privacy, control, and compliance from day one.
Why Self-Hosted Matters
When you host your password manager yourself, you eliminate a major risk: handing your most sensitive data to someone else.
With PasswordLab:
Your passwords stay inside your network.
Nothing leaves your environment unless you allow it.You define the security perimeter.
Use your existing firewalls, VPNs, and access rules.You meet compliance on your terms.
Easier auditing, better reporting, and no external data processors.
Built for Modern Infrastructure
PasswordLab is flexible enough to deploy anywhere your stack lives:
- Physical servers (bare metal)
- Virtual machines
- Private or hybrid clouds
- Containerized environments
Whether you're running a data center or a minimal VM, PasswordLab fits in quietly without demanding resources — no bloated software, no surprise dependencies.
Say Goodbye to Cloud Risks
Cloud-based password managers may be convenient, but convenience comes at a cost:
- Data breaches from shared multi-tenant setups
- Limited visibility into backend storage
- Vendor lock-in and opaque pricing
- Legal concerns with where and how data is stored
With PasswordLab, your data stays on your side — encrypted, isolated, and fully in your control.
Set Up in Minutes. Stay Secure for Years.
Getting started is simple. Our guided installer gets you up and running quickly. No phone-home behavior. No hidden syncs. No fine print.
Self-Hosted Security, Done Right
Whether you're a growing startup or a security-conscious enterprise, PasswordLab gives you what other password managers can't: peace of mind.
"If you're serious about protecting your business, self-hosting isn't a feature — it's a necessity."