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LastPass Pricing in 2026: Plans, Costs, and the Free Plan Catch

LastPass pricing starts at free and tops out at $7 per user per month for its Business plan. For individuals, Premium runs $3 per month and Families is $4 per month, both billed annually. There is a genuinely free plan, but it comes with a catch that trips up almost everyone who tries it: you can only use it on one type of device (computers or phones, not both).

Prices below are what LastPass publishes as of July 2026. Password-manager pricing shifts often, so confirm the current numbers on the official LastPass pricing page before you buy. Note that every paid plan bills annually, so the monthly figures are what you pay across a year, not month-to-month.

LastPass plans at a glance

PlanPrice (billed annually)Who it coversBest for
Free$01 user, one device typeTrying it out on a single device
Premium$3/mo1 userIndividuals who want to sync everywhere
Families$4/mo6 usersHouseholds sharing logins
Teams$4/user/moUp to 50 usersSmall businesses
Business$7/user/moUnlimited usersCompanies needing SSO and MFA

Free

The Free plan gives you unlimited password storage, autofill, one-to-one password sharing, and dark web monitoring at no cost. The limitation is that it works on a single device type only. When you set it up, LastPass makes you pick either computers (laptops and desktops) or mobile devices (phones and tablets). Whatever you choose, the other category stops syncing. If you save a password on your laptop, it will not appear on your phone unless you upgrade.

This device-type split is still in effect in 2026, and it is the single biggest reason people move off Free.

Premium

Premium costs $3 per month, billed annually (so roughly $36 for the year). It removes the device-type limit, so your vault syncs across every computer and phone you own. It also adds one-to-many sharing, 1GB of encrypted file storage, emergency access, and priority support. For a solo user who wants their passwords on all their devices, this is the entry point.

Families

Families is $4 per month, billed annually, and covers 6 individual Premium accounts under one bill. Each family member gets their own private vault plus a shared folder for logins the whole household uses. At $4 for six people, it is cheaper per person than Premium, which is why couples and households often pick it even when they do not have six people to cover.

Teams

Teams is $4 per user per month, billed annually, and is capped at 50 users. It adds a central admin dashboard, shared folders across the group, and basic user management. It is aimed at small businesses that want shared credential control without the overhead of full identity features.

Business

Business is $7 per user per month, billed annually, with no cap on the number of users. It includes single sign-on (SSO) with multi-factor authentication for up to three apps, advanced MFA, SCIM provisioning, and a dedicated customer success contact. Larger identity needs are handled through add-ons layered on top of the Business plan rather than a separate published tier.

The gotchas worth knowing before you pay

The free plan’s device-type split. As covered above, Free only works on computers or mobile, never both. If you want your passwords on your laptop and your phone, Free will not do it. This is the most common surprise.

Everything bills annually. LastPass does not offer month-to-month billing on paid plans. The advertised “$3/month” and “$4/month” figures are annual commitments divided by twelve. You pay the full year up front.

Business math is per user. The $7 Business price is per seat. A 20-person team is $140 per month, or $1,680 a year, billed annually. Teams at $4 per user is cheaper but stops at 50 users, so growing companies eventually get pushed to Business whether they need the identity features or not.

The trust question

LastPass shopping in 2026 is different from a few years ago because of its breach history, and it is fair to factor that in. In 2022, attackers carried out a pair of linked intrusions that ultimately exposed encrypted customer vault backups. The fallout is still working through the courts: LastPass agreed to a $24.5 million class-action settlement, which received preliminary approval in a Massachusetts federal court, with a final approval hearing held in July 2026. The settlement splits into an $8.2 million pool for general losses and a $16.25 million pool for users who lost cryptocurrency after attackers cracked stolen vaults, as reported by PCWorld.

Since then, LastPass completed its split from parent company GoTo in May 2024 and now operates as an independent company under private-equity owners Francisco Partners and Elliott, with a leadership team it says is focused on security. Whether that reset changes your calculus is a personal call, but it is the reason many buyers now comparison-shop on trust as much as price.

Is LastPass free?

Yes, LastPass has a free plan with unlimited password storage, autofill, and dark web monitoring. The catch is that it only works on one device type at a time (computers or mobile, not both). To sync your vault across your laptop and your phone, you need Premium at $3 per month, billed annually. There is no free plan that covers all your devices.

When LastPass isn’t the right fit

If the device-type limit on Free is a dealbreaker, or the breach history makes you uneasy, it is worth comparing alternatives before committing. A few starting points:

FAQ

How much does LastPass cost per month? Premium is $3 per month and Families is $4 per month, both billed annually. For business, Teams is $4 per user per month and Business is $7 per user per month, also billed annually.

Is the LastPass free plan actually usable? It is, but only on one device type. You pick computers or mobile during setup, and the other category stops syncing. For a single laptop or a single phone it works fine; for both, you need Premium.

Does LastPass offer monthly billing? No. All paid plans bill annually. The monthly prices you see are the annual cost divided across twelve months, paid up front.

Is LastPass safe after the 2022 breach? LastPass has settled a $24.5 million class-action suit over the 2022 incidents and split from parent company GoTo in May 2024 to operate independently with a stated security focus. Many buyers still weigh that history against alternatives before deciding.

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