

We start our Dashlane review with its free plan – a feature-limited version of its premium plan that enables users to save up to fifty passwords on one device. Ultimately, despite some cool features and an ultra-user-friendly interface, Dashlane does not come out well in our comparisons. In addition, Dashlane has also dropped some capabilities from its range of subscription plans, or dropped subscription plans altogether – for example the Premium Plus and Premium Plus for Families plans, which offered up to $1 million in identity theft insurance, credit monitoring, and identity restoration support.Ĭonsequently, our Dashlane review is a point-in-time review which has looked at the password manager´s current plans and capabilities and compared them against some of its biggest competitors. There have been further updates to desktops app and mobile apps throughout the year – some to fix bugs that have slipped through beta testing, but most to enhance the user experience and add capabilities to the existing product. So far in 2021, Dashlane has updated its web app and browser extension twenty times. Consequently, our review of the Dashlane password manager focuses on its core capabilities and how they compare against the capabilities of other password managers. Due to the frequency at which Dashlane updates its password manager, any Dashlane review is likely to be quickly out of date.
