I use Bitwarden and recommended it to all my friends and family. It's e2ee and you can have them on all your devices, it has autofill, password generators, and username generators. It's pretty neat.
I also have some friends who use keepassxc. There are mobile clients out there for it as well but it's meant as a completely offline password storage.
Less support for KP on Linux. Needs Mono to run. More importantly, AFAIK, it won't interface with a browser extension (on Linux). So KP is more Windows oriented.
1000% bitwarden. LastPass gets breached too often and have bait and switched users that were using the free version. Jump ship if you're using them, export them and import into bitwarden.
Something to keep in mind is that security isn't just about preventing attackers from accessing it. If that was the only criteria, then the most secure thing would be a flash drive buried in concrete.
Security is also about accessibility.
To that point, I believe the best password manager is subjective. That being said, I'm going to throw out a recommendation for 1Password. If you use it right, it balances security with convenience really well.
I have been using 1Password for a few years now, coming from LastPass before the whole bait-and-switch thing they did. I love 1Password, but I am curious how it stacks up to BitWarden since everyone in this thread keeps mentioning them.
The most secure thing to do would be to host your own server. You can do this with Bitwarden. Remember though that if you lose your server, you lose your passwords. You can also just use Bitwarden and their cloud service. It's free and open source.
I can't really host my own server right now (maybe later when i have my own place) and after a bit of research bitwarden is the best free option but somehow it have 3.4 ish rating in my region
Just thinking out loud. If your paper record is actually QR codes, then you could scan them into your device as you need them. So you wouldn't have to type some long, complicated sequence by hand.
Bitwarden has a free tier on their service where you can share passwords with a single person. It's not much in that regard but it's all some people need.
If you have a Linux PC you can create a partition encrypted with LUKS and save the passwords in txt files. Even this solutions has a small risk because when you open a file it might end up in the cache. But it is still safer than Keepass.
Downside. It might take a little bit more than few clicks to access to your passwords. But I suspect that the concern over too many clicks is inflated by the big corporations looking to dumb down their users.
I like the idea of a locally stored and locally encrypted password manager because when your passwords are on somebody else's server with 10s of thousands of other people, that server becomes an attractive target for hacks. Who would bother hacking my computer just for one set of passwords?
But with something hosted, they do (probably, do your research) have professional security experts working to protect their database.
I like them being locally encrypted, but them being not (exclusively) locally stored is very important if you want to keep using those accounts after your hard drive fails.
Not using one. Anything and everything that is connected to the internet in any way what-so-ever has at the very least some level of insecurity and vulnerability.
I Used to think like this but having multiple different accounts with multiple different password on different site is tiring. Just for this week i forgot my password on 3 different site which apparently i already change 1 of those site password last week. Now i second guessing myself every time i try to log in on a site