About Server Stash
We built Server Stash because password managers were not enough for real infrastructure.
Encrypted in your browser.
Free for solo developers.
Why we build Server Stash
Server Stash started as an internal tool. We were running infrastructure across a handful of projects, with the usual mess: a main server, a database, a scraper running somewhere else, two or three sub-accounts per service, and a growing list of CLI commands that had to be exactly right at exactly the wrong moment.
We tried the obvious solutions first. A general-purpose password manager handled the username and password fields fine, but had nothing useful to say about the IP, the port, the database URL, the supplier API endpoint, the queue name. Notes apps held the rest, unencrypted, scattered across devices. A spreadsheet held a worse version of the same thing. Eventually we did what the situation deserved: we built the tool we kept wishing existed.
A server is not a login. It is an IP, a port, a database URL, four sub-accounts, three jump hosts, and the six commands you forget every time you SSH in. Server Stash is shaped like that reality.
What we believe
Credentials deserve real encryption, not a "we promise" page. Everything sensitive in Server Stash is encrypted in your browser before it reaches us. We store ciphertext. We cannot read your data. The full design is in the security whitepaper, including the things this approach does not protect against, because pretending those limitations do not exist would undermine the claims that do hold.
Honesty over polish. If we have not built something yet, the site says so. The roadmap in the whitepaper is a list of public commitments, not a vision document. When we ship a security upgrade, we want the people who care to be able to verify it.
Small surface, narrow dependencies. No third-party JavaScript. No analytics SDKs. No chat widgets following you around. Every line of code on the page is code we wrote and serve from our own origin. This is partly a security position and partly a taste position. Both are deliberate.
Solo first, teams later. Server Stash is free for individual use, and will stay that way. The team tier, with shared workspaces and role-based access, is what we plan to charge for. We would rather build something useful for one person and then add real collaboration than ship a half-finished team product on day one.