How to share a password
securely
Sending a password by email, SMS or Slack is bad practice that exposes your credentials for life. Here's the complete guide to share a password securely in 2026 — without risk, without installation.
Why classic password sharing is dangerous
Every day, millions of passwords are exchanged via email, Slack, WhatsApp or SMS. It's fast, convenient... and it's the leading cause of data leaks in business according to the Verizon DBIR.
- Email: stays forever in two mailboxes, plus intermediate servers and backups. A hacked account = compromised password for life.
- SMS: stored in plain text on the phone, accessible via device lending or SIM-swap attack.
- Slack / Teams: history viewable by admins and kept on publisher's servers (often non-EU).
- WhatsApp: encrypted in transit, but backed up in plain text on iCloud or Google Drive.
- Post-it / paper: still very common in offices.
The right method: 4 steps for secure sharing
Truly secure password sharing rests on 4 essential principles. If one is missing, sharing is vulnerable.
End-to-end encryption
The password must be encrypted on your device before being sent. If the service can read your password, it can also be compelled to disclose it.
One-time link
Once read, the content must be destroyed permanently. Prevents any later viewing, even if the link is intercepted.
Limited validity
Beyond a few days, the password must expire automatically, even unread. Protects against links forgotten in mailboxes.
Separate channel for context
Send the link via one channel (Slack, email), context via a second channel (SMS, voice). No critical information should travel together.
Share a password with Seecret.it in 30 seconds
2. Configure security
Optional: add password protection, choose validity duration and number of views.
3. Send the link
Click Seecret it, copy the generated link and send it. You'll be notified upon opening.
What alternatives to share a password?
- Shared password manager (Bitwarden, 1Password) — ideal for permanent teams but heavy for one-off sharing.
- One-time links (Seecret.it, Privnote, OneTimeSecret) — simplest and fastest for one-off exchange.
- In-person / verbal — secure but impractical remotely.
- Shared encrypted vault (Cryptpad, VeraCrypt) — for very sensitive uses, but high friction.
For one-off professional exchange, the one-time link remains the best security/simplicity tradeoff.
The most common cases
- Onboarding: send Wi-Fi, VPN, internal tools to a new joiner
- Contractors: temporarily share credentials with a freelancer
- DevOps: send an SSH key, API token or database password
- HR: transmit an initial password to an employee
- Individuals: share a Netflix access, home Wi-Fi, temporary credential