VaultKeepR
The password manager that doesn't ask you to trust it. No account needed, no email required — unlock with passkeys or biometrics. Zero-knowledge encrypted vaults stored on IPFS.
Cost / License
- Freemium (Subscription)
- Open Source (MIT)
Platforms
- Android
- iPhone
- Google Chrome
- Mozilla Firefox
- iPad
- Android Tablet
Features
Properties
- Decentralized
- Privacy focused
Features
- Time-based One-time Password
- Passkey Support
- Password Recovery
- FIDO U2F (2FA) support
- Biometric Authentication
- Cloud Sync
- Works Offline
- Dark Mode
- Encrypted Backup
- Password Sharing
- No Tracking
- AES-256 Encryption
- Ad-free
- End-to-End Encryption
- Zero Knowledge
VaultKeepR News & Activities
Recent activities
- POX updated VaultKeepR
- 0xJust1 added VaultKeepR
- 0xJust1 added VaultKeepR as alternative to Bitwarden, KeePass, Proton Pass and LastPass
VaultKeepR information
What is VaultKeepR?
VaultKeepR is a decentralized, zero-knowledge password manager that works without an account, email, or phone number. Unlock your vault with passkeys, biometrics, or a master password — nothing is stored on our servers.
Unlike traditional password managers, VaultKeepR never has access to your data. Encryption happens client-side using XChaCha20-Poly1305 with Argon2id key derivation (t=3, m=64MB, p=4). Vaults are stored on IPFS — content-addressed, distributed, and fully under your control.
Available on Chrome, Firefox, iOS, and Android with a unified codebase.
Features include:
- Zero-knowledge architecture — provider can never read your data
- No account or email required — use passkeys, biometrics, or wallet auth
- IPFS distributed storage (optional encrypted S3 cloud for premium)
- XChaCha20-Poly1305 encryption with Argon2id
- CRDT sync for conflict-free multi-device access
- Shamir secret sharing (3-of-5 fragmented recovery)
- Email aliases for privacy
- Encrypted cloud file storage
- Biometric passkeys + backup NFC keys
- Password health audit & breach scanner
- Quick Share ephemeral links (zero-knowledge)
- Open source (MIT license)
By default, no data leaves your device. IPFS backup is optional and always encrypted client-side before upload.




