FactorCat vs 1Password

1Password is a great password manager. Here's why your second factor should live somewhere else.

1Password is excellent — for passwords

1Password is one of the best password managers available. It's well-designed, well-audited, and trusted by millions. It also supports storing TOTP tokens alongside your passwords. Many people do this because it's convenient.

We think this is a mistake.

The case against combining passwords and MFA

The entire point of multi-factor authentication is that the factors are independent. "Something you know" (password) and "something you have" (TOTP token) are supposed to be in different places. If your password manager stores both, a single breach compromises both factors simultaneously.

Side-by-side comparison

FactorCat 1Password
PurposeMFA only — never stores passwordsPasswords + MFA combined
Factor independenceYes — factors are in a separate appNo — same vault as passwords
Browser auto-fillMFA codes auto-fill via push approveMFA codes auto-fill with passwords
Push notificationsYes — one-tap phone approvalNo — codes generated in the app
Zero-trust modeLocked Vault (free)Not applicable (different model)
Token sharingYes — share individual factorsYes — via shared vaults
PriceFree (50 factors) / Pro $24/yr$36/yr individual / $60/yr family

Where 1Password is better

Where FactorCat is better

The best setup

Use 1Password for passwords. Use FactorCat for MFA. They complement each other perfectly. Your passwords live in one app, your second factor lives in another, and neither can compromise the other.

Ready to switch?

Get FactorCat free — available on iOS, Android, Chrome, and the web.

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