The mechanism for moving to RabbitKey is a CSV export from your old manager and a CSV import into RabbitKey. The steps are simple; the one thing to be careful about is that the CSV in between is plaintext.
A few things to have ready:
RabbitKey is currently available on iOS. Android, macOS, and Windows versions are in development. If you are on a different platform, check the current availability status before beginning.
Most password managers support CSV export, though menu locations change between app versions — check your manager's current documentation for the exact path. RabbitKey recognizes the CSV layouts of several common managers automatically, including 1Password, Bitwarden, LastPass, Dashlane, Keeper, Enpass, and Chrome, plus a generic CSV format. Export "all items" as CSV from your current app; the result is a .csv file.
A CSV export is unencrypted plaintext. Every password, username, URL, and note in your vault is readable by anyone who opens the file. From the moment the export completes until you securely delete it, this file is the highest-risk object in the migration process.
Practical implications:
You need to get the CSV file to your iOS device for import. Options:
Avoid routing the file through email or an unencrypted cloud service. The file will be deleted after import, so keeping the transfer local minimizes exposure window.
RabbitKey imports through a short wizard:
Before you delete anything, confirm the import landed correctly:
Verifying before deleting matters: if the import has a problem, the plaintext CSV is your only copy of the original data until you confirm.
Once you have confirmed the import is complete and correct, delete the plaintext CSV:
Do not skip this step. The CSV contains your entire credential set in plaintext.
Fields are shifted or misaligned. This happens when notes contain commas or newlines, which break naive CSV parsing. Review affected entries manually and correct them.
URLs are missing. Some managers export the site name without a URL. You will need to add URLs to those entries.
Custom fields were not imported. Import covers the standard fields (title, username, password, URL, notes), plus favorites and folder/category groupings where the source format provides them. Manager-specific custom fields outside that set may not carry over. Keep access to the old manager until you have confirmed everything you need came through.
With your vault in RabbitKey, take two follow-up steps:
For how RabbitKey's own exports work — including the difference between an encrypted backup and a plaintext CSV — see Exporting and Backing Up Your Vault.