1Password Review (2026): The Password Manager Crypto Users Should Own
Our verdict: 4.5 / 5
1Password is the password manager we'd put in front of anyone holding crypto on an exchange. It generates a long, unique password for every account, stores two-factor (TOTP) codes alongside them, warns you via Watchtower when a site you use has been breached, and makes all of this genuinely pleasant to use across phone, laptop and browser. For a few pounds a month it shuts down the single most common way people lose crypto — a reused or phished exchange password. The only real caveats are that it's a subscription and that, like any password manager, it must never hold your wallet seed phrase. Use it for logins, keep your seed on paper, and you've closed a big door on the thieves.
How it scores
👍 Pros
- Creates and remembers a unique, strong password for every exchange and account
- Stores two-factor (TOTP) codes next to logins for fast, safe sign-in
- Watchtower flags reused, weak or breached passwords so you can fix them
- Polished apps and autofill across iOS, Android, macOS, Windows and browsers
- Travel Mode and a secret-key + master-password model add real protection
👎 Cons
- Subscription only — no free tier (there is a trial)
- Never store a wallet seed phrase or private key here — that belongs offline
- Keeping logins and their 2FA in one vault is convenient but concentrates risk, so guard the master password
How it compares
| Feature | 1Password | Proton Pass | Browser-saved passwords |
|---|---|---|---|
| Our score | 4.5 | 4.5 | 2.5 |
| Unique passwords | Yes | Yes | Yes (weakly) |
| Built-in 2FA codes | Yes | Yes | No |
| Breach alerts | Yes (Watchtower) | Yes | Partial |
| Cross-device | Excellent | Very good | Browser-locked |
| Free tier | Trial only | Yes | Free |
| Best for | Best all-round manager | Privacy-first + free | Not recommended |
How we tested
We judge a password manager on whether it makes good security the easy path. With 1Password we'd set up unique passwords and TOTP two-factor codes for a couple of test exchange accounts, check autofill and sign-in across browser and mobile, and run Watchtower to see how clearly it surfaces reused or breached credentials. We'd test the secret-key recovery model and Travel Mode, and confirm the app never encourages you to store a seed phrase. Scores weight real-world account protection and day-to-day usability most heavily. 1Password is software, not a financial product — nothing here is investment advice.
FAQ
Why does a crypto user need a password manager?
Because the most common way people lose crypto is an account takeover, not a market crash. If you reuse a password and one site leaks it, attackers try it everywhere — including your exchange. 1Password gives every account its own strong password and a built-in two-factor code, so a single leak can't cascade. It's the cheapest, highest-impact security upgrade most people can make.
Should I store my crypto wallet seed phrase in 1Password?
No. A seed phrase should never be typed into any internet-connected app, including a password manager. If someone compromises the vault or the device, they'd have your funds. Keep the seed on paper or a steel backup, stored offline. Use 1Password for your exchange and email logins instead — that's exactly what it's built for.
1Password or a free option?
Free browser-saved passwords are better than reusing one password, but they're browser-locked and lack proper 2FA and breach tools. 1Password is a small subscription for a polished, cross-device experience with Watchtower and inline 2FA. Proton Pass is a strong free-tier alternative if you'd rather not pay. Any dedicated manager beats reusing passwords.