Drop in your .spass file, review every entry, and export a clean CSV — for Apple Passwords, Chrome, or Bitwarden.
Everything runs in your browser. Nothing touches a server.
| URL | Username | Name | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| accounts.google.com | user@gmail.com | Clean | |
| github.com | devuser | GitHub | Selected |
| netflix.com | stream@email.com | Netflix | Clean |
| missing URL | admin | Unknown | Missing URL |
| amazon.com | buyer@email.com | Amazon | Clean |
How it works
Drop in your .spass file. It never leaves your device.
Type the password you set when exporting from Samsung Pass.
Inspect every entry, edit cells, and remove anything you don't want.
Download a clean file ready for Apple Passwords, Chrome, or Bitwarden.
Security
The entire conversion happens inside your browser tab. There is no backend, no cloud sync, and no analytics collecting your file contents.
Your .spass file is read by the browser locally via the File API. It never leaves your device.
Zero network requests are made with your data. You can verify this in DevTools → Network.
The decryption library is MIT/Apache-2.0, auditable on GitHub, and compiled to WASM.
The exported CSV contains your passwords in plain text. Import it into your password manager and delete the file from your Downloads folder right away.
Export targets
Choose your format in the app — the converter adapts the column structure automatically.
iOS 18 · macOS Sequoia
Settings → Apps → Passwords → Import CSV
All Chromium browsers
chrome://password-manager
Cross-platform vault
Tools → Import Data
Any password manager
Standard column layout