NordPass is owned by Nordsec, the outfit behind NordVPN, which means there's actual security expertise in the background rather than someone who read a blog post once. The core job is straightforward: it stores your passwords in encrypted form, fills them in automatically, and generates strong ones when you need them. They've got a free tier that's genuinely usable, though it's limited. The paid plans come in several flavours: personal subscriptions (which show up with decent discounts fairly often), family plans that cover up to six people, and business solutions for companies that need to manage credentials across teams.
The interface is clean enough without being precious about it. Setup takes about five minutes. Password autofill works across browsers and phones, which is the whole point. They do the usual extras like breach monitoring (tells you if your email's turned up in a data leak) and password strength checking. One thing worth noting: password managers live in a bit of a trust paradox. You're essentially handing over all your passwords to a company, so you need to believe they're genuinely good at security. NordPass's track record seems solid, though like all online services, you're placing faith in their infrastructure and their incident response if something goes wrong.
Family plans are where the deals tend to be sharpest. You'll often see 50% off the two-year option, which brings the per-person cost down significantly. Business plans have their own pricing structure and occasionally run trials so you can test it properly before committing.