Passwd was created especially for businesses using Google Workspace. Because Passwd is built on a zero-knowledge architecture, only users—not Passwd—can access data that has been decrypted. Additionally, the service offers audit logging, which allows administrators to see who has accessed credentials and when.

Its pricing model eliminates additional fees once a company has more than 301 users, making it appealing to larger teams, and reports show that it scales effectively for several hundred employees. In order to give teams that already use Google's tools a dependable system, the platform prioritizes functionality over feature overload. Unlimited records and users are included in Passwd's Premium plans, which are made to grow with an organization.

The features that are available are determined by the plan tier, enabling businesses to adopt the level appropriate to their work processes. Teams accustomed to Google Admin Console, Drive, Gmail, or Docs will find the setup to be intuitive. Passwd is not intended for individual licensing, but rather for use by organizations.

The Workspace plan, which includes unlimited stored records, starts at $19 per month. For businesses that need to comply with SOC2 and GDPR, the Enterprise plan is perfect. Passwd continues to have a

4.7-star rating on all third-party review sites, such as G2 and Trustpilot.

One unique feature that sets it apart from other team password managers is the ability to host the password manager within your own Google Cloud project. Strong encryption, controlled collaboration, compliance-ready visibility, and seamless Google authentication are all clearly part of its role. The interface is simple and uncomplicated, with no complex add-ons.

layout: it's simple to find and use search, filtering, and record editing. While larger organizations use Passwd for role transitions and onboarding, the free tier offers sufficient functionality for secure sharing and centralized storage.