For the last couple weeks, I'm actually in the process of consolidating all my passwords from Lockwise, GPG files and iCloud to LastPass. And I can tell you that migrating from one password manager to another is a very laborious process when you have hundreds of passwords. Makes me shy away from self-hosted password managers which can screw me over if they blow up (which Bitwarden actually did to me, I never even got it past the install stage).
Okay what the hell? How- what? huh? explain sir.
*psst. Aye m8, g'day. Based on my past research, Dashlane has been bloody reputable from what I remember.*
Unfortunately I can't recommend nor not-recommend it because I haven't tried it personally, but it seems pretty good. I'm just more of a fan of open-source.
*psst. [whispering slowily]
I...love dashlane but-- they are switching to an entirely browser-based platform which I am not sure if I like.*psst *psst *psst From all the password managers out there, I would only be able to recommend bitwarden because it's the only one that provides you with an option to self-host[1] your client. This means that you're not storing your encrypted passwords somewhere in the cloud (or bitwarden servers) but you're actually hosting that same environment but in a much more closer entity (your machine).
As a side note, you'll find in here -
https://www.privacytools.io/ - a great list of apps and addons that you can use to increase your privacy in almost every spectrum of a computer use (programs, OS, Internet ...).
[1]
https://bitwarden.com/help/article/install-on-premise/ *triple psst to you, ouuu.Okay in all seriousness, I like the idea behind bitwarden, and I want to use it, but the reviews on it thus far are shaky. ssss. And I don't know if I trust windows to keep my files safe. Heckin hell this is.