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."