Vaultwarden vs Padloc: Which Password Manager?

Quick Verdict

Vaultwarden is the better choice for most people. It has mature browser auto-fill, polished mobile apps, a massive community, and the full Bitwarden client ecosystem. Padloc has a prettier interface and native apps, but its browser integration and community are significantly smaller. Choose Padloc only if design quality is your top priority and you don’t need deep browser auto-fill.

Overview

Vaultwarden is a lightweight Bitwarden server compatible with all official Bitwarden clients. It’s the most popular self-hosted password manager, with ~50 MB RAM usage and SQLite storage.

Padloc is a modern password manager with a design-focused approach. It uses its own client apps (web, desktop, mobile) and requires two containers (API server + PWA frontend).

Feature Comparison

FeatureVaultwardenPadloc
Browser extensionYes (Bitwarden — mature)Yes (less mature)
Browser auto-fillExcellentBasic
Desktop appYes (Bitwarden)Yes (Electron)
Mobile appYes (Bitwarden iOS/Android)Yes (iOS/Android)
Mobile auto-fillExcellentBasic
Web vaultYesYes (PWA)
Password sharingOrganizations + collectionsOrganizations + shared vaults
TOTP 2FA storageYesNo
File attachmentsYesYes
Emergency accessYesNo
PasskeysYesNo
Send (temporary sharing)YesNo
Import/export30+ formatsCSV
UI design qualityFunctional (Bitwarden)Excellent (modern, minimal)
Docker containers needed12 (server + PWA)
RAM usage (idle)~50 MB~150 MB
SMTP requiredNo (optional)Yes (account verification)

Installation Complexity

Vaultwarden is a single container with one port. Set up HTTPS and you’re done. SMTP is optional (nice for email verification, but not required).

Padloc requires two containers (API server and PWA), two domain names or reverse proxy rules, and mandatory SMTP for account creation. The setup has more moving parts.

Winner: Vaultwarden. Simpler deployment with fewer dependencies.

Performance and Resource Usage

MetricVaultwardenPadloc
Idle RAM~50 MB~150 MB
Containers12
Docker images~50 MB~200 MB total
DatabaseSQLite (embedded)File-based (in /data)
SMTP requiredNoYes

Community and Support

MetricVaultwardenPadloc
GitHub stars43,000+3,000+
Client ecosystemBitwarden (massive, mature)Padloc (small)
Community sizeVery largeSmall
DocumentationExtensive (Bitwarden + Vaultwarden)Basic
Active developmentVery activeActive but smaller team

Vaultwarden’s advantage here is overwhelming. The entire Bitwarden ecosystem — extensions, apps, CLI, documentation, community forums — works with Vaultwarden.

Use Cases

Choose Vaultwarden If…

  • You want the best browser auto-fill experience
  • You need mature, polished mobile apps
  • You want TOTP 2FA storage
  • You need passkey support
  • You need emergency access
  • You want the simplest deployment
  • Community size and documentation matter to you

Choose Padloc If…

  • UI design quality is your top priority
  • You prefer Padloc’s minimal, modern aesthetic
  • You don’t rely heavily on browser auto-fill
  • You want native apps (not Electron) for mobile — though both use native

Final Verdict

Vaultwarden wins on functionality. Better auto-fill, better mobile experience, more features (TOTP, passkeys, Send, emergency access), simpler setup, and a community 14x larger.

Padloc wins on aesthetics. It genuinely has a better-looking interface. But a password manager’s job is to fill passwords quickly and securely, not to look pretty. Vaultwarden (via Bitwarden clients) does that job better.

Recommendation: Use Vaultwarden unless you’ve specifically tried it and found the Bitwarden UI unacceptable. Padloc is a solid app, but the ecosystem gap is too large to recommend it as the default choice.

FAQ

Can I migrate from Padloc to Vaultwarden?

Yes. Export from Padloc as CSV, then import into Vaultwarden via the web vault (Tools → Import Data). Organizational structures won’t transfer automatically.

Is Padloc more secure than Vaultwarden?

Both use strong encryption (AES-256, client-side). Padloc uses SRP for authentication, Vaultwarden uses Argon2-based key derivation. Both are sound cryptographic approaches. The security difference is negligible in practice.

Which has better mobile apps?

Vaultwarden, via the Bitwarden apps. They’ve been refined over years with millions of users. Auto-fill integration on both iOS and Android is excellent. Padloc’s mobile apps work but have less polish on the auto-fill side.