Digital Shell
Feature Comparison

Digital Shell vs LastPass

LastPass requires recipient accounts. Digital Shell uses link-based sharing — no signup friction.

Link-Based Sharing

No recipient account needed — just send a link

Digital Shell only

View Tracking

Know exactly who viewed your credentials

Digital Shell only

Expiration Controls

Set time and view limits on shared links

Digital Shell only
Feature
Digital Shell
LastPass
Share without recipient accountKEY
Link-based sharingKEY
Self-destructing links
Time-based expirationKEY
1h to 30d+
View limit options
1, 5, 10, unlimited
View tracking (who, when, where)KEY
Revoke shared access
Shared folders (team)
Coming soon
File watermarking
Zero-knowledge encryption
Passkey support
Coming soon
Dark web monitoring
Emergency access
Security dashboard
Browser extensions
Coming soon
Autofill
Coming soon

Bottom line

LastPass is a traditional password manager — great for teams where everyone uses LastPass. Digital Shell is built for sharing with external parties via links. No recipient accounts needed. Use LastPass for internal, Digital Shell for external.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know

With LastPass, no — recipients need their own LastPass account. With Digital Shell, just send an encrypted link. Recipients click and view instantly, no signup needed. Perfect for sharing with clients, contractors, or anyone external.
Yes! Digital Shell is a complete secure vault with zero-knowledge encryption. Store passwords, API keys, documents, contracts, and any sensitive data. The difference: when you share, you get full tracking — know exactly who viewed your data.
Digital Shell stores any document type — contracts, IDs, certificates, SSH keys. When you share files, they can be automatically watermarked with recipient info. If a document leaks, you'll know who shared it. LastPass doesn't offer this.
Digital Shell, hands down. Clients don't need accounts, you can track every view (who, when, where), set expiration dates, limit views, and revoke access instantly. LastPass requires everyone to have accounts and doesn't offer view tracking.
Digital Shell can replace LastPass for storage and sharing. If you need browser autofill today, you can use both until our extension launches. Many users are switching completely — Digital Shell offers better sharing controls and the same secure storage.
Still have questions?Contact us

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I share passwords with non-LastPass users?

With LastPass, no — recipients need their own LastPass account. With Digital Shell, just send an encrypted link. Recipients click and view instantly, no signup needed. Perfect for sharing with clients, contractors, or anyone external.

Can Digital Shell store passwords like LastPass?

Yes! Digital Shell is a complete secure vault with zero-knowledge encryption. Store passwords, API keys, documents, contracts, and any sensitive data. The difference: when you share, you get full tracking — know exactly who viewed your data.

What about document storage?

Digital Shell stores any document type — contracts, IDs, certificates, SSH keys. When you share files, they can be automatically watermarked with recipient info. If a document leaks, you'll know who shared it. LastPass doesn't offer this.

Which is better for sharing with clients?

Digital Shell, hands down. Clients don't need accounts, you can track every view (who, when, where), set expiration dates, limit views, and revoke access instantly. LastPass requires everyone to have accounts and doesn't offer view tracking.

Should I switch from LastPass?

Digital Shell can replace LastPass for storage and sharing. If you need browser autofill today, you can use both until our extension launches. Many users are switching completely — Digital Shell offers better sharing controls and the same secure storage.

Try Digital Shell Free

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