Tresorit vs Bitwarden
Based on our analysis, Tresorit is the more privacy-respecting choice overall.
BACK →| Category | Tresorit | Bitwarden |
|---|---|---|
| Overall | B+ · 83/100 | B+ · 79/100 |
| What they collect | Mixed (72) | Mixed (76) |
| Who they share it with | Mixed (74) | Mixed (73) |
| What you can do | Positive (84) | Mixed (77) |
| What they promise | Positive (82) | Mixed (78) |
Tresorit is an encrypted cloud storage service based in Switzerland that genuinely cannot access your files; it holds ISO 27001 certification, stores data primarily in the EEA, and gives 30 days' notice of material policy changes — but it records and transcribes sales calls with AI bots, uses Facebook and Google for ad targeting, collects app usage analytics, and business-plan admins can access employees' encrypted files via a recovery master key.
View full analysis →Bitwarden is an open source password manager that encrypts your vault on-device so it cannot read your passwords — but it uses Google Analytics on both the website and service, is a US company subject to FTC jurisdiction and government requests, collects meaningful amounts of administrative data for marketing and product improvement, and uses legitimate interest as a legal basis for several secondary data uses.
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