Based on our analysis, Keeper is the more privacy-respecting choice overall.
BACK →Overall
Incogni
C+ · 62/100Keeper
B · 76/100What they collect
Incogni
Mixed (60)
Keeper
Mixed (76)
Who they share it with
Incogni
Mixed (58)
Keeper
Mixed (75)
What you can do
Incogni
Mixed (65)
Keeper
Mixed (72)
What they promise
Incogni
Mixed (63)
Keeper
Positive (80)
| Category | Incogni | Keeper |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | C+ · 62/100 | B · 76/100 |
| What they collect | Mixed (60) | Mixed (76) |
| Who they share it with | Mixed (58) | Mixed (75) |
| What you can do | Mixed (65) | Mixed (72) |
| What they promise | Mixed (63) | Positive (80) |
Incogni is a data broker removal service that must collect your most sensitive personal information — full name, date of birth, home address, phone numbers — to do its job, then stores that data with US cloud providers including Google BigQuery, retains customer support records for six years, and runs a marketing tracking stack via Tune Inc. and Mailchimp, which sits in real tension with its privacy-first brand.
View full analysis →Keeper is a zero-knowledge password manager with SOC 2, ISO 27001, and FedRAMP High certification — among the strongest independent security credentials of any password manager — and it cannot access your vault contents under any circumstances; the main caveats are that it is a US company (Chicago) hosted on AWS subject to US legal process, uses cookies and marketing tracking on its website, retains data for vaguely defined periods, and enterprise account admins can access usage and interaction data for employees on business plans.
View full analysis →You might also want to compare