Passlette Get started

About Passlette

Shared passwords for groups that don't all use the same tools.

The problem it solves

Your band shares a SoundCloud account. Your club has a website with a login nobody can remember. Your group chat has that one pinned message with a password in it that everyone ignores until they need it at 11pm.

The bigger issue: everyone in the group uses different tools. Some use a password manager. Some use their browser's built-in one. Some use a notes app. You can't just say "everyone install 1Password" — that's not happening, and honestly it's overkill for a hiking club.

Passlette is a place where the group's shared credentials live. Members sign in from wherever and whatever they're using to get to them. The passwords belong to the group, not any one person's password manager.

How it works

1.

Create a group

Give it a name — your band, your club, your friend group running a shared Minecraft server. Add the credentials that belong to the group.

2.

Invite people

Send invite links to whoever needs access. They make a Passlette account (about 30 seconds) and you let them in.

3.

Use it however suits you

Open Passlette when you need a credential and copy it directly, or save it into your own password manager for quick access. Both are totally fine — Passlette is the group's source of truth, not a replacement for whatever you use personally.

It's not for everyone

If you're a company with a budget, tools like 1Password Teams or Bitwarden for Business are genuinely great and probably a better fit. They have mobile apps, browser extensions, SSO, admin consoles — the works.

Passlette is for when that's overkill. A volunteer-run community org. A group of friends with a shared server. A small club where rotating the admin password through a group chat feels bad but setting up enterprise software feels worse.

Your passwords stay private

Passlette uses zero-knowledge encryption. Your passwords are encrypted in your browser before they leave your device — the server stores only scrambled data it can't read, and neither can we.

The tradeoff: if you forget your master password, there's no recovery flow. The encryption key lives with you, not with us.

Learn more

How the encryption works in detail →